According to Taiwan's "Central News Agency" report, the office of former Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou had received a series of threatening letters with cashier's checks and stamps inside. Prosecutors and police determined that the woman surnamed Xu was involved in the case based on

2024/02/2121:20:32 hotcomm 1315

A Taiwanese woman sent a blackmail note to threaten Ma Ying-jeou and others. She was prosecuted because the saliva DNA on the stamp was exposed.

According to Taiwan's "Central News Agency" report, the office of former Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou had received a series of threats with bank cashier's checks and blackmail paper inside. According to the letter, prosecutors and police determined that the woman surnamed Xu was involved in the case based on the saliva DNA comparison on the stamps. The Taipei District Prosecutor's Office today (7th) charged the woman surnamed Xu with intimidation and other crimes.

According to Taiwan's
Taiwan media report screenshot

reported that an investigation by the Taipei District Prosecutor’s Office found that a woman surnamed Xu lived in Taipei City and moved because she was suspected of being dissatisfied with the residents in the community. In January this year, she falsely issued multiple denominations in the names of former neighbors surnamed Chen and Pan. Cashier's checks worth NT$880,000 each were sent to Ma Ying-jeou, "President of Supervision" Chen Ju, Taipei City Councilor Zhang Maonan of the Democratic Progressive Party and others.

In addition, the woman surnamed Xu is also suspected of sending letters to Ma Ying-jeou, Secretary-General of the Democratic Progressive Party Lin Xiyao, and Taipei City Councilor Xu Qiaoxin of the Kuomintang in March this year, using the names of former neighbors surnamed Chen and Pan. The envelope contained two paragraphs. Dark paper.

After receiving the report from Ma Ying-jeou's office and other units, the police conducted an investigation according to the letter address. However, the former neighbors surnamed Chen and Pan said that they did not send the letter and suspected that they were framed.

According to Taiwan's
Ma Ying-jeou information picture

After in-depth investigation, the police discovered that a woman surnamed Xu, who was a neighbor of the man surnamed Chen and the woman surnamed Pan, was involved in the case. They reported it to the prosecutor to direct the investigation, and later seized blank promissory notes and dead paper from the residence of the woman surnamed Xu. and five other envelopes with the names of politicians written on them but not yet sent.

The prosecutors compared the handwriting on the envelope with the saliva DNA on the stamps and identified the woman surnamed Xu as the sender. Prosecutors today charged her with forging securities, intimidation, forging documents and other crimes.

(Original title: A woman sent a threatening note to Ma Ying-jeou, and the saliva on the stamp was exposed...)

Source: Global Network

Process Editor: TF021

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