The Taipei District Court on Tuesday granted a request from former Taipei mayor Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) to lift a restriction on his place of residence while he remains under investigation in a corruption case.
The restriction had required him to reside at his current address so that he could report to authorities at designated times and receive court documents.
During the hearing on his suspected involvement in breach of trust and embezzling political donations, the former Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) chairman maintained his innocence.
Photo: CNA
He restated that prosecutors “weaved a story,” pieced together far-fetched reasons to detain him, and teamed up with some media outlets to serve as “political operatives.”
The Control Yuan also “collaborated closely” with the prosecution, fining him NT$2.4 million (US$76,239) and confiscating his political donations, he said.
Ko said that he had shown restraint during his one year of detention, with his family and friends being angrier than he was.
He said his main grievance was that too many people had been drawn into the case, leaving members of the TPP feeling unsafe.
He said his former classmate Lee Wen-tsung (李文宗) was detained for 11 months for replying to a text message and Core Pacific Group chairman Sheen Ching-jing’s (沈慶京) company was “effectively finished.”
He also said that the bank accounts and cash flows of his family members and relatives were investigated, and former Taipei deputy mayor Pong Cheng-sheng (彭振聲) confessed without knowing what he had done wrong.
Ko was indicted in December last year on suspicion of accepting NT$17.1 million in bribes during his tenure as Taipei mayor and embezzling political donations during his presidential campaign. Prosecutors are seeking a total sentence of 28-and-a-half years.
Lee was the finance chief of Ko’s presidential campaign, while Sheen was implicated for bribing members of the Taipei City Government over a property development project.
After being released on NT$70 million bail in September, Ko was not allowed to change his place of residence and was barred from leaving the country. He was also required to wear an ankle monitor and carry a government-issued mobile phone to monitor his whereabouts.
His lawyers on Tuesday requested the lifting of the residence restriction to allow him to stay with his elderly mother in Hsinchu.
He also cited commitments to attend events across the country during the holiday season, saying that the court proceedings were not expected to conclude beforehand, making daily trips to Taipei difficult.
Ko said he was already subject to digital surveillance and had appeared in court on time without any violations over the past three months.
He added that, given the high level of media attention surrounding his schedule, there was no risk of him fleeing.
Taking into account the stage of the court proceedings, the grounds for his request and the principle of proportionality, the court granted the request.
SHIPS, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES: The ministry has announced changes to varied transportation industries taking effect soon, with a number of effects for passengers Beginning next month, the post office is canceling signature upon delivery and written inquiry services for international registered small packets in accordance with the new policy of the Universal Postal Union, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications said yesterday. The new policy does not apply to packets that are to be delivered to China, the ministry said. Senders of international registered small packets would receive a NT$10 rebate on postage if the packets are sent from Jan. 1 to March 31, it added. The ministry said that three other policies are also scheduled to take effect next month. International cruise ship operators
HORROR STORIES: One victim recounted not realizing they had been stabbed and seeing people bleeding, while another recalled breaking down in tears after fleeing A man on Friday died after he tried to fight the knife-wielding suspect who went on a stabbing spree near two of Taipei’s busiest metro stations, Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an (蔣萬安) said. The 57-year-old man, identified by his family name, Yu (余), encountered the suspect at Exit M7 of Taipei Main Station and immediately tried to stop him, but was fatally wounded and later died, Chiang said, calling the incident “heartbreaking.” Yu’s family would receive at least NT$5 million (US$158,584) in compensation through the Taipei Rapid Transit Corp’s (TRTC) insurance coverage, he said after convening an emergency security response meeting yesterday morning. National
PLANNED: The suspect visited the crime scene before the killings, seeking information on how to access the roof, and had extensively researched a 2014 stabbing incident The suspect in a stabbing attack that killed three people and injured 11 in Taipei on Friday had planned the assault and set fires at other locations earlier in the day, law enforcement officials said yesterday. National Police Agency (NPA) Director-General Chang Jung-hsin (張榮興) said the suspect, a 27-year-old man named Chang Wen (張文), began the attacks at 3:40pm, first setting off smoke bombs on a road, damaging cars and motorbikes. Earlier, Chang Wen set fire to a rental room where he was staying on Gongyuan Road in Zhongzheng District (中正), Chang Jung-hsin said. The suspect later threw smoke grenades near two exits
The Forestry and Nature Conservation Agency yesterday launched a gift box to market honey “certified by a Formosan black bear” in appreciation of a beekeeper’s amicable interaction with a honey-thieving bear. Beekeeper Chih Ming-chen (池明鎮) in January inspected his bee farm in Hualien County’s Jhuosi Township (卓溪) and found that more than 20 beehives had been destroyed and many hives were eaten, with bear droppings and paw prints near the destroyed hives, the agency said. Chih returned to the farm to move the remaining beehives away that evening when he encountered a Formosan black bear only 20m away, the agency said. The bear