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."
REASONS FOR TRAVEL: An assistant professor said that proposed amendments to penalize drivers if they used drugs overseas would not deter people from traveling People who operate a motor vehicle under the influence of marijuana would have their driver’s license revoked, even if they used the substance while overseas, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications said yesterday, citing proposed amendments to the Road Traffic Management and Penalty Act (道路交通管理處罰條例). The amendments would also authorize the government to revoke the licenses of people determined to have used Category 1 or Category 2 narcotics, even if they were not operating a vehicle while under the influence of drugs, as well as ban them from taking the license test for three years, the ministry said. People aged 18 or
UPGRADE: The Kang Ding-class frigate is replacing its Chaparall missiles with Tien Chien II and Hua Yang VLS, which would provide it with long-range, 360° air defense Taiwan plans to produce 1,200 to 1,376 Hai Chien II missiles (海劍二, Sea Sword II) — also known as TC-2N — to serve as the standard air defense system of the navy’s surface combatant fleet, a source said yesterday. Last week, the Hai Chien II, the naval version of the Tien Kung II missile (天劍二, Sky Sword II), completed a live-fire test in waters off the National Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology’s Jiupeng facility (九鵬) in Pingtung County’s Manjhou Township (滿州). The MIM72 Chaparral and other dated air defense missiles that currently arm Taiwanese ships have inadequate range to combat Chinese
GLOBALGIVING: ‘ Caving to external pressure is not acceptable for an organization that has cultivated justice reform and human rights for 30 years,’ one NGO said A slew of non-government organizations (NGOs) have withdrawn from the GlobalGiving fundraising platform after it announced it would use “Chinese Taipei” instead of “Taiwan” from next month. The Taiwan Good Rice Association wrote on Facebook on Friday that it was informed on April 28 via a teleconference call of the change, which was made because the platform wanted to operate in China. Taiwan Good Rice is to terminate all cooperative relationships with GlobalGiving in response to the platform’s “unilateral and non-negotiable” decision to remove references to Taiwan, the NGO said. “Taiwan is in the official name of Taiwan Good Rice Association and the
HEAVY WEATHER: Typhoon Jangmi is due to crash straight into the Ryukyus as airlines look to shift flights to larger aircraft or cancel flights to Okinawa entirely Taiwan’s international air carriers announced flight adjustments over the weekend as Typhoon Jangmi is forecast to hit the Ryukyu Islands today and tomorrow. The Central Weather Administration (CWA) upgraded Jangmi from a tropical storm to a typhoon at 8am yesterday, with the eye located 580km south of Naha city. It was moving north at 19kph. Today, China Airlines’ CI-120, CI-121, CI-122 and CI-123 flights between Taoyuan and Naha, Okinawa, have been canceled as well as CI-132 and CI-133 between Kaohsiung and Naha. EVA Air’s BR-112, BR-113, BR-186 and BR-185 flights between Taoyuan and Naha are also canceled. Low-cost carrier Tigerair Taiwan canceled IT-230,