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Riot gun birthday surprise fail punished by fine in south Taiwan | Taiwan News
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A man who assaulted a driver with a police baton in a traffic altercation must pay NT$2,000 for carrying a banned weapon in his vehicle, the Keelung District Court ruled last month.
The man, surnamed Chang (張), 47, was driving along an alley of Keelung’s Renyi Road when the vehicle driven by a man surnamed Chou (周) blocked his way, the court filing showed.
Chang approached Chou with the baton, leading to an altercation in which both men were injured, it showed.
Responding to a call, officers from the Keelung Second Police Precinct broke up the fight and apprehended Chang, the court said,
High Court upholds verdict on dad who made kids kneel
By Yang Kuo-wen, Huang Chia-lin and Jonathan Chin / Staff reporters, with staff writer
The High Court on Wednesday upheld a guilty verdict against a Keelung man who made two of his children kneel in public with placards bearing humiliating remarks.
The court found the man, surnamed Chang (張), guilty of coercion and sentenced him to 20 days in prison, which is commutable to a NT$20,000 fine.
Chang in November last year made his son and daughter kneel in a busy public garage at the city’s main bus station, holding up pieces of paper saying: “I am a beggar,” the court said.
28 Apr 2021
Taiwan is considering a bill that would ban public displays of the communist Chinese flag as part of a set of reforms aimed at asserting Taiwanese sovereignty, including a passport redesign officials said on Tuesday had proven extremely popular.
A bill recently proposed by a member of Taiwan’s anti-communist Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) which opposes Chinese influence in Taiwan would ban “raising, lowering, hanging, displaying, holding or brandishing a political or military flag of a hostile foreign power in public places. Those found guilty would be subject to fines of up to $1,782,” the Diplomat reported on April 24.
The bill would target the public display of the five-star People’s Republic of China (PRC) flag in Taiwan and require an amendment to Taiwan’s National Security Act to “criminalize certain actions deemed hostile to the nation,” according to the Diplomat. DPP legislator Wang Ting-yu first proposed the amendment in October 2020 w
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