Democratic Progressive Party presidential candidate Frank Hsieh's (謝長廷) campaign yesterday accused a prosecutor of having tried to entice former Kaohsiung Bureau of Urban Development director Wu Meng-teh (吳孟德) into incriminating Hsieh in exchange for a lighter sentence.
Wu was sentenced to 12 years in prison on July 31 for having taken NT$2 million (US$60,000) in bribes in the Kaohsiung Rapid Transit Corp bid-rigging scandal.
Hsieh's campaign manager Lee Ying-yuan (李應元) told a press conference that he had received information suggesting that Prosecutor Wu Wen-chung (
Lee said Wu Wen-chung hoped that Wu Meng-teh could provide information to "sabotage" Hsieh's career.
"Wu Wen-chung even warned Wu Meng-teh that he would deny ever having met him, no matter what he said. This has seriously damaged the public's trust in the judiciary," Lee said.
He declined to say what evidence the campaign had to support the allegation.
Lee also said that Wu Wen-chung had told senior Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) officials on July 16 that he would seek to detain former Kaohsiung Development Association president Hsu Cheng-chao (徐政朝), who is close to Hsieh, and Kaohsiung City Government accountant Hsiao Ling-hui (蕭玲慧).
Three task force prosecutors -- Chu Chao-liang (朱朝亮), Lee Hai-lung (李海龍) and Wu Wen-chung -- who are in charge of several cases involving Hsieh, questioned Hsu and Hsiao over Hsieh's political donation case until late on Monday night.
The Kaohsiung District Court later dismissed their request to detain the two and released them without bail. Prosecutors said they would appeal the ruling to the Taiwan High Court's Kaohsiung branch.
The Kaohsiung Development Foundation was established by Hsieh. The special investigation team has been working to collect evidence linking him to suspected irregularities.
Prosecutors said that a few individuals who made large donations to the foundation were later elected to the board of Kaohsiung Bank, and they suspected the donations may have been bribes.
Prosecutors refused to comment on whether Hsieh had been involved.
Alluding to a judicial plot to blacken Hsieh's name, Lee said that Hsieh had sent a letter to the Special Investigation Task Force on July 20 to "inform the task force director of the situation."
"Since prosecutors can reveal the progress of investigations to the KMT and the media, why should they continue to keep investigations confidential?" Lee said.
"We are willing to give up our rights as a concerned party in the case and request that prosecutors make the investigation public so that the public can supervise the judiciary and pass their own judgment," he said.
Hsieh, who was in Taoyuan yesterday, also lashed out at Wu Wen-chung, saying that Wu got his job at the task force because Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (
Wang yesterday refused to comment on Hsieh's accusation, but issued a statement saying that he had never intervened in the judiciary.
"As legislative speaker, I always respect judicial trials or prosecutors' investigations in the spirit of the Constitutional separation of state power," Wang said.
He said that Hsieh had phoned him up after his criticism of Wu Wen-chung and suggested that he not comment on the matter.
Wu Wen-chung yesterday told reporters the accusations were groundless.
He said he had not revealed the details of his investigations to anyone, nor had he contacted any KMT politicians.
Wu Wen-chung said he had summoned Wu Meng-teh for questioning because he was believed to be concealing information about suspected irregularities involving Hsieh, which is part of a prosecutor's job.
He added that he had never lobbied any politicians to be elected to the task force.
Additional reporting by Shih Hsiu-chuan
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