Rescuers are still digging through the rubble of the toppled Wei-kuan apartment complex in the southern city of Tainan which collapsed during Saturday's quake -- 30 residents remain missing and the death toll has climbed to 94.
Prosecutors questioning the developer and two others connected with the building have said there were "flaws" in the residential complex, including a lack of steel reinforcement girders.
Tainan's district court today gave the city government the go-ahead to freeze up to USD 908,623 in assets belonging to the building's developer Lin Ming-hui and three associates, according to a government statement.
"The Tainan district court handled it quickly, and granted... Provisional seizure up to USD 908,623 million of the assets of the related people," the statement said.
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It added the move was to prevent the developer and associates from "disposing assets".
The fourth to have assets seized was a contractor used during the construction of the Wei-kuan building, the only high-rise to crumble completely in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake. He has not been detained.
USD 908,623 million is a preliminary figure to cover the property damages of victims who have already made claims, the Tainan government statement said.
The government has also identified land owned by Lin -- totalling at least 30 plots in Tainan -- and has directed local authorities to prevent any sale of those assets.
Engineers helping at the rescue site added that some walls many have been knocked down on the ground floor, which housed part of a multi-storey electronics store.
The Wei-kuan building had 96 apartments and was completed in 1994, before a new building code was brought in following a devastating earthquake that left 2,400 people dead in 1999.
The building collapse has struck a nerve with the public, increasingly embittered by a string of disasters, from food safety scandals to a water park explosion that left 15 dead.