
S Korean ex-first lady Kim Keon Hee faces public questioning
Kim, the wife of jailed former President Yoon Suk Yeol, arrived late at the office of special counsel Min Joong-ki.
She is the first spouse of a sitting or former president to publicly appear as a suspect in a criminal probe, according to Yonhap news agency.
She is accused of participating in a stock price manipulation scheme involving Deutsch Motors, a BMW dealer in South Korea, between 2009 and 2012.
Kim is also suspected of meddling in candidate nominations during the 2022 parliamentary by-elections and the 2024 general elections.
In addition, she allegedly received luxury gifts from the Unification Church through a shaman in return for business favours.
'She will go in there and testify to the way things are,' her legal team told Yonhap.
The special counsel is investigating a total of 16 criminal allegations against her, suggesting further summons are likely.
In past cases, other first ladies were also questioned by prosecutors, though not publicly at the time.
In 2004, Lee Soon Ja, wife of former President Chun Doo Hwan, was questioned in a slush fund case. In 2009, Kwon Yang Sook, wife of former President Roh Moo Hyun, was summoned as a witness in a corruption probe. - Bernama-Yonhap

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
9 hours ago
- The Star
South Korea to offer visa-free entry to Chinese tourists from late September
A large crowd of tourists walks through Bukchon Hanok Village in Seoul, South Korea, October 25, 2024. - Photo: Reuters file SEOUL: South Korea will offer visa-free entry to tourist groups from China, for a temporary period from September 29 through June 2026, to boost foreign tourism ahead of an Asia-Pacific summit, the government said on Wednesday (Aug 6). The visa-free offer was first announced in March after China's decision last November to offer a visa exemption to South Koreans and foreign visitors from other countries. The Reuters Daily Briefing newsletter provides all the news you need to start your day. Sign up here. It also comes amid expectations that ties between the two countries will improve under the new South Korean administration of liberal President Lee Jae Myung. The decision to introduce the measure ahead of a Chinese holiday period in early October will help boost the domestic economy amid a recovery in foreign visits, the tourism ministry said, after a meeting to discuss measures to revitalise tourism ahead of the Asia-Pacific summit. South Korea will host a summit of leaders from 21 economies for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum from October 31 to November 1 in the southeastern city of Gyeongju, a gathering where Chinese leader Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump might hold separate talks. Shares of South Korean department stores, casinos, hotels and beauty product makers rallied on hopes of a boost from Chinese demand. Hyundai Department Store ( opens new tab shares jumped 7.1%, Hotel Shilla ( opens new tab rose 4.8%, casino operator Paradise ( opens new tab climbed 2.9% and Hankook Cosmetics ( opens new tab surged 9.9%. - Reuters


The Star
13 hours ago
- The Star
'Trigger' review: Warning, shameless button-pushing ahead
The brisk, violent and morally murky K-drama Trigger is a study in contrasts. The show is pretty ambitious, aiming for a serial thriller vibe while tackling tough questions about gun control, violence begetting violence, and humanity's general indifference to the suffering of others. Yet it is puzzling how something that scores so highly on the bingeability scale can also shoot itself in the foot so frequently when it comes to believability. For better or for worse, this 10-episode "alternate society" series sends viewers down a darkly dystopian path as it ponders the effect of guns suddenly flooding a powderkeg of assorted social ills. From grieving mothers to bullied students, overlooked gangland underlings to harassed apartment dwellers, South Korean citizens mysteriously receive guns on their doorsteps. Of course, you can guess how most – though not all – of these scenarios play out. It's heartening to see that writer-director Kwon Oh-seung (Midnight) chooses to have some secondary characters take the high road, even if much of Trigger's manipulative plotting seems to push everyone down the low road. 'After reviewing the footage of yesterday's shootout, we're convinced you'll look cooler next time if you advance towards danger with your gun angled upwards instead of pointing straight ahead.' The victims are all too vulnerable and helpless, their tormentors one-dimensionally cruel and unrepentant; and it should be noted that one sequence set in a school is deeply disturbing in its almost offhand depiction of juvenile carnage. Much of Trigger revolves around frenemies Lee Do (Kim Nam-gil, Fiery Priest, Through The Darkness) and Moon Baek (Kim Young-kwang, Hot Young Bloods, Mission: Possible). Lee is ex-military (though he's sometimes referred to in the subtitles as a mercenary), now a policeman who prefers non-lethal methods of subduing even the most vicious perps, and whose empathy has endeared him to the community – if not all his superiors. Moon is a mysterious figure who always seems to be in the right (wrong?) place when stuff hits the fan, and initially helps Lee as waves of gun violence sweep through the city. Together and separately, they are charismatic leads who grab and hold our interest in whichever what-if scenario Kwon happens to be pitching at us, though ultimately Nam-gil's hero cop comes across as more admirable and fully formed than Young-kwang's larger-than-life but sketchily shaped antagonist. Trigger is certainly not short on action sequences, many of them executed with the same verve as Nam-gil's famous beatdowns from his Fiery Priest days (set to a familiar-sounding score), with some slick shoot-'em-up sequences too. One scene where Moon deals with a van-load of thugs even evokes vintage Jackie Chan slapstick fights seldom emulated in this neck of the woods. The series also serves up human drama in buckets, and the ensuing pathos should not be lost on even the most jaded, stone-hearted viewer. 'Don't blame me for how I act in this series, it's in my DNA. I'm a Hot Young Blood, after all.' Where Trigger stumbles, however, is in the motivation and grand plan of its principal villain, the lever and fulcrum with which he plans to move the whole world (sorry, just watched The Fantastic Four: First Steps, insert sheepish grin emoji here) – it just doesn't hold water. Also, dystopian alternate reality or not, it's pretty baffling how the baddie and his goons can brazenly commit multiple murders of law enforcement personnel on camera, in a public place, and not spark a nationwide manhunt. At least, nothing of that sort is even hinted at in the script right up to the finale, where the authorities appear content to just gawk or mill about helplessly while chaos ensues. Not our man Lee Do, though. Expect him to be in the thick of the action and drama as he engages in battles of philosophy and physicality with the bad guys, all to show his adversary that it's not hypocritical to espouse peace while indulging in some John Wick-style gun fu. The rough edges aside, you can't deny that Kwon is pretty clued in to the pressures, injustices and sense of helplessness that appear to have permeated most urban settings around the globe these days. Just that he often chooses to take a sensationalised approach instead of having the characters argue their respective cases in a calmer atmosphere. It's hard to pay attention to people arguing semantics when there's so much hot lead flying around. All 10 episodes of Trigger are available on Netflix.


Sinar Daily
13 hours ago
- Sinar Daily
Museum staff pleads not guilty to sexually abusing 6-year-old South Korean girl
The accused entered his plea before Judge Irwan Suainbon after the charge was read to him in Malay. The accused pleads not guilty to the charge of sexual abuse involving a South Korean child last July. GEORGE TOWN - A museum counter staff member has pleaded not guilty at the Sessions Court in George Town to a charge of sexually abusing a six-year-old South Korean girl at a hotel in July. The accused, Chong Khay Tee, 18, entered his plea before Judge Irwan Suainbon after the charge was read to him in Malay. He was not represented by legal counsel during the proceedings. According to the charge sheet, Chong, who works at the TeddyVille Museum inside the hotel, is accused of touching the private parts of the young victim at around 4pm on July 31. The charge falls under Section 14(a) of the Sexual Offences Against Children Act 2017, which provides for a maximum sentence of 20 years' imprisonment and whipping upon conviction. During the proceedings, Deputy Public Prosecutor Lee Jung Keong offered bail at RM10,000 with one surety, while also requesting several conditions to be imposed. 'I request additional conditions that the accused not be allowed to approach the victim or interfere with prosecution witnesses. 'In addition, the accused's passport must be surrendered to the court, if available, until the case is concluded,' said Lee. The accused, dressed in a purple jersey, appeared confused when asked to respond. 'I don't know what to say. I just want a lower bail,' he pleaded. The court granted bail of RM8,000 with one surety and accepted all additional conditions proposed by the prosecution. The case has been set for mention on Oct 6, pending the submission of documents and the appointment of a defence lawyer. More Like This