Is it serious to be detained for refusing to commit a crime?

Legal subjectivity:

Compared with administrative detention, criminal detention is not serious, it is only a criminal compulsory measure and will not leave a criminal record. Will criminal detention be sentenced? Criminal detention is a kind of criminal compulsory measure, and it is a compulsory method for public security organs and people's procuratorates to temporarily deprive criminals or major suspects of their personal freedom in the process of investigation under legal emergencies. Whether he will be sentenced depends on whether the suspect constitutes a crime and whether he needs to bear criminal responsibility. There is no direct relationship between the two. When a criminal suspect is detained in criminal detention, the best way is to entrust a professional lawyer to understand the relevant case as soon as possible, so as to protect the criminal suspect's relevant litigation rights and interests to the maximum extent.

Legal objectivity:

Article 91 of the Criminal Procedure Law If a public security organ deems it necessary to arrest a detained person, it shall, within three days after detention, submit it to the people's procuratorate for examination and approval. Under special circumstances, the approval time can be extended by one to four days. For major suspects who commit crimes on the run, commit crimes many times or commit crimes in collusion, the time for submitting for examination and approval may be extended to 30 days. The people's procuratorate shall, within seven days after receiving the approval letter from the public security organ, make a decision on whether to approve or disapprove the arrest. If the people's procuratorate does not approve the arrest, the public security organ shall immediately release it after receiving the notice and promptly notify the people's procuratorate to execute it. Those who need to continue the investigation and meet the conditions of obtaining a guarantor pending trial or residential surveillance shall be granted a guarantor pending trial or residential surveillance according to law.