The Taichung District Court yesterday handed down mostly suspended sentences to workers at the Chinese Nationalist Party’s (KMT) Taichung chapter for falsifying documents in an effort to recall two Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lawmakers last year.
In a brief statement, the court said it sentenced the chapter’s senior officials, Chen Chien-feng (陳劍鋒) and Wu Kang-long (伍康龍), to 21 months and 23 months in prison respectively, suspended for five years.
Wu and Chen were also stripped of their civil rights for two years and fined NT$300,000 and NT$250,000 respectively, the court said.
Photo: Chen Chien-chih, Taipei Times
It also sentenced 30 other party staff to prison terms ranging from three to 14 months, all suspended for two to three years.
Two other defendents, surnamed Chou (周) and Mai (買), received jail terms of nine months and one year respectively, with those sentences not suspended.
The court did not specify why it did not suspend the sentences of Chou and Mai, saying only that the rulings can be appealed.
All of the defendents were found guilty of contravening the Personal Data Protection Act (個人資料保護法).
According to the indictments filed by prosecutors, the 34 defendents forged 4,258 signatures following the chapter’s decision in January last year to launch recall petitions against legislators Tsai Chi-chang (蔡其昌) and Ho Hsin-chun (何欣純).
Wu was chief of the recall campaign, while Chen assisted in promotional work. The two men directed their staff to organize and shuffle the forged signatures to avoid detection before submitting the completed petitions to the Taichung Election Commission, prosecutors said.
People who initiate recalls need to collect signatures of enough eligible voters in the constituency to reach the threshold to send the decision to a vote.
Taiwan has received more than US$70 million in royalties as of the end of last year from developing the F-16V jet as countries worldwide purchase or upgrade to this popular model, government and military officials said on Saturday. Taiwan funded the development of the F-16V jet and ended up the sole investor as other countries withdrew from the program. Now the F-16V is increasingly popular and countries must pay Taiwan a percentage in royalties when they purchase new F-16V aircraft or upgrade older F-16 models. The next five years are expected to be the peak for these royalties, with Taiwan potentially earning
STAY IN YOUR LANE: As the US and Israel attack Iran, the ministry has warned China not to overstep by including Taiwanese citizens in its evacuation orders The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday rebuked a statement by China’s embassy in Israel that it would evacuate Taiwanese holders of Chinese travel documents from Israel amid the latter’s escalating conflict with Iran. Tensions have risen across the Middle East in the wake of US and Israeli airstrikes on Iran beginning Saturday. China subsequently issued an evacuation notice for its citizens. In a news release, the Chinese embassy in Israel said holders of “Taiwan compatriot permits (台胞證)” issued to Taiwanese nationals by Chinese authorities for travel to China — could register for evacuation to Egypt. In Taipei, the ministry yesterday said Taiwan
Taiwan is awaiting official notification from the US regarding the status of the Agreement on Reciprocal Trade (ART) after the US Supreme Court ruled US President Donald Trump's global tariffs unconstitutional. Speaking to reporters before a legislative hearing today, Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) said that Taiwan's negotiation team remains focused on ensuring that the bilateral trade deal remains intact despite the legal challenge to Trump's tariff policy. "The US has pledged to notify its trade partners once the subsequent administrative and legal processes are finalized, and that certainly includes Taiwan," Cho said when asked about opposition parties’ doubts that the ART was
If China chose to invade Taiwan tomorrow, it would only have to sever three undersea fiber-optic cable clusters to cause a data blackout, Jason Hsu (許毓仁), a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislator, told a US security panel yesterday. In a Taiwan contingency, cable disruption would be one of the earliest preinvasion actions and the signal that escalation had begun, he said, adding that Taiwan’s current cable repair capabilities are insufficient. The US-China Economic and Security Review Commission (USCC) yesterday held a hearing on US-China Competition Under the Sea, with Hsu speaking on