Lam Cheuk-ting, a former lawmaker of the Hong Kong Democratic Party, was arrested by Hong Kong’s anti-corruption agency for allegedly disclosing the identity of a police commander under investigation in the “7.21” incident—a violent attack at a local train station that occurred during the anti-extradition bill protests that rocked the city last year. Lam says that he did not commit a crime and was only investigating suspected collusion between the police and criminal gangs, and accused the anti-corruption agency of becoming a tool for the Chinese communist regime to suppress dissent. According to Chinese media reports, on the morning of Dec. 28, Lam was arrested by the Hong Kong Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) and charged with three counts of disclosing the identity of a suspect under investigation for possible police misconduct over the “7.21” incident. Lam uploaded a video footage to his Facebook account, which shows the ICAC coming …