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Chaebol scions indicted for distributing marijuana in Korea

By Son Ji-hyoung
Published : Jan. 26, 2023 - 14:46


Shin Jun-ho, a senior prosecutor at the Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office, speaks at a press briefing at its headquarters in southern Seoul on Thursday. (Yonhap)

South Korean prosecutors said Thursday they have indicted 17 people on charges of distributing cannabis in the nation, where owning and using the substance are strictly prohibited.

Among them were six scions of Korean chaebol families, a son of a high-ranking official, entrepreneurs, a musician and an entertainment agency chief, according to the Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office, ending a monthslong probe since September 2022.

According to local reports, the chaebol scions included a third-generation heir of dairy product maker Namyang Dairy Products, an heir from metal product manufacturer KIS Wire, an heir of provincial bank JB Financial Group and an heir of chemical-to-machinery firm Hyosung. Prosecutors declined to confirm their identities.

So far, 20 people have been indicted on charges of drug distribution through 2022 in Korea, as cannabis is categorized as an illegal drug here.

The accused have formed an exclusive group to get access to drugs in Korea face-to-face. Most of them were in their late 30s or early 40s, according to prosecutors.

"Most of the accused studied abroad at the younger age, ... so they got to know each other and created an exclusive human network to trade drugs," said Shin Jun-ho, drug and organized crime deputy chief prosecutor of Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office.

"Drug trading on social networks without buyers and sellers meeting face-to-face are becoming a growing problem. Drugs can be distributed indiscriminately through these methods, but in this case, those within the exclusive network of people met to trade drugs."

Ten of the indicted have been detained for buying cannabis multiple times and possessing it to smoke or vape it. Some were accused of growing cannabis at home or inside a tangerine farm in Jeju Island without authorization. One grew cannabis inside a house where adolescent children lived together, and another smoked it during a trip to a foreign country with his pregnant wife.

Prosecutors have placed three -- a chaebol scion among them – who fled Korea on a wanted list.


The photos show cannabis grown inside a house of one of the indicted. (Courtesy of Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office)

Shin told a press briefing that investigators have seized no more than 1 kilogram of cannabis powder and cannabis vape liquids combined so far. He did not disclose the value of the confiscated products, nor the level of penalty charge to be imposed on the indicted.

What enabled the indictment, he added, was a law revision which went into effect in September 2022 allowing prosecutors to retain the right to investigate drug distributing crimes. The revision was a change of course from the decision during the former Moon Jae-in administration to restrict prosecutors' investigative power and transfer most of the power to the police.

Shin also pointed to a "mistake" in the police’s investigation. Cannabis-growing tents run by one of the detained by the police were left unattended, and prosecutors later seized the grow tents as they regained investigative power.

"This case shows that prosecutors with investigative power can bring an investigation to an end," Shin said.

The revelation was a follow-up from its announcement in December 2022, where six people – including some chaebol scions -- were indicted and three were indicted without detention.

Korea is increasingly prone to cannabis-related crimes due to addiction among users. According to data from the Supreme Prosecutors' Office, nearly 40 percent of those caught for cannabis-related crimes were repeat offenders. The number of criminals in 2021 rose 17,6 percent to 3,777, marking an increase in the figure for three consecutive years, data also showed.

Shin said Korean prosecutors will work to keep Korea from cannabis distribution, calling cannabis a "gateway drug" that precedes the use of other illegal substances.

This is in line with the announcement by the Ministry of Justice Thursday to create special teams of drug crime investigators across the nation, teams dedicated to encrypted internet at which digital drug trades are being frequented, as well as a joint information-sharing system of the police and prosecutors.




By Son Ji-hyoung (consnow@heraldcorp.com)

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