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Showing posts with label Korean Air. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Korean Air. Show all posts

Monday, July 2, 2018

South Korean Prosecutors Seek Arrest Warrant for Korean Air Chairman

Corruption is Everywhere
 - and it's completely trashed this once powerful South Korean family
By Wooyoung Lee 

Korean Air Lines Co. Chairman Cho Yang-ho appears at a prosecution office in Seoul on June 28, 2018, to undergo questioning over allegations of tax evasion, breach of trust and embezzlement. Photo by Yonhap

SEOUL, UPI -- South Korean prosecutors issued an arrest warrant Monday for Korean Air Chairman Cho Yang-ho for charges of inheritance tax evasion and embezzlement, among others.

Cho was summoned for a 15-hour questioning last week over such allegations at the Seoul Prosecutors' Office.

He has been under probe over suspicion that he evaded taxes for more than $45 million (50 billion won) in his inheritance of overseas properties from his father Cho Joong-hoon, the founder of Korean Air Lines, according to Yonhap.

Cho is also accused of paying his lawyer's fee from the company budget when his daughter Cho Hyun-ah, then the Korean Air vice president, was under trial over the notorious "nut rage" incident in 2014.

He also allegedly paid another lawyer's fee with the company fund when he was being investigated over a scandal, in which he received an unfair request to hire a lawmaker's relative in 2015.

Cho also faces an allegation of raising illicit profits from running a pharmacy.

It is the third time that a key member of the Korean Air founding family was called for an investigation and sought with an arrest warrant. Earlier, prosecutors requested arrest warrants for Cho's wife Lee Myung-hee for charges of illegally hiring foreign housekeepers, assault and verbal abuse.

Cho's daughter Hyun-min, the former vice president of Korean Air Lines' budget Jin Air, was also accused of assault from throwing a cup of water to a business meeting attendee.

The court, however, declined to issue arrest warrants for both mother and daughter.

You would almost think this family had made some powerful political enemies considering some of the charges leveled at them. Regardless of whether or not they have enemies, they seem to keep giving them ammunition to shot them with. Both daughters resigned from the airlines in April, and the father resigned in May (2nd story on link). 


Thursday, May 10, 2018

Corruption is Everywhere - In China and Especially South Korea

Anbang founder Wu Xiaohui sentenced
to 18 years for fraud
By Danielle Haynes (UPI)

A Shanghai court on Thursday sentenced Wu Xiaohui, founder of Anbang Insurance Group, to 18 years in prison for fraud and abuse of power.


The Shanghai No. 1 Intermediate People's Court also confiscated $1.65 billion of Wu's assets as part of the Chinese government's efforts to crack down on fraud and abuse of power.

The sentence came after a one-day trial in March in which Wu admitted he fraudulently raised billions of dollars from investors. Authorities first detained Wu last June.

The court said Wu instructed the falsification of documents and personally embezzled some of the premiums from the company. The government seized the privately held company in February and was expected to oversee Anbang for at least a year until new investors are found.

The seizure was China's largest takeover of a privately owned company.

Anbang has $315 billion in assets and is among the highest-profile Chinese companies in international investments. It purchased New York City's iconic Waldorf-Astoria in 2014.

A year ago, the company was in talks to invest in a company owned by the family of Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump's son-in-law and White House adviser.





Korean Air chairman quits top post at Jin Air
By Sara Shayanian (UPI) 

The chairman of Korean Air, Cho Yang-ho, stepped down from his role as CEO of Jin Air on Thursday amid numerous investigations involving his family.

"The CEO change was made to strengthen the responsibility and management structure of Jin Air," Jin Air said in a statement. "We have newly appointed Kwon Hyuk-min as the new CEO, after the resignation of Cho Yang-ho, but Cho will remain as a director."

Jin Air is the budget unit of Korean Air Lines Co., and both companies are part of Hanjin, a transportation and logistics conglomerate.

Cho resigned after a series of incidents involving the chairman's family that led to allegations of physical and verbal abuse as well as tax evasion and smuggling.

Cho Hyun-min, one of the chairman's daughters and a Korean Air executive, was suspended in April during a police investigation into claims she yelled and threw water at a manager of a marketing firm during a business meeting.

The chairman's other daughter, Cho Hyun-ah, was previously involved in the so-called "nut rage" scandal in 2014. She ordered a Korean Air plane to return to the gate and made a flight attendant kneel and beg for forgiveness after serving a bag of nuts in a package instead of on a plate.

Investigators have also launched a probe into the chairman's wife -- Lee Myung-hee -- over alleged physical and verbal abuse.

Lee allegedly slapped the face of a construction crew worker hired to remodel her Seoul residence in 2013 while forcing the worker to kneel down. The worker allegedly avoided being hit by moving his head backward, and Lee yelled at the worker and kicked his knee. She is also accused of verbally insulting an employee at the Incheon-based Grand Hyatt hotel.

In April, South Korean customs services raided Korean Air's headquarters over suspicions that the chairman's family members were sneaking luxury goods into South Korea without paying duties.

Good grief! What a family!





South Korea police seize flash drive linked to
online comment scandal
By Elizabeth Shim (UPI)

South Korea’s opposition party conservatives protest an online comment-rigging scandal that implicates the ruling Democratic Party. File Photo by Yonhap
South Korea police have begun investigations into the "Druking" online comment-rigging scandal, centered on a South Korean blogger who interfered in online comments during the presidential race of 2017.

The blogger with the surname Kim is suspected of interfering in online news articles through commentary. Seoul police obtained a flash drive containing fake comments on more than 90,000 news reports, Newsis reported Wednesday.

Data show the blogger and his team of operatives interfered with manipulative comments from October 2016 to March 2017, when South Korea was caught in the grip of a presidential scandal that culminated in the impeachment of South Korean President Park Geun-hye.

Park's impeachment led to snap elections and the election of current President Moon Jae-in.

The suspect has been linked to Moon's ruling Democratic Party, and Yonhap reported Tuesday the blogger delivered $4,600 to a Moon aide in return for information on government jobs.

South Korea police also requested a warrant for the suspect's arrest, but a local court dismissed the request, according to Newsis.

"Whether or not there was an illegal rigging of online comments is something we will confirm going forward," a police source told the news service.

Actions taken by Kim, whose nickname "Druking," is a combination of the words druid and king, extended well beyond the online world.

Local news service No Cut News reported Wednesday police said Kim is linked to the November 2016 payment of about $25,000 to a South Korean lawmaker in the Democratic Party.

Rep. Kim Kyung-soo was allegedly paid the sum of money when he was elected a prospective candidate for a governorship in strategically important Gyeonggi Province.

Conservative politician Nam Kyung-pil is the current governor.





Trump's lawyer got $150K from a Korean weapons company for "accounting" expertise

By Greg Walters 

President Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen has received a lot of attention this week for secretly accepting payments from a firm linked to Russian oligarch, AT&T and a Swiss healthcare company — all while his boss was in the White House.

But he also had another major client: a massive South Korean weapons-maker mired in corruption scandals that also happens to be up for a $16 billion contract with the U.S. Air Force.

The company, known as Korean Aerospace Industries, dropped Cohen $150,000, supposedly for his expertise around U.S. accounting issues, even though Cohen has not generally worked as an accountant. The payment arrived in November 2017, the same month President Trump visited South Korea for talks with President Moon Jae-in.

“Why a military aerospace company would want ‘accounting advice’ from a real estate consulting firm run by a lawyer is indeed rather suspicious,” said Sam Perlo-Freeman, head of the Global Arms Business and Corruption program at the World Peace Foundation in Massachusetts.


Sunday, April 22, 2018

The Cost of Being Spoiled Brats

Korean Air heiresses resign from executive roles
By Daniel Uria  

Two Korean Air heiresses resigned from their executive roles Sunday after investigators raided the company's headquarters to collect evidence regarding allegations they had abused subordinates. Photo by Yonhap/EPA

UPI -- The head of Korean Air announced Sunday his two daughters have resigned from their positions at the company in light of allegations they abused subordinates.

Chairman of Hanjin Group and Korean Air Cho Yang-ho said his two daughters Cho Hyun-min, 35, and Cho Hyun-ah,43, will depart all posts at the Hanjin conglomerate, effective immediately.

He also said Korean Air will create a new vice chairman position to be filled by someone outside of the Cho family and will strengthen the board's role in company operations.

Cho Yang-ho also issued an apology for his daugters' behavior amid growing anger throughout South Korea against the the family-run conglomerates, known as chaebol, which dominate the country's economy.

"I am deeply sorry that problems connected to my family have worried the people and employees of Korean Air," he said. "As chairman of Korean Air and as the head of my family, I feel crushed by the immature behavior of my daughters."



The announcement comes after Seoul police raided Korean Air offices Thursday to investigate allegations that Cho Hyun-min yelled and threw water or plum juice at an advertising firm employee.

OK, this is a police incident? It's stupid, immature behaviour but the woman needs to be sent to her room not investigated by police. This is just bizarre! Her sister, on the other hand...

Investigators confiscated Cho Hyun-min's computer and two of her mobile phones and also seized mobile phones and a personal computer belonging to executive members during the marketing firm where her alleged victim works.

Police plan to determine whether the two sides had coordinated their stories and if any threats had been made to the marketing firm.

Cho Hyun-min has denied she threw the cup at the employee's face, saying she pushed it toward the ground and neither of the victims have reportedly expressed the wish to seek a case against the heiress.

The elder sister Cho Hyun-ah made global headlines in 2014 for a so-called "nut rage" incident, in which she after forced a plane to return to the gate and forced an employee to kneel and beg for forgiveness, over how macademia nuts were served.

She was sentenced to a year in prison, but later freed after an appeals court cleared her of the most of hampering an air route.