| DPP alleges 
misconduct in Ma’s case
 ‘DISTORTION’: KMT Secretary-General Tseng 
Yung-chuan rejected DPP claims that he had tried to influence Ma’s corruption 
trial in 2007 by speaking to prosecutors
 
 By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff reporter
 
 
 Tseng Yung-fu, right, who 
resigned as minister of justice on Friday, bids farewell to staff members at the 
ministry in Taipei yesterday.Photo: CNA
 
 Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) 
Secretary-General Tseng Yung-chuan (曾永權) yesterday denied allegations that he 
had visited then-prosecutor-general Chen Tsung-ming (陳聰明) over a lawsuit 
involving then-KMT chairman Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) in 2007.
 Tseng said that while it was true he had paid Chen a visit after Ma was found 
not guilty in the first trial of a corruption case regarding his use of special 
allowance funds granted to him during his tenure as Taipei mayor from 1998, the 
visit had nothing to do with Ma.
 
 The allegation made by the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) that the visit was 
aimed at urging prosecutors not to appeal Ma’s acquittal in the first trial was 
“a distortion of the truth,” Tseng said.
 
 As a caucus whip at the time, Tseng said he was commissioned by the caucus to 
express their concern to Chen that local prosecutors may have made a different 
interpretation on the proper use of special allowances.
 
 “We were there to express our hope that Chen should address the problem and had 
made no mention of any single case during our conservation,” he said.
 
 The fact that prosecutors had lodged an appeal against the not-guilty verdict 
afterward clearly “disproved the allegation,” Tseng said.
 
 Hou Kuan-jen (侯寬仁), then a prosecutor with the Supreme Prosecutors’ Office, 
indicted Ma on charges of corruption on Feb. 13, 2007. Ma cleared his name on 
April 23, 2008, after the third and final verdicts were handed down. He was also 
ruled not guilty in his first and second trials.
 
 According to DPP Legislator Tsai Huang-liang (蔡煌瑯), Vice President Wu Den-yih 
(吳敦義), who was then the KMT secretary-general, had instructed Tseng to urge 
Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (王金平) to convince Hou from appealing the first 
trial because Hou is a relative of Wang, but Wang declined to meddle in the 
case.
 
 Meanwhile, former minister of justice Tseng Yung-fu (曾勇夫) had been immediately 
discharged, in accordance with a personnel order signed by Ma and delivered to 
the Ministry of Justice yesterday.
 
 Deputy Minister of Justice Chen Ming-tang (陳明堂) will serve as acting minister 
from today until a new appointment is made, the Executive Yuan said.
 
 Tseng tendered his resignation on Friday after he was accused of using his 
influence to urge the prosecutor in charge of a breach of trust case not to 
appeal a High Court verdict. The case involved DPP Legislator Ker Chien-ming 
(柯建銘), who was found not guilty after two previous guilty verdicts. Tseng’s 
resignation was accepted immediately that day by Premier Jiang Yi-huah (江宜樺).
 
 Additional reporting by CNA
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