A generalized definition of intrinsic and extrinsic transport coefficients is introduced. We show that transport coefficients from the intrinsic origin are solely determined by local electronic structure, and thus the intrinsic spin Hall effect is not a transport phenomenon. The intrinsic spin Hall current is always accompanied by an equal but opposite intrinsic orbital-angular-momentum Hall current. We prove that the intrinsic spin Hall effect does not induce a spin accumulation at the edge of the sample or near the interface.PACS numbers: 72.15.Gd, 73.50.Jt Recently, there are emerging theoretical interests on the spin Hall effect in a spin-orbit coupled system [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. The spin Hall effect refers to a non-zero spin current in the direction transverse to the direction of the applied electric field. Earlier studies had been focused on an extrinsic effect [15,16], namely, when conduction electrons scatter off an impurity with the spin-orbit interaction, the electrons tend to deflect to the left (right) more than to the right (left) for a given spin orientation of the electrons. Thus the impurity is the prerequisite in the extrinsic spin Hall effect. Recently, the spin Hall effect has been extended to semiconductor heterostructures where the spin-orbit coupled bands are important. It has been shown that the spin current exists in the absence of impurities, termed as the intrinsic or dissipationless spin Hall effect (ISHE) in order to distinguish the impurity-driven extrinsic spin Hall effect (ESHE) mentioned above. In general, the magnitude of ISHE is two to three orders larger than that of ESHE; this immediately generates an explosive interest in theoretical research on the ISHE since the spin current is regarded as one of the key variables in spintronics application.However, the spin current generated via ISHE is fundamentally different from conventional spin-polarized transport in many ways. First, the spin current is carried by the entire spin-orbit coupled Fermi sea, not just electrons or holes at the Fermi level [1,4]. Second, ISHE exists even for an equilibrium system (without external electric fields) [5] and ISHE is closely related to the dielectric response function that characterizes the electronic deformation [6]. Most recently, it is proposed that the intrinsic spin Hall effect exists even in insulators [17]. The above unconventional properties cast serious doubts on experimental relevance of the intrinsic spin current. It has been already alerted by Rashba [5,6] that the ISHE may not be a transport phenomenon. Due to the ill-defined nature of the spin current in the spin-orbit coupled Hamiltonian, theories utilizing different approaches produce contradicting results: some predicted a zero spin Hall current in the presence of an arbitrary weak disorder and some claimed a universal spin conductivity at weak disorder. In this letter, we do not try to resolve the above theoretical debate, instead we reveal the spurious nature of the intrinsic spin Hall effect and discuss i...