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Chen Yi-hsiung

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Template:Chinese name

Chen Yi-hsiung
Traditional Chinese陳義雄[1]
Simplified Chinese陈义雄
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinChén Yìxióng
Wade–GilesCh'en² I⁴-hsiung²
Tongyong PinyinChén Yì-syóng

Chen Yi-hsiung[1] (died 29 March 2004) is the prime suspect in the 3-19 shooting incident, a failed attempt to assassinate the president of Taiwan Chen Shui-bian, and perhaps vice president Annette Lu, on 19 March 2004, one day prior to the 2004 presidential election. Chen was unemployed and blamed the president for his economic woes.

Finding Chen Yi-hsiung

Working off of clues from a video that was shot near the attack, authorities spent months tracing the bullets used in the assassination attempt to an illegal gun maker. After questioning the individual, investigators were able to follow the purchase to Chen Yi-hsiung, who was found drowned in a harbour in Tainan 10 days after the attack.[2]

Controversy

While the case has officially been closed, with the main suspect Chen Yi-hsiung dead, police are having a hard time proving their theory. While Chen Yi-hsiung's death was officially ruled a suicide, with both suicide notes (supposedly burned by his family) and a video of his wife apologizing for her husband's crime backing up this theory, opponents of president Chen disagree with this conclusion.[citation needed] President Chen's foes claim that the assassination attempt was planned in order to win sympathy votes, which led to president Chen winning the election by just over 29,500 votes, barely hours after the attempted assassination.[3][4]

One theory, supported by Vice President Lu herself, is that there may have been two shooters. Whatever the case, the common sentiment is that few people, only 21% in a poll by the pan blue China Times newspaper, believe that Chen Yi-hsiung was the sole assailant and engineer of the attack.

Notes

  1. ^ a b Mo Yan-chih (2006-03-16). "Ma urges pan-blue lawmakers to initiate new probe". Taipei Times. Retrieved 2007-12-22.
  2. ^ Ramzy, Austin (2005-03-14). "Who Shot Chen Shui-Bian?". Time. Retrieved 2007-12-22.
  3. ^ "Inquiry says Taiwan's Chen faked shooting". chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2019-05-10.
  4. ^ correspondent, Michael A. Lev, Tribune foreign. "Faked-shooting charge takes a hit". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 2020-05-27. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)