Independent Legislator May Chin (高金素梅) was released on NT$1 million (US $31,805) bail yesterday after being questioned by Taipei prosecutors over her suspected misappropriation of salary payments to her aides and other cases.
According to the Taipei District Prosecutors Office, Chin was ordered to post bail at around 5:30 pm after about three and a half hours of questioning.
In addition to the alleged misappropriation of funds, an offense under the Anti-Corruption Act (貪污治罪條例), Chin is also suspected of having illegally imported COVID-19 test kits during the pandemic and embezzling funds subsidized by various government agencies or state-owned companies to an indigenous cultural exchange foundation from 2015-2018.
Photo: Chen Chih-chu, Taipei Times
Under the direction of Taipei prosecutors, agents from the Investigation Bureau raided the lawmaker’s residence and legislative office, then summoned her and 16 others for questioning Tuesday morning.
After a preliminary interrogation, Chin was transferred to Taipei prosecutors in the early hours of Wednesday. She was later deemed unfit to continue questioning after she started to feel unwell and was asked to return once she felt better.
In addition, Chin’s aide Chang Chun-chieh (張俊傑) is deemed by prosecutors to have played a key role in all three cases. He is suspected of offenses including embezzlement under the Anti-Corruption Act, aggravated fraud, document forgery, violations of the Money Laundering Control Act (洗錢防制法), and breaches of the Business Entity Accounting Act (商業會計法), and was considered a flight risk.
Taipei prosecutors successfully petitioned the court to take Chang into custody. Meanwhile, 11 others were released on bail ranging from NT$100,000 to NT$500,000, while four others were allowed to go home after questioning.
Speaking to reporters after posting bail, Chin apologized to her constituents, supporters and legislative colleagues for causing them concern.
The lawmaker did not provide details about the investigation, but said she hopes for peace in Taiwan and the well-being of its people.
A magnitude 6.1 earthquake struck off the coast of Yilan County at 8:39pm tonight, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said, with no immediate reports of damage or injuries. The epicenter was 38.7km east-northeast of Yilan County Hall at a focal depth of 98.3km, the CWA’s Seismological Center said. The quake’s maximum intensity, which gauges the actual physical effect of a seismic event, was a level 4 on Taiwan’s 7-tier intensity scale, the center said. That intensity level was recorded in Yilan County’s Nanao Township (南澳), Hsinchu County’s Guansi Township (關西), Nantou County’s Hehuanshan (合歡山) and Hualien County’s Yanliao (鹽寮). An intensity of 3 was
Instead of focusing solely on the threat of a full-scale military invasion, the US and its allies must prepare for a potential Chinese “quarantine” of Taiwan enforced through customs inspections, Stanford University Hoover fellow Eyck Freymann said in a Foreign Affairs article published on Wednesday. China could use various “gray zone” tactics in “reconfiguring the regional and ultimately the global economic order without a war,” said Freymann, who is also a nonresident research fellow at the US Naval War College. China might seize control of Taiwan’s links to the outside world by requiring all flights and ships entering or leaving Taiwan
The next minimum wage hike is expected to exceed NT$30,000, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday during an award ceremony honoring “model workers,” including migrant workers, at the Presidential Office ahead of Workers’ Day today. Lai said he wished to thank the awardees on behalf of the nation and extend his most sincere respect for their hard work, on which Taiwan’s prosperity has been built. Lai specifically thanked 10 migrant workers selected for the award, saying that although they left their home countries to further their own goals, their efforts have benefited Taiwan as well. The nation’s industrial sector and small businesses lay
Quarantine awareness posters at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport have gone viral for their use of wordplay. Issued by the airport branch of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Agency, the posters feature sniffer dogs making a range of facial expressions, paired with advisory messages built around homophones. “We update the messages for holidays and campaign needs, periodically refreshing materials to attract people’s attention,” quarantine officials said. “The aim is to use the dogs’ appeal to draw focus to quarantine regulations.” A Japanese traveler visiting Taiwan has posted a photo on X of a poster showing a quarantine dog with a