The Supreme Court earlier this month upheld a 15-year sentence for a Filipino man convicted of murdering a fellow countryman and endangering the lives of others in 2023.
The ruling, which was issued on Feb. 11 and is final, upheld the lower courts' sentences after finding no legal errors in the lower court judgements.
Photo: CNA
In the original verdict, the Changhua District Court found Filipino national Dizon Benjie San Agustin guilty of homicide and endangerment for murdering a fellow migrant worker in Changhua County and endangering the lives of others.
Agustin apparently decided to kill his victim when his attempts to reconcile with his estranged wife failed, the district court said.
He tried to save his marriage by returning to the Philippines from December 2022 to January 2023, but found out during the trip that the victim told Agustin's estranged wife that Agustin had a girlfriend in Taiwan, the initial verdict said.
After attempts at reconciliation failed, Agustin purchased gasoline, a blow torch and a sickle in Taiwan between Nov. 18 and 22, 2023, and hid the items inside a workers' dormitory.
At about 12am on the morning of Nov. 23, 2023, Agustin doused the room occupied by the deceased and a roommate.
After setting the room ablaze, he blocked the door from the outside to prevent the occupants from escaping.
The victim and his roommate eventually breached the door, but Agustin reportedly attacked his victim with a sickle in an effort to force him back into the room.
Although both occupants eventually managed to escape the room, Agustin's main target sustained lacerations and fractures to his head and chest on top of burns to his face and torso.
Efforts to save the man failed, and he passed away on Dec. 16, 2023.
The roommate survived the ordeal with burns to his limbs and back.
The Changhua verdict also said that after setting fire to the room, Agustin later took flammable liquid to a second room inside the dormitory and sprayed it onto the face of another migrant worker who suffered from shock.
Although local firefighters were able to put the fire out and save the dorm, the verdict said that the location still sustained property damage to the wall divisions and air-conditioning units.
The Changhua District Court sentenced Agustin to 15 years in prison for homicide on Aug. 7 last year, and gave him an additional six months for endangerment, which could be commuted to a fine.
Agustin subsequently appealed his case, but the High Court's Taichung branch upheld the verdict of the Changhua District Court.
With the Supreme Court also upholding the original ruling on Feb. 11, Agustin's sentencing is deemed final.
The Grand Hotel Taipei on Saturday confirmed that its information system had been illegally accessed and expressed its deepest apologies for the concern it has caused its customers, adding that the issue is being investigated by the Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau. The hotel said that on Tuesday last week, it had discovered an external illegal intrusion into its information system. An initial digital forensic investigation confirmed that parts of the system had been accessed, it said, adding that the possibility that some customer data were stolen and leaked could not be ruled out. The actual scope and content of the affected data
DO THEY BITE IT? Cats have better memories than people might think, but their motivation is based entirely around the chance of getting fed Cats can remember the identity of the people who fed them the day before, Taipei-based veterinarians said on Friday, debunking a popular myth that cats have a short memory. If a stray does not recognize the person who fed them the previous day, it is likely because they are not carrying food and the cat has no reason to recognize them, said Wu Chou Animal Hospital head Chen Chen-huan (陳震寰). “When cats come to a human bearing food, it is coming for the food, not the person,” he said. “The food is the key.” Since the cat’s attention is on the food, it
A New York-based NGO has launched a global initiative to rename the nation’s overseas missions, most of which operate under the name "Taipei," to "Taiwan Representative Office (TRO)," according to a news release. Ming Chiang (江明信), CEO of Hello Taiwan, announced the campaign at a news conference in Berlin on Monday, coinciding with the World Forum held from Monday through Wednesday, the institution stated in the release. Speaking at the event, Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Huang Jie (黃捷) said she believed this renaming campaign would enable the international community to see Taiwan
DEFENSE: The US should cancel the US visas or green cards of relatives of KMT and TPP lawmakers who have been blocking the budget, Grant Newsham said A retired US Marine Corps officer has suggested canceling the US green cards and visas of relatives of opposition Taiwanese lawmakers who have been stalling the review of a proposed NT$1.25 trillion (US$39.7 billion) special defense budget. The Executive Yuan has proposed the budget for major weapons purchases over eight years, from this year to 2033. However, opposition lawmakers have refused to review the proposal, demanding that President William Lai (賴清德) first appear before the Legislative Yuan to answer questions about the proposed budget. On Thursday last week, 37 bipartisan US lawmakers sent a letter to Legislative Speaker Han Kuo-yu (韓國瑜), the heads