《TAIPEI TIMES》 Prosecutors seek to hold Alex Tsai in CMPC case
Former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Central Policy Committee director Alex Tsai talks on a cellphone during a break from questioning at the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office yesterday. Photo: Lin Cheng-kun, Taipei Times
‘PRINCIPLED’: Former KMT chairperson Hung Hsiu-chu said Alex Tsai was found not guilty by the former SID, questioning the motive for the renewed investigation
By Chien Li-chung and Jake Chung / Staff reporter, with staff writer
The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office early yesterday morning asked the court to detain former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Central Policy Committee director Alex Tsai (蔡正元) for allegedly embezzling funds from the sale of Central Motion Pictures Corp (CMPC, 中央電影公司).
A hearing was still in progress at press time last night.
Tsai’s wife, Queena Hung (洪菱霙), has been confined to house arrest and prohibited from overseas travel following her release on Monday night on NT$3 million (US$98,782) bail.
Tsai late last month recused himself from any party position after he announced that he had been appointed chairperson of Jiangsu Min’An Automotive Co (敏安汽車) in China.
Tsai, former CMPC vice president Chuang Wan-chun (莊婉均) and Cheng Uei Precision Industry Co (正崴) chairman Gou Tai-chiang’s (郭台強) wife, Lor Yu-chen (羅玉珍), in 2006 raised NT$3.1 billion and jointly bought out CMPC, prosecutors said.
The shares were initially registered under Apollo Investment Co (阿波羅) — which was founded by Tsai — and were to be transferred to CMPC after accounts were cleared, prosecutors said.
Tsai allegedly gave Apollo NT$582 million under the guise of a capital reduction by convening an extraordinary shareholders’ meeting as president of Apollo, despite the company being only a nominal shareholder, and Lor being the actual owner of CMPC.
Tsai allegedly signed a contract with himself on behalf of Apollo, entrusting NT$430 million of the capital reduction funds to his name, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors accused Tsai of laundering money from Apollo through different accounts between 2007 and 2009.
A civil case filed by Gou against Apollo and Tsai in 2006 demanding the return of the capital reduction money might have also motivated Tsai to move the money, prosecutors said.
The Supreme Court in May last year upheld a ruling that Tsai must return NT$170 million to CMPC.
The alleged purchase of Chuang’s CMPC promissory note for NT$100 million that was withdrawn from Apollo, and NT$50 million for the alleged purchase of first-buying rights on any CMPC real estate — which CMPC did not agree to — were irregular trading activities that led to the suspicion of embezzlement, prosecutors said.
Tsai’s purchase of Forworld Electronics Co (福彥電子) shares in 2009 using Apollo funds — and then returning the funds in seven installments between 2009 and 2013 — was also suspicious, prosecutors said.
Tsai wired NT$65 million to his wife’s company, Chintsuan Co (金鑽), for investment in real estate in 2012 and 2013, which was not acceptable under the contract signed with his co-purchasers, the office said.
Meanwhile, former KMT chairperson Hung Hsiu-chu (洪秀柱) offered Tsai her support, saying that he was “a principled and honorable man.”
Previous investigations by the former Special Investigation Division (SID) found Tsai innocent, Hung said, adding that she was suspicious of the motives and timing behind the restarted investigation.
The government should not promote political oppression under the guise of a judicial investigation, Hung said.
新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES
Queena Hung, left, wife of former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Central Policy Committee director Alex Tsai, returns home after posting bail of NT$3 million late on Monday night. Photo: Lin Cheng-kun, Taipei Times
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