The former deputy mayor of Taipei City Peng Zhensheng, including the three people, involved in the Beijing -Huacheng case, were detained, and they all protested, but were rejected by the Taiwan High Court on Friday (September 6).
Integrated Yiping News and United News Network reported that the Taipei Procuratorate was investigated in the Beijing City case in violation of the crime of violating the crime of corruption and crime. Peng Zhensheng was detained.Peng's lawyer protests.
The Taiwan High Court ruled that the original trial was crime of charting the corruption regulations with Peng Zhensheng involved in the corruption regulations.Extinction of evidence and ticking witnesses, if you only have less infringement, blame or restrict residence, are not enough to ensure the smooth progress of the prosecution procedure.Without violations or improper, Peng Zhensheng had no reason and should be rejected.
The Taigao High Court believes that Peng Zhensheng's current physical condition has not been able to take care of the serious illness.
Peng Zhensheng suddenly was uncomfortable when he returned from the Taipei District Court on Sunday (September 1), and he did not improve after taking the medicine. He even vomited and pant several times.Essence
Shen Qingjing, chairman of Weijing Group, involved bribery, assisting Guan Saying, and pressureing the municipal government to relax the plot ratio in the Jinghua City case.Shen Qingjing filed a protest that he was unwell, his whole body twitching on Thursday (September 5), and was urgently sent to the hospital for treatment.High Court believed that although Shen Qingjing had taken care of medical treatment, he had returned to the detention center's illness and continued to be treated. He was not detained with serious illness. Therefore, on Friday, he rejected his protest.
The High Court also handled the protest of Taipei City Councilor Ying Xiaowei Assistant Wu Shunmin.Both said that the two parties had no contact, and there was a reason to believe that the two would have a certificate, which was necessary to detain.