The Taipei District Court yesterday approved prosecutors' request to detain former independent lawmaker Lo Fu-chu (
Tu Ying-ta (杜英達), Lo's lawyer, said that Lo was pretty shocked by the decision after the 13-hour hearing.
"He believes that someone, perhaps his political enemies, are trying to interfere with justice and are picking on him," Tu said. "He looked pretty upset about this."
PHOTO: GEORGE TSORNG, TAIPEI TIMES
Before entering the courtroom, Lo said he was fairly confident that everything would be fine.
"Prosecutors were worried that I might go on the run," Lo said. "Well, here I am. I came here on time. I believe our judicial system will prove me innocent. Don't charge me with things I haven't done."
The court yesterday held a hearing to revisit the issue of whether to approve prosecutors' request to detain the former independent lawmaker. The hearing began at 9:30am and ended at 10:30pm.
The hearing was ordered by the Taiwan High Court on March 15.
That court said that an earlier arrest of Lo was lawful and asked the Taipei District Court to hold a hearing to determine whether Lo should again be taken into custody.
Prosecutors and police from the Taiwan High Court Prosecutors' Office, the Taipei District Prosecutors' Office and the Taipei City Police Headquarters' Criminal Investigation Corp arrested Lo on suspicion of fraud, breach of trust and usury on Feb. 1, the first day when Lo lost his immunity from prosecution as a lawmaker.
At the time, prosecutors filed a request to detain Lo for longer than the maximum 24 hours for which suspects may be detained without the approval of a district court judge.
On Feb. 3, Taipei District Court judges Yeh Chien-ting (葉建廷), Kuo Hui-ling (郭惠玲) and Chen Te-min (陳德民) released Lo, stating that his arrest had been "improper," and that it would therefore be unlawful to detain him.
An apartment building in New Taipei City’s Sanchong District (三重) collapsed last night after a nearby construction project earlier in the day allegedly caused it to tilt. Shortly after work began at 9am on an ongoing excavation of a construction site on Liuzhang Street (六張街), two neighboring apartment buildings tilted and cracked, leading to exterior tiles peeling off, city officials said. The fire department then dispatched personnel to help evacuate 22 residents from nine households. After the incident, the city government first filled the building at No. 190, which appeared to be more badly affected, with water to stabilize the
Taiwan plans to cull as many as 120,000 invasive green iguanas this year to curb the species’ impact on local farmers, the Ministry of Agriculture said. Chiu Kuo-hao (邱國皓), a section chief in the ministry’s Forestry and Nature Conservation Agency, on Sunday said that green iguanas have been recorded across southern Taiwan and as far north as Taichung. Although there is no reliable data on the species’ total population in the country, it has been estimated to be about 200,000, he said. Chiu said about 70,000 iguanas were culled last year, including about 45,000 in Pingtung County, 12,000 in Tainan, 9,900 in
DEEPER REVIEW: After receiving 19 hospital reports of suspected food poisoning, the Taipei Department of Health applied for an epidemiological investigation A buffet restaurant in Taipei’s Xinyi District (信義) is to be fined NT$3 million (US$91,233) after it remained opened despite an order to suspend operations following reports that 32 people had been treated for suspected food poisoning, the Taipei Department of Health said yesterday. The health department said it on Tuesday received reports from hospitals of people who had suspected food poisoning symptoms, including nausea, vomiting, stomach pain and diarrhea, after they ate at an INPARADISE (饗饗) branch in Breeze Xinyi on Sunday and Monday. As more than six people who ate at the restaurant sought medical treatment, the department ordered the
Taiwan’s population last year shrank further and births continued to decline to a yearly low, the Ministry of the Interior announced today. The ministry published the 2024 population demographics statistics, highlighting record lows in births and bringing attention to Taiwan’s aging population. The nation’s population last year stood at 23,400,220, a decrease of 20,222 individuals compared to 2023. Last year, there were 134,856 births, representing a crude birth rate of 5.76 per 1,000 people, a slight decline from 2023’s 135,571 births and 5.81 crude birth rate. This decrease of 715 births resulted in a new record low per the ministry’s data. Since 2016, which saw