Prosecutors on Friday charged the owner and proprietors of Wagyu Emperor, a high-end grilled meat restaurant in Taichung, for allegedly having expired food products and suspicion of fraud. Consumers had filed a complaint and an investigation was launched in April.
The three indicted are Japanese nationals: Wagyu Emperor chairman Toshi Sakamoto, 35; restaurant general manager Atsuya Kubo, 25; and head chef Shohei Yamazoe, 42.
Prosecutors requested the maximum sentence, alleging that the trio was hostile to investigators, threatened media reporters for publishing news reports on the case and said they would not compensate the consumers who were allegedly victimized.
Photo provided by the Taichung City Health Bureau
Prosecutors also asked the court to seize NT$78,300 (US$2,409) profit related to the incident.
In April, consumers had filed a complaint and a “food safety alert” was raised, leading to an inspection by the Taichung City Health Bureau and a preliminary probe by prosecutors. The Ministry of Justice’s Investigation Bureau searched the restaurant, looked at its food products, and confiscated receipts, purchase order records, menus and preparation lists.
Wagyu Emperor was started by Takuya Sakamoto, who ran a food supply firm in Taiwan, in September last year. It was later handed over to his brother, Toshi Sakamoto, prosecutors said.
Sakamoto Toshi hired Kubo as the store’s general manager and Yamazoe as head chef.
“The trio knew the Kobe beef they purchased was past its due date, but they still continued to sell the meat and promoted the restaurant as ‘the highest peak of Taichung’s Japanese yakiniku restaurants,’” prosecutors said.
“From January to March, they sold to 29 customers at NT$2,900 per person. They profited NT$78,300 while causing serious health issues and contravening consumer rights,” the indictment said.
The investigation allegedly found that the Kobe beef’s “best before” date was at the start of December last year, but they continued to sell until March this year, it said.
The trio contravened the Act Governing Food Safety and Sanitation (食品安全衛生管理法) by selling food past its expiration date, the indictment said. They would also be charged with aggravated fraud and causing harm to health under the Criminal Code.
Prosecutors said that the trio did not prioritize food safety.
They sold expired items to reduce loss and gain profit, despite their promotions and advertisements saying “we use top-class wagyu beef,” “our mission is to carry on the tradition of Japanese yakiniku food culture,” “customers would feel like they are in Japan,” and “we only use the highest class of Japanese beef, for highest-class dining experience,” the filing said.
Wagyu Emperor has been bought by a Taiwanese business team and has been reopened. The restaurant’s name and address remain the same.
TECH SECTOR: Nvidia Corp also announced its intent to build an overseas headquarters in Taiwan, with Taipei and New Taipei City each attempting to woo the US chipmaker The US-based Super Micro Computer Inc and Taiwan’s Guo Rui on Wednesday announced a joint venture to build a computation center powered only by renewable energy. After meeting with Supermicro founder Charles Liang (梁見後) and Guo Rui chairman Lin Po-wen (林博文), Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) instructed a cross-ministry panel to be established to help promote the government’s green energy policies and facilitate efforts to obtain land for the generation of green power, Executive Yuan spokesperson Michelle Lee (李慧芝) said. Cho thanked Liang for his company’s support of the government’s 2019 Action Plan for Welcoming Overseas Taiwanese Businesses to Return to Invest in
The unification of China and Taiwan is “non-negotiable,” China’s Taiwan Affairs Office (TAO) said yesterday in response to an article by a Chinese academic suggesting that Beijing would not set a timetable for the annexation of Taiwan in the next four years. Chinese international studies researcher Yan Xuetong (閻學通) at Beijing’s Tsinghua University wrote in an article published last week in Foreign Affairs that China’s focus for the next four years would be revitalizing the economy, not preparing a timetable to invade Taiwan. The TAO said that was only the personal opinion of an academic. The Chinese Communist Party has since 1949 committed
China is likely to focus on its economy over the next four years and not set a timetable for attempting to annex Taiwan, a researcher at Beijing’s Tsinghua University wrote in an article published in Foreign Affairs magazine on Friday. In the article titled “Why China isn’t scared of Trump: US-Chinese tensions may rise, but his isolationism will help Beijing,” Chinese international studies researcher Yan Xuetong (閻學通) wrote that the US and China are unlikely to go to war over Taiwan in the next four years under US president-elect Donald Trump. While economic and military tensions between the US and China would
The National Immigration Agency (NIA) said Thursday it had caught 124 people attempting to use forged documents to visit Taiwan since allowing Chinese nationals based overseas to apply for entry permits in September last year. The NIA’s revelation comes after unnamed immigration officials and travel agency workers cited in a CNA report Wednesday said that Chinese entry permit applicants had submitted forged documents showing they were students in Malaysia. After closing its borders to Chinese tourists on Jan. 22, 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Taiwan began allowing those living or studying outside of China to enter from a third country on Sept.