The Taipei District Prosecutors' Office yesterday decided to release Hong Kong entertainer William So (蘇永康) from a drug rehabilitation program at the Taipei Drug Abstention and Treatment Center (台北煙毒勒戒所) in Tucheng, Taipei County.
A team of psychologists, social workers and medical doctors carried out So's first evaluation yesterday morning to decide whether he could be released early. The team submitted the result of the evaluation to the prosecutors' office around noon.
PHOTO: LI YING-FENG, LIBERTY TIMES
Chief Prosecutor Weng Hung-tsai (
So left the center around 3:30pm but refused to comment.
His agent said that a press conference would be held this afternoon.
Weng said that he decided to free So because he believed in the team's professional evaluation.
"We treated So as a normal drug user and we did everything by book," Weng said.
"Usually, we will release the drug user if the evaluation report says that the user has successfully quit and doesn't intend to take drugs again."
So was arrested at Taipei's Texound night club along with an entourage of 11 friends and colleagues on June 8.
The police discovered four and half Ecstasy pills at the scene but nobody admitted to possession of the pills. So tested positive for the drug after a urine test at the police station.
On Aug. 2, So attended an investigative hearing at the Taipei Prosecutors' Office and was sent to the Taipei Drug Abstention and Treatment Center. According to Chen Hung-ta (陳宏達), the spokesman of the Taipei District Prosecutors' Office, So asked the prosecutor if he could take part in the rehabilitation program and said that he hoped that he could attend the program as soon as possible. However, So never admitted to taking Ecstasy pills.
On Saturday, under an arrangement by the Taipei Drug Abstention and Treatment Center, So participated in a karaoke contest when Vice President Annette Lu (
Standing by the vice president, So urged all the drug users to keep the faith by quitting and encouraged young people to say no to drugs which, the vice president called, "a very brave thing to do."
TRAGEDY: An expert said that the incident was uncommon as the chance of a ground crew member being sucked into an IDF engine was ‘minuscule’ A master sergeant yesterday morning died after she was sucked into an engine during a routine inspection of a fighter jet at an air base in Taichung, the Air Force Command Headquarters said. The officer, surnamed Hu (胡), was conducting final landing checks at Ching Chuan Kang (清泉崗) Air Base when she was pulled into the jet’s engine for unknown reasons, the air force said in a news release. She was transported to a hospital for emergency treatment, but could not be revived, it said. The air force expressed its deepest sympathies over the incident, and vowed to work with authorities as they
A tourist who was struck and injured by a train in a scenic area of New Taipei City’s Pingsi District (平溪) on Monday might be fined for trespassing on the tracks, the Railway Police Bureau said yesterday. The New Taipei City Fire Department said it received a call at 4:37pm on Monday about an incident in Shifen (十分), a tourist destination on the Pingsi Railway Line. After arriving on the scene, paramedics treated a woman in her 30s for a 3cm to 5cm laceration on her head, the department said. She was taken to a hospital in Keelung, it said. Surveillance footage from a
BITTERLY COLD: The inauguration ceremony for US president-elect Donald Trump has been moved indoors due to cold weather, with the new venue lacking capacity A delegation of cross-party lawmakers from Taiwan, led by Legislative Speaker Han Kuo-yu (韓國瑜), for the inauguration of US president-elect Donald Trump, would not be able to attend the ceremony, as it is being moved indoors due to forecasts of intense cold weather in Washington tomorrow. The inauguration ceremony for Trump and US vice president-elect JD Vance is to be held inside the Capitol Rotunda, which has a capacity of about 2,000 people. A person familiar with the issue yesterday said although the outdoor inauguration ceremony has been relocated, Taiwan’s legislative delegation has decided to head off to Washington as scheduled. The delegation
Another wave of cold air would affect Taiwan starting from Friday and could evolve into a continental cold mass, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday. Temperatures could drop below 10°C across Taiwan on Monday and Tuesday next week, CWA forecaster Chang Chun-yao (張竣堯) said. Seasonal northeasterly winds could bring rain, he said. Meanwhile, due to the continental cold mass and radiative cooling, it would be cold in northern and northeastern Taiwan today and tomorrow, according to the CWA. From last night to this morning, temperatures could drop below 10°C in northern Taiwan, it said. A thin coat of snow