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    U.S. to deport Taiwan envoy who abused Filipina maids

    (Reuters) - A U.S. federal judge ordered the deportation on Friday of a high-ranking official from Taiwan who pleaded guilty last year to human trafficking charges for abusing her two Filipina maids, the U.S. attorney's office said.

    Hsien-Hsien Liu, the 64-year-old director general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Kansas City, Missouri, was arrested in November and charged with fraud in foreign labor contracting in connection with her treatment of the two maids.

    Liu ultimately admitted to forcing the two women, whom she hired in the Philippines and brought to work for her in the United States between 2009 and 2011, to toil day and night for significantly less pay than promised in their contracts.

    U.S. District Judge Greg Kays sentenced Liu, who has been in custody since her arrest, to time served and ordered her deported back to Taiwan as part of a plea deal.

    Prosecutors said Liu told one of the women she would pay her $1,240 a month to work eight hours a day, five days a week -- but only paid her $450 a month and forced her to work 16 to 18 hours a day, seven days a week.

    She also installed surveillance cameras inside her home in Johnson County, Kansas, to monitor the woman, did not allow her to leave without supervision or permission, and seized her passport and visa and refused to return them.

    According to an FBI affidavit filed in the case, Liu also warned the woman she "was friends with local law enforcement and well known in the community, so if the (female victim) acted out, she would be deported."

    Liu pleaded guilty to the charges last November.

    In addition to the deportation order, the judge also ordered Liu to pay $80,044 in restitution to the women, as well as an as-yet unspecified fine, and to cover the full costs of her incarceration and deportation, including round-trip airfare for the U.S. immigration agents who escort her back to Taiwan.

    Liu's two former maids are eligible for T-visas, designed to help victims of human trafficking who cooperate with prosecutors. The visas will allow them to live and work legally in the United States and to apply for permanent residency after three years, the U.S. attorney's office said.

    (Reporting by James B. Kelleher; Editing by Cynthia Johnston)

     

    12 comments

    • Snafu B  •  26 days ago
      Taiwan should have known better than to risk a self inflicted black eye like this. ( A good example of both Formosan economics and culture.) Perhaps in the future, they will insure they send slave/master employees/representatives that do not break the law. Nice to see Justice wielding her sword & scales so!
    • melee401  •  26 days ago
      Typical greedy-doer. They all want to be just like this one and would be too if they could get away with it.
    • Steve  •  26 days ago
      I am cheering for the filipina ladies, I LIKE them
    • Independent1  •  Juneau, Alaska  •  26 days ago
      This story is unique only because the official was deported. Too often Filipina maids trying to escape poverty back home take overseas jobs well below their education level, only to be exploited by sadistic employers.
    • Gary P  •  Akron, Ohio  •  24 days ago
      great news that she is caught and convicted-----and very good result for the maids
    • ameribro  •  25 days ago
      We should let China take over Taiwan already. Taiwanese are a bunch of stupid arrogant asians. Their economy was benefitted by the US after WW2 and brought them to a modern country but that island still have a lot of backwood attitude. Their laws don't protect foreign women or maids from treatments like this. They're used to taking their maids passports away in Taiwan and get away with lots of abuse so they think they can do the same here. Their men(poor and rich) usually scouting poor asian countries looking for naive girls to marry to abuse them. They set up auditions in hotels and inspecting farm girls in the nude before marry them through a "Matchmaking" agency. This should be banned as human traffickings are rampage and tolerated by the stupid government of Taiwan.
    • steve  •  26 days ago
      nothing out of the ordinary for the people of taiwan or hong kong. filippinos are all maids in taiwan and hong kong. the filippinos are to chinese people as mexicans are to caucasian people. Eastern Hemisphere, Western Hemisphere, same thing.
    • SuperG  •  Portland, Oregon  •  26 days ago
      Oh I remember this from a few weeks ago. At that time the name was being kept secret and I conjectured that it was a Taiwanese politician with a lot of clout. I love being right! Though in hindsight, if I caused it to become public, now I'm on a hit list.
    • All Hail God or Die  •  26 days ago
      Hang him.
    • A Yahoo! user  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  26 days ago
      MANY "FOREIN" DOCTORS AND WELL TO DO HAVE MAIDS & SERVANTS(SLAVES)
      SZ
    • Beer!  •  26 days ago
      did you allow the maids to abuse him back first ??
    • tom g  •  26 days ago
      .....Can't wait till Mao's people swarm that stupid island and stop all this "Two China" Madness.......
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