The Taipei District Court on Wednesday ruled that Cashbox Partyworld Co chairman Lien Tai-sheng (練台生) was not guilty of negligent homicide or other charges related to a fire in April 2020 that killed six people at a Cashbox outlet in Taipei.
In the same trial, contract maintenance foreman Wang Sheng-chieh (王聖傑) was found guilty and given a three-year prison sentence.
Weng Pei-wen (翁珮雯) and Chang Hui-chun (張惠純), the manager and deputy manager of the karaoke club respectively, and Huang Ssu-ming (黃思銘), an engineer who was in charge of the outlet’s renovation, were given prison sentences of one to two years, suspended for four years.
Photo: Lo Pei-de, Taipei Times
Two managers of the club who were also indicted, Chen Ssu-hung (陳思宏) and Hsieh Yung-kuei (謝勇奎), were found not guilty of any charges.
Beyond the guilty verdicts, the court imposed a fine of NT$300,000 (US$9,340) on Tee Kuang International Co, the Cashbox Partyworld subsidiary that operated the karaoke club, for contraventions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (職業安全衛生法).
The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office said it would assess whether to file an appeal.
In October 2020, the office indicted Lien and the six others over the incident on charges of negligent homicide, negligence resulting in injury, and contraventions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act and the Fire Services Act (消防法).
The court found that Lien, in his capacity as chairman of Cashbox Partyworld, and Tee Kuang International followed regulations covering the installation and maintenance of fire safety equipment.
However, he was not in charge of fire safety issues based on the organization’s different levels of responsibility and therefore was not subject to criminal liability, the court found.
The case revolved a fire that had its origins in an elevator installation project at the outlet that began in February 2020.
The club had planned to suspend operations during the installation process, but later opted to continue welcoming customers while repairs were ongoing.
The fire that broke out on April 26 at the outlet on Linsen N Road was believed to have been caused by a faulty battery in an electric laser level that was left charging in a storage room on the fourth floor by Wang, prosecutors said.
The battery caught fire, triggering the blaze, and fire and smoke soon spread to other floors through open fire safety doors that were not kept closed because of a revised fire compartmentation plan, prosecutors said.
Tee Kuang International reached a NT$90.11 million civil settlement with 56 victims, including the families of the deceased, according to court documents.
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