The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office yesterday said it would seek the death penalty against 21 suspects charged in the killing of off-duty police detective Hsueh Chen-kuo (薛貞國) outside a Taipei nightclub in September.
A statement by the office said that the key suspects, Tseng Wei-hao (曾威豪), his girlfriend Liu Hsin-tung (劉芯彤) and their associate Hsiao Jui-hung (蕭叡鴻), gathered members of criminal gangs to beat the policeman.
A total of 60 suspects, including Tseng, Liu and Hsiao, have been indicted on charges of murder, injury causing death, gathering to engage in affray, and other crimes, Taipei Chief Prosecutor Chang Chieh-chin (張介欽) said.
Photo: Chen Wei-tzu, Taipei Times
The statement said that because of the total disregard for the rule of law and flouting of social order by the suspects, and the severity of the beating, the office is seeking the maximum punishment — the death penalty — against 21 of them, including Hsiao, Chou Yu-teng (周譽騰), Wan Shao-cheng (萬少丞) and Yi Pao-hung (易寶宏).
Chang said Hsiao, Tseng and Liu were allegedly the main instigators, as they reportedly solicited the help of friends and gang members for the confrontation, which allegedly arose from personal disputes.
The suspects behaved with total disregard for the rule of law by attacking Hsueh, who was a stranger to them, beating him to death with extreme violence, Chang said, adding that this had caused unmitigated pain and suffering to the victim’s family.
Photo: Chien Jung-fong, Taipei Times
The office said it would seek the maximum penalty for the suspects, to serve as an example to society.
Hsueh died in the early hours of Sept. 14 after being beaten up outside of Spark ATT night club in the Xinyi District (信義).
Police said the 38-year-old detective was at the scene to handle a disturbance at the nightclub, although other accounts by a city councilor and other officials alleged that Hsueh had engaged in a protection racket, receiving bribes from business owners in the area.
For the 17 suspects still held in detention, the office said a bail hearing would be held today at the Taipei District Court, as the two-month limit is up for detention without trial or criminal charges.
Hsiao is reportedly one of the leaders of the “He Tang” (和堂) chapter of the Bamboo Union (竹聯幫), a well-known triad.
A number of suspects in the case are reportedly also members of the Bamboo Union, and the Four Seas Gang (四海幫), another major triad.
The Ministry of Transportation and Communications yesterday inaugurated the Danjiang Bridge across the Tamsui River in New Taipei City, saying that the structure would be an architectural icon and traffic artery for Taiwan. Feted as a major engineering achievement, the Danjiang Bridge is 920m long, 211m tall at the top of its pylon, and is the longest single-pylon asymmetric cable-stayed bridge in the world, the government’s Web site for the structure said. It was designed by late Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid. The structure, with a maximum deck of 70m, accommodates road and light rail traffic, and affords a 200m navigation channel for boats,
PRECISION STRIKES: The most significant reason to deploy HIMARS to outlying islands is to establish a ‘dead zone’ that the PLA would not dare enter, a source said A High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) would be deployed to Penghu County and Dongyin Island (東引) in Lienchiang County (Matsu) to force the Chinese military to retreat at least 100km from the coastline, a military source said yesterday. Taiwan has been procuring HIMARS and Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS) from the US in batches. Once all batches have been delivered, Taiwan would possess 111 HIMARS units and 504 ATACMS, which have a range of 300km. Considering that “offense is the best defense,” the military plans to forward-deploy the systems to outlying islands such as Penghu and Dongyin so that
WHAT WAS ALL THAT FOR? Jaw Shaw-kong said that Cheng Li-wen had pushed for more drastic cuts and attacked him, just for the outcome to be nearly identical to his bill The legislature yesterday passed a supplementary budget bill to fund the purchase of separate packages of US military equipment, with the combined amount of spending capped at NT$780 billion (US$24.8 billion). The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) used their legislative majority to pass the bill, which runs until 2033 and has two main funding provisions. One was for NT$300 billion of arms sales already approved by the US for Taiwan on Dec. 17 last year, the other was for NT$480 billion for another arms package expected to be announced by Washington. The bill, which fell short of the NT$1.25
‘CLEAR MESSAGE’: The bill would set up an interagency ‘tiger team’ to review sanctions tools and other economic options to help deter any Chinese aggression toward Taiwan US Representative Young Kim has introduced a bill to deter Chinese aggression against Taiwan, calling for an interagency “tiger team” to preplan coordinated sanctions and economic measures in response to possible Chinese military or political action against Taiwan. “[Chinese President] Xi Jinping [習近平] has directed the People’s Liberation Army to be ready to invade Taiwan by 2027. China has a plan. America should have one too,” Kim said in a news release on Thursday last week. She introduced the “Deter PRC [People’s Republic of China] aggression against Taiwan act” to “ensure the US has a coordinated sanctions strategy ready should