Teacher Wang Po-Chi was interviewed by TVBS News Network: “First Tax Investigation to Arrest a Boss”: The Tiandao League’s Iron Tyrant and Sun Alliance Vice Leader Arrested.

Reporters Guo Ying and Wu Yuya / Photography Chen Yingren and Cai Mingxun / Editor-in-Chief News Center Report Published: 2025/08/19 18:18 Last Updated: 2025/08/19 21:31 Taiwan’s first “tax investigation” to apprehend a gang leader! Prosecutors and police launched Operation Anti-gang 2.0, shifting from tracing the source of violent crimes to investigating taxation instead. They successfully arrested over 20 people, including …

Teacher Wang Po-Chi, in an interview with Today’s News, discusses three key areas of the government’s fight against fraud! Police officers, facing online threats and intimidation, claim they can’t arrest the perpetrators. Cryptocurrency scammers vanish, leaving no recourse for redress. Light sentences for scammers fuel rampant fraud

NOWNEWS In July 2025, a family of five in Taichung, suspected of being deceived by a gold investment scam and burdened by heavy debt, committed suicide. In December 2024, a mother and daughter in Neihu, Taipei, lost approximately NT$12 million to an investment fraud and committed suicide after leaving a suicide note. Cases of fraud rings driving victims to despair …

Teacher Wang Po-Chi was interviewed by Today’s News: The Battle Against Fraud Part 3 / Fake Investments Raise 72.98 Billion Yuan Annually, Dominating the Scam List

Reporter Zhang Hongyi / Special Report 2025-08-14 08:05:12 2025-08-14 08:06:17 “People can’t earn wealth beyond knowledge, do you agree?” He gushed endlessly about the wonders of cryptocurrency, claiming to build a world-leading crypto trading platform. Under the dazzling lights, the packed auditorium was captivated. The Shenxing Exchange, known as “SUREX,” lured investors into the cryptocurrency world, hoping for riches. Little …

Teacher LIN,SHU-LI was interviewed by PTS News Network: A woman, after being stopped from transferring money after a netizen claimed she needed NT$100,000 in shipping fees for a gift, realized it was a scam.

Published: 2025/8/9 12:31 PM Updated: 2025/8/9 3:01 PM Lin Jiansheng and Peng Huanqun / Local Report A woman in Taichung met a wealthy, handsome man on an online social network. The man pretended to have a gift for her, but demanded NT$100,000 in shipping fees before it could be sent. When she went to the post office to transfer the …