Prosecutors in New Taipei City yesterday indicted 31 individuals affiliated with the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) for allegedly forging thousands of signatures in recall campaigns targeting three Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lawmakers.
The indictments stem from investigations launched earlier this year after DPP lawmakers Su Chiao-hui (蘇巧慧) and Lee Kuen-cheng (李坤城) filed criminal complaints accusing campaign organizers of submitting false signatures in recall petitions against them.
According to the New Taipei District Prosecutors Office, a total of 2,566 forged recall proposal forms in the initial proposer petition were found during the probe.
Photo: Taipei Times
Among those indicted was KMT New Taipei City Branch Secretary-General Chen Chen-jung (陳貞容), who is currently being held and whose case will be transferred to the New Taipei City District Court, the prosecutors said.
Three other senior officials from the KMT’s New Taipei City branch were also charged -- party secretaries Chu Pei-yi (朱蓓儀) and Lin Chien-yi (林建鎰), as well as Kuo Sheng- hsiung (郭勝雄), KMT party secretary and head of general affairs for the city.
The list of those indicted also includes KMT Banciao District party chief executive officer Hsieh Ching-jen (謝慶認) and Banqiao District party committee chairperson Chiu Hung-pin (邱宏濱).
The 31 individuals -- connected to KMT organizations in 25 out of 29 districts across New Taipei -- face charges of document forgery and violations of thePersonal Data Protection Act (個人資料保護法), according to the prosecutors.
Recall campaign convener Wang Yu-jen (王昱人) and the primary person who proposed the recall for Su Chiao- hui, Tan Chen-yao (譚鎮耀), were also among those indicted for their roles in the recall efforts, prosecutors said.
However, Tsai Cheng-jui (蔡承睿), Hsu Wei-hao (徐偉豪) and Sung Chien-liang (宋建樑), identified by prosecutors as the primary or secondary proposers of the recall campaigns against the DPP lawmakers, were not indicted.
The prosecutors office said an additional 19 people, including volunteers and associates of those indicted, were granted deferred prosecutions.
The indictments yesterday follow a second wave of searches in April that targeted KMT offices in New Taipei City.
Under the Public Officials Election and Recall Act (公職人員選舉罷免法), voters can seek to recall lawmakers by submitting joint-signature petitions to the Central Election Commission in two phases before a district-wide vote can take place.
The New Taipei City indictments are part of several investigations into alleged recall campaign signature forgeries, with similar cases involving KMT members in Taipei, Keelung, Taichung, Kaohsiung and other cities and counties across Taiwan.
Alain Robert, known as the "French Spider-Man," praised Alex Honnold as exceptionally well-prepared after the US climber completed a free solo ascent of Taipei 101 yesterday. Robert said Honnold's ascent of the 508m-tall skyscraper in just more than one-and-a-half hours without using safety ropes or equipment was a remarkable achievement. "This is my life," he said in an interview conducted in French, adding that he liked the feeling of being "on the edge of danger." The 63-year-old Frenchman climbed Taipei 101 using ropes in December 2004, taking about four hours to reach the top. On a one-to-10 scale of difficulty, Robert said Taipei 101
Nipah virus infection is to be officially listed as a category 5 notifiable infectious disease in Taiwan in March, while clinical treatment guidelines are being formulated, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said yesterday. With Nipah infections being reported in other countries and considering its relatively high fatality rate, the centers on Jan. 16 announced that it would be listed as a notifiable infectious disease to bolster the nation’s systematic early warning system and increase public awareness, the CDC said. Bangladesh reported four fatal cases last year in separate districts, with three linked to raw date palm sap consumption, CDC Epidemic Intelligence
Two Taiwanese prosecutors were questioned by Chinese security personnel at their hotel during a trip to China’s Henan Province this month, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said yesterday. The officers had personal information on the prosecutors, including “when they were assigned to their posts, their work locations and job titles,” MAC Deputy Minister and spokesman Liang Wen-chieh (梁文傑) said. On top of asking about their agencies and positions, the officers also questioned the prosecutors about the Cross-Strait Joint Crime-Fighting and Judicial Mutual Assistance Agreement, a pact that serves as the framework for Taiwan-China cooperation on combating crime and providing judicial assistance, Liang
US climber Alex Honnold left Taiwan this morning a day after completing a free-solo ascent of Taipei 101, a feat that drew cheers from onlookers and gained widespread international attention. Honnold yesterday scaled the 101-story skyscraper without a rope or safety harness. The climb — the highest urban free-solo ascent ever attempted — took just more than 90 minutes and was streamed live on Netflix. It was covered by major international news outlets including CNN, the New York Times, the Guardian and the Wall Street Journal. As Honnold prepared to leave Taiwan today, he attracted a crowd when he and his wife, Sanni,