The XREX memory blockchain investigator's car accident has raised concerns from all walks of li
According to a press release from the Supreme Prosecutors Office, the chief investigator of blockchain financial crimes at Taiwan's cryptocurrency exchange XREX traveled to Taiwan on Wednesday to answer questions about the case and then took a ride back north. Unfortunately, he died in a chase car accident on a national highway in the early hours of Thursday, raising doubts about the suspicious points involved in the case. The Supreme Prosecutors Office has instructed the Hsinchu District Prosecutors Office to establish a special investigation team to investigate the cause of the car accident and clarify the case today.
According to a report by the Central News Agency, earlier on the same day, another car accident occurred about 800 meters away on the same road section, resulting in one death and three injuries. The injured included Hao Guangmin, a former member of the Four Seas Gang who was involved in instigating the shooting of Chairman Wu of the Weizhen Group. Although the national highway police have preliminarily determined that there should be no direct causal relationship between the two accidents, the XREX investigator surnamed Chen assisted the prosecutors in clarifying the flow of funds from creative private houses, and the person in charge of the 88 Club, Guo Zhemin, was involved in underground exchange of funds. Therefore, this car accident has aroused many doubts from the outside world.
In a press release, the Supreme Procuratorate pointed out that Procurator General Xing had sent the relevant opinions of countrymen people to the Hsinchu Local Procuratorate in Taiwan this morning. The Procuratorate General Xing was asked to appoint prosecutors to set up a special case team to investigate the cause of the accident, clarify the relevant doubts, and request the Hsinchu Local Procuratorate to report the investigation results to the Taiwan High Procuratorate and the Supreme Procuratorate as soon as possible.
The investigator surnamed Chen, who died in a car accident, assisted the Criminal Police Department's virtual currency confiscation task force in cracking down on multiple investment fraud cases. According to a press release from the Criminal Investigation Bureau, as of the end of November, there were a total of 60 investment fraud cases, and the bureau has frozen and seized nearly NT $10 billion in illegal gains from virtual currencies of criminal groups. Investigator Chen provided technical guidance to the task force with professional knowledge and played a key role in the process.