Guangze Clinic Involved in Voyeurism, Person in Charge Fled to China and Not Returned; New Taipei Prosecutors Urge Prompt Return

A hidden camera voyeurism scandal at Guangze Clinic has led the New Taipei District Prosecutors Office to urge its person in charge, Wang Chao-hui, who fled to China before the incident, to return promptly for investigation. Two individuals, an operations director and an IT manager, have been detained for allegedly instructing employees to remove surveillance cameras.
その他NQ 0/100出典:PR Times

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  • 📰 Published: May 11, 2026 at 13:08
  • 🔍 Collected: May 11, 2026 at 13:31 (23 min after Published)
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Central News Agency

(Central News Agency reporter Tsao Ya-yen, New Taipei, 11th) Guangze Clinic is involved in hidden camera voyeurism. Prosecutors and police found that Chen, the group's operations director, and Tang, the IT manager, allegedly instructed employees to remove surveillance cameras, and both have been detained without bail. Wang Chao-hui, the person in charge of Guangze Clinic, had already left the country for China before the incident, and the New Taipei District Prosecutors Office today urged him to return to Taiwan promptly to face the investigation.

The New Taipei District Prosecutors Office issued a press release stating that Wang Chao-hui, the person in charge of Guangze Clinic, had left the country for China before the incident and has not yet returned. The New Taipei District Prosecutors Office urges him to return to Taiwan as soon as possible to explain the case and face judicial investigation.

After the Aierli Clinic was suspected of a hidden camera voyeurism case, on the 5th, residents in New Taipei discovered that Guangze Clinic's Banqiao Zhongshan branch was suspected of having disguised surveillance camera lenses. The police received a report in the early morning of the 8th. The District Prosecutors Office directed the New Taipei City Police Department's Women and Children Protection Team and relevant precincts to successively search five branches of Guangze Medical Aesthetics Clinic: Banqiao Qian, Banqiao Zhongshan, Sanxia, Sanchong, and Xinzhuang. The Department of Health also dispatched personnel to assist with administrative inspections.

After the search, prosecutors and police found that three branches—Banqiao Zhongshan, Qian, and Sanchong—had traces of surveillance cameras being removed. The police traced the clues and found that a man surnamed Chen, the operations director of Guangze Group and manager of the Banqiao Zhongshan branch, and a man surnamed Tang, the head of the Information Research and Development Department, allegedly instructed employees to remove disguised surveillance recording equipment from the clinics.

After being notified to appear and transferred to the prosecutor for questioning, Chen and Tang were deemed to be involved in offenses such as unauthorized recording of sexual images, unauthorized secret recording of private body parts, violations of the Personal Data Protection Act, and attempted filming of sexual images of children and adolescents under the Child and Youth Sexual Exploitation Prevention Act. Given the risk of flight and collusion with accomplices and witnesses, their detention without bail was approved by the court on the 9th. The other five engineers involved in the case were released on bail of NT$500,000 after questioning.

The prosecutor urges victims, if contacted by the police, to cooperate in confirming and considering whether to file a complaint. Victims can also inquire with the police whether they are within the retention period of surveillance footage and actively report the case to cooperate with the police investigation. (Edited by Hsiao Po-wen) 1150511

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