Former Unification Church chief of staff Jeong Won-ju arrives at Seoul police station for questioning in politician bribery probe.
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Unification Church Bribery Probe: Ex-chief of staff questioned as leader faces scrutiny

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In the ongoing Unification Church politician bribery investigation, police questioned former chief of staff Jeong Won-ju as a witness on December 18, following leader Han Hak-ja's interrogation the previous day. The probe centers on cash and luxury watches allegedly given to former Oceans Minister Chun Jae-soo and other politicians.

Following raids on December 15 at the church's headquarters, Han's residence, and sites linked to suspects, police intensified the Unification Church bribery probe. On December 17, jailed leader Han Hak-ja was questioned at Seoul Detention Center over tens of millions of won in cash and luxury gifts allegedly provided to former Oceans Minister Chun Jae-soo, Democratic Party lawmaker Lim Jong-seong, and former United Future Party lawmaker Kim Gyu-hwan between 2018 and 2020. Han remains in custody since September on related charges including bribery and illegal donations.

The investigation, sparked by testimony from ex-church official Yun Young-ho, also involves a church foundation's purchase of 500 copies of Chun's book for 10 million won in 2019. A prior special counsel raid found 28 billion won in cash in Han's safe; police are still seeking a Bulgari watch allegedly given to Chun.

On December 18, Jeong Won-ju—Han's former chief of staff and the church's second-highest official—appeared at the Korean National Police Agency for questioning on bribe deliveries and Han's instructions. Chun Jae-soo, who resigned as minister last week, denies receiving 20 million won and the watch in exchange for church project support, such as a Korea-Japan undersea tunnel. He is scheduled for questioning on December 19 at Seodaemun Ward police station. Search warrants for Chun, Lim, and Kim expire January 14.

O que as pessoas estão dizendo

Discussions on X focus on the police interrogation of Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja and former chief of staff Jeong Won-ju over alleged bribery of politicians including luxury watches and cash. Users from media outlets report on investigations, searches at church headquarters, and related prosecutions, while some express outrage calling for dissolution of the church and accountability across political parties, highlighting bipartisan concerns.

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Police on December 15 identified Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja as a suspect in a bribery case involving politicians from both ruling and opposition parties, conducting raids on the church's Seoul headquarters and her residence among 10 locations. The case involves allegations of bribes to figures including former Oceans Minister Chun Jae-soo. Han is already on trial for a separate bribery case linked to former first lady Kim Keon Hee.

In a follow-up to earlier questioning, police on December 28 interrogated Jeong Won-ju—former chief secretary to Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja—for a second time over alleged bribes to politicians across parties. Now booked as a suspect, Jeong's probe ties into the church's widening corruption scandal linked to former President Yoon Suk Yeol's wife, Kim Keon Hee.

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Oceans Minister Chun Jae-soo offered to resign on December 11 amid allegations of receiving bribes from the Unification Church. He denied the claims as 'completely groundless' but stated he would step down to avoid hindering government operations. President Lee Jae Myung plans to accept the resignation.

In the final act of its 180-day investigation launched in July 2025—including former President Yoon Suk Yeol's questioning on December 20—the special counsel team on December 29 announced results accusing ex-first lady Kim Keon Hee of corruption, stock manipulation, bribery, and illegal intervention in state affairs. The probe led to 20 detentions and 66 indictments, including Kim; Yoon was referred to police without indictment.

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