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President’s Friend Avoids Detention

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  • Published Jun 2, 2009 5:54 pm KST
  • Updated Jun 2, 2009 5:54 pm KST

By Park Si-soo

Staff Reporter

A court rejected a prosecution request made Tuesday for an arrest warrant for Chun Shin-il, CEO of Sejoongnam Tour and a close friend of President Lee Myung-bak.

Chun has been accused of bribery and tax evasion between 2006 and 2007.

Judge Kim Hyung-doo at the Seoul Central District Court, rejected the request at 10:30 p.m. after questioning Chun over the corruption allegations surrounding him.

Chun has been accused of pressuring tax authorities to suspend an audit into Park Yeon-cha, the indicted CEO of shoemaker Taekwang, last year in return for monetary benefits worth about 700 million won ($560,000).

He is also suspected of evading some 10 billion won in taxes by illegally handing over part of a stake in his company to his three children in April 2006 with the help of Park.

Meanwhile, the opposition Democratic Party (DP) filed a suit against senior prosecutors for making public unconfirmed information and allegations they uncovered during the investigation of the late former President Roh Moo-hyun.

The party said it had filed the suit with the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors' Office against senior prosecutors, including Lee In-gyu, head of a central investigation unit of the Supreme Prosecutors' Office, Hong Man-pyo and Woo Byeong-woo.

It said in a complaint that they intentionally leaked information they found during the investigation to the media before Roh was officially prosecuted, which is illegal.

``Roh denied all bribery allegations surrounding him. But they snubbed them and kept releasing one-sided information to the media to corner him,'' it said. ``They even gave daily press briefings on the progress of their investigation.''

Under the law, those leaking investigation information before a suspect stands trial can face up to three years in prison or have their license suspended for up to five years.

``They should have announced information confirmed by both sides. They have to play by the rules and meet people's right to know in a sound way,'' said Kim Yoo-jung, DP spokesman. ``They also didn't respect Roh's right to be treated the same as an innocent person until indicted.''

pss@koreatimes.co.kr