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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

Customs officials raid Korean Air over alleged tax evasion by chairman's daughter

A Gangseo Police Station investigator leaves an ad agency in Gongdeok-dong, Mapo-gu in Seoul, April 21, after raiding the company to search for evidences to prove the tax evation charge of Cho Hyun-min, Korean Air's senior vice president. / YonhapCustoms officials raided the headquarters of Korean Air Lines Co. and the residence of the chairman's daughter on Saturday to look into allegations that the heiress didn't pay duties on luxury goods brought into the country.Investigators from the Korea Customs Service stormed into the main office of the country's biggest airline in western Seoul and the house of Cho Hyun-min, Korean Air's senior vice president.Cho is also under probe over allegations that she threw water in the face of an ad agency manager during a meeting last month.Police recently raided the 35-year-old executive's office. She has been banned from overseas travel pending the probe.She is younger sister of Cho Hyun-ah, who made headlines four years ago for the high-profile "nut rage" scandal. (Yonhap)

Apr 21, 2018
Customs officials raid Korean Air over alleged tax evasion by chairman's daughter

Kim Kyoung-soo to be questioned on opinion-rigging

Amid mounting allegations of online opinion-rigging, ruling Democratic Party of Korea lawmaker Rep. Kim Kyoung-soo announces his run for Gyeonggi Province governor Thursday. YonhapBy Kim Hyun-binRep. Kim Kyoung-soo of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea has come under criticism, suspected of working with the power blogger nicknamed Druking, who has been arrested for online opinion-rigging.“I will be running for governor of South Gyeongsang Province and urge a swift investigation of the online opinion-rigging. If needed I will fully cooperate with the independent counsel,” Kim said.However, the lawmaker's statement came a day before new evidence surfaced and investigations show Kim has been in close contact with Druking for years.The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency revealed Friday that Kim sent at least 10 messages containing links to news articles related to the President from November 2016 until last month.Druking, known only by his surname Kim, received the messages through Telegram _ a Russia-based mobile messenger app similar to Kakao, except the messages are untrac

Apr 20, 2018
Kim Kyoung-soo to be questioned on opinion-rigging

Korean Air under investigation

Police search Korean Air in Seoul to collect evidence of Cho Hyun-min's alleged assault on an advertising company official Thursday. YonhapBy Kim Hyun-binPolice searched the headquarters of Korean Air Thursday, as part of the probe into Cho Hyun-min, who allegedly assaulted an advertising company worker during a meeting.Six police officers went to the airline's office to confiscate evidence related to the case, police said.Cho Hyun-min, the youngest daughter of Korean Air Chairman Cho Yang-ho, is accused of yelling and throwing a cup of water in the face of the manager of HS AD, an ad agency.Cho has denied the allegation saying she only pushed the manager.The police plan to confiscate Cho's smartphone through her lawyer, and could start questioning her next week. A travel ban has been issued against her.Strengthened investigationThe police searched Cho's office to find if there was any evidence of a cover up of the incident or to appease the victim or the ad firm.A day earlier, they went to the ad company and secured smartphone recordings of people that took part in the meeting.&ldqu

Apr 19, 2018
Korean Air under investigation

News magazine editor arrested for embezzling advertisement cash

By Park Si-soo A news magazine's managing editor was arrested for embezzling part of advertisement money wired from companies and public offices to head off damaging articles, the prosecution said Thursday. The editor has pocketed tens of millions of won since 2012, the Jeonju Prosecutors' Office said.Prosecutors said he threatened companies and government offices in North Jeolla Province that he would publish damaging articles if they did not run advertisements. Many organizations bowed to the threat and sent money for ads. But he spent part of it on personal purposes and did not publish some ads.

Apr 19, 2018
News magazine editor arrested for embezzling advertisement cash

'Lawmakers violate anti-graft law with improper overseas trips'

Lawmakers would be violating the anti-graft law if they go on trips funded by institutions and agencies under their oversight, the chief of the country's anti-corruption commission said Thursday.Such sponsored trips by lawmakers have been a target of public criticism in recent weeks following revelations that Kim Ki-sik, former chief of the Financial Supervisory Service, made a few overseas trips with money from institutions under the oversight of his parliamentary committee when he was a lawmaker.Kim argued that the trips might appear inappropriate but were "legitimate." But he ultimately resigned early this week, just two weeks after taking office, after the country's election watchdog found one of his past political fund donations a violation of election law.On Thursday, Pak Un-jong, head of the Anti-Corruption and Civil Rights Commission, told reporters that her agency consulted law experts about the appropriateness of such sponsored trips, and many of them concurred that it would be a violation of the Improper Solicitation and Graft Act."Regardless of whether it's during the per

Apr 19, 2018
'Lawmakers violate anti-graft law with improper overseas trips'

Russian in custody for violence on Korean Air plane

By Park Si-soo A Russian man has been arrested for abusing and elbowing cabin crew on a Korean Air flight, police said Thursday. The man, 53, is suspected of yelling at and tussling with cabin crew on the flight to Incheon International Airport from Thailand's resort island of Phuket on Wednesday. Police said he threw the tantrum at cabin crew and elbowed them when they intervened in his noisy altercation with his wife.Airport police arrested him onboard after the plane landed. The couple was on the way to Russia's Vladivostok via Incheon airport.

Apr 19, 2018
Russian in custody for violence on Korean Air plane

Top court confirms four-year jail term for ex-spy chief for election meddling

The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a four-year prison term for former National Intelligence Service (NIS) Director Won Sei-hoon on his conviction for political interference and election meddling.The close confidante of former President Lee Myung-bak was indicted in 2013 for running an illicit smear campaign to sway voters in favor of then-ruling party candidate Park Geun-hye ahead of the 2012 presidential election. Won headed the NIS from 2009-2013.NIS officials hired hundreds of civilians and retirees of the agency to post Internet comments against her liberal rival Moon Jae-in.Park won the 2012 election and was ousted in March 2017 over a corruption scandal. Moon became her successor after winning a snap election last May.The trial dragged on as court verdicts differed on whether he was guilty of violating election law, a crime punishable by a much heavier penalty than that for breaching NIS law.He was first found not guilty of the charge in the lowest court ruling in July 2014 and given a suspended term. But the appellate court overturned the verdict in February 2015 and had him

Apr 19, 2018
Top court confirms four-year jail term for ex-spy chief for election meddling

'Rage' probe: Police search Korean Air headquarters

By Jung Min-hoPolice searched the headquarters of Korean Air Thursday as part of their investigation of allegations that senior vice president Cho Hyun-min (Emily Cho) splashed water in the face of an advertising agency employee. The Seoul Gangseo Police Station said it sent six officers to the main building of the country's largest airline in western Seoul to gather evidence. Cho, the sister of Cho Hyun-ah (Heather Cho), who made world headlines for the 2014 "nut rage" aircraft incident, is accused of throwing a cup of water into the face of the manager of Korean Air's advertising agency, HS AD, at a recent meeting in her Seoul office.Police searched her office and the office of the marketing department, which she had headed until the issue emerged, to discover whether there was any attempt to cover up the incident or appease the victim or the advertising agency. If the accusation is true, she could be prosecuted for assault. But Cho has denied the allegation, insisting she did not throw the cup at the manager.Police said they are also seeking a travel ban on Emily Cho, who is an Am

Apr 19, 2018
'Rage' probe: Police search Korean Air headquarters
  • Sister of Korean Air 'nut rage' heiress in her own rage controversy
  • Police seek travel ban for Korean Air heiress

Korean dies while trekking on Pacific Crest Trail

A South Korean man died of a cardiovascular problem while trekking last week on a long-distance route in the western United States, the South Korean Consulate General in Los Angeles said Thursday, urging people to refrain from extreme exertion.The 65-year-old man, whose name was not released, collapsed on Friday while walking on a mountain road in the vicinity of San Diego, California, on the Pacific Crest Trail, which runs 2,663 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border through California, Oregon and Washington, according to the South Korean diplomatic mission. The trail, which reaches its northern terminus at the U.S.-Canada border, is known as a challenging through-hiking and backpacking route through some of the country's most spectacular wilderness ranges."Trips in an extreme situation can be lethal to those who have high blood pressure or other chronic illnesses," the consul general said.Together, the Pacific Crest Trail, the Appalachian Trail and the Continental Divide Trail are known as the Triple Crown of long-distance hiking in the United States.An increasing number of South Korean

Apr 19, 2018
Korean dies while trekking on Pacific Crest Trail

Stronger fire safety needed for Hongdae nightclubs

Clubbers line up outside a nightclub near Hongik University, March 29, 2018. / Korea Times photo by Lee Suh-yoonBy Lee Suh-yoonA false fire alarm at a nightclub in western Seoul has exposed its lack of preparedness for possible disasters.On Feb. 11, the fire alarm went off at a nightclub called Hive, near Hongik University in western Seoul; but it turned out to be a false alarm.However, the police found the exits were cluttered with boxes blocking evacuation routes. Experts say such fire safety violations are common at the area's 40 clubs.“This is a big social problem because it could raise the death toll. Further inspection is needed,” said Choi Jun-ho, a professor of firefighting engineering at Pukyong National University.“I've visited clubs two to three times in the past for research. I found fire extinguishers were hidden in order to keep them out of sight from drunken clubbers who might break them,” Choi said. The police cannot detect such violations unless they are called in to investigate cases involving bar fights, sexual harassment or fire-related acc

Apr 18, 2018
Stronger fire safety needed for Hongdae nightclubs
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