Ting Hsin food firm boss charged over tainted cooking oil
The head of a lard supplier in Taiwan was formally charged yesterday with deliberately selling adulterated cooking oil.

The head of a lard supplier in Taiwan was formally charged yesterday with deliberately selling adulterated cooking oil.
The indictment of Wei Ying-chun, one of four brothers who run the Ting Hsin International Group, was delivered by the Taipei District Prosecutors Office. Charges include fraud and forgery.
Wei was already in custody in Chunghua county in the centre of the island on a charge linked to a cooking oil scandal implicating another subsidiary of the group.
It has been accused of using oil meant for animal feed in its products.
Another subsidiary of the firm, Wei Chuan Foods Corp, Taiwan's second-largest food manufacturer, was found to have sold food products made with gutter oil, a potentially harmful mixture of waste oil recycled from restaurant fryers and slaughterhouse byproducts.
Bowing to public pressure, Wei had resigned from his positions as chairman of three of the group's subsidiaries.