Joint Prosecution-Police Team Launched in Unification Church Bribery Probe

Following police raids and a special counsel investigation, the prosecution and police have formed a joint team led by Kim Tae-hoon of the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors' Office to probe bribery allegations between the Unification Church and politicians from both major parties.

The joint investigation team will examine bribery claims involving the Unification Church and lawmakers, building on December 2025 police raids that named church leader Han Hak-ja as a suspect and targeted locations linked to figures like former Oceans Minister Chun Jae-soo. These allegations surfaced during special counsel Min Joong-ki's probe into corruption tied to former first lady Kim Keon-hee, resulting in the indictment of Rep. Kweon Seong-dong (People Power Party) and ongoing scrutiny of Rep. Chun Jae-soo (Democratic Party).

President Lee Jae-myung called for a special or joint headquarters to uncover the truth and prevent recurrence. With rival parties deadlocked on a new special counsel, the team launches after Min's mandate expired last month without full resolution of illegal donations and influence peddling.

This step aims to enhance accountability amid concerns over the church's political influence.

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South Korean police raid Unification Church HQ in Seoul bribery probe.
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Unification church leader named suspect in politician bribery case

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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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South Korea's ruling Democratic Party accepted the main opposition People Power Party's proposal on Monday for a special counsel investigation into bribery allegations involving the Unification Church and politicians. The move follows suspicions that members from both parties received funds from the church ahead of the 2022 presidential election. Party leaders stressed the need to uncover the full truth.

Building on initial results, special prosecutor Cho Eun-seok's team revealed military intelligence prepared baseball bats and other tools to coerce election officials, amid a 180-day probe indicting 27 and yielding new insights into the Dec. 3 power grab plot.

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A joint team of prosecutors and police raided the headquarters of South Korea's main opposition People Power Party on Friday. The operation targeted allegations that followers of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus were mass-recruited to influence the party's 2021 presidential primary and 2024 general election candidate nominations. Shincheonji has denied all accusations.

Police on Thursday requested arrest warrants for lawmaker Kang Sun-woo and former Seoul city councilor Kim Kyung over a bribery scandal tied to the 2022 local elections. Kim is accused of offering 100 million won to Kang in exchange for a Democratic Party nomination, while Kang admits receiving a shopping bag but denies knowing it contained cash. The scandal emerged late last year from a disclosed recording.

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A special counsel team led by Ann Gweon-seob raided the Supreme Prosecutors' Office in southern Seoul on January 2, 2026, as part of an investigation into the prosecution's loss of key evidence linked to former first lady Kim Keon Hee. The raid targeted the office's information and communications department to probe potential cover-up instructions from higher-ups. Authorities sought to secure messenger records related to the missing Bank of Korea straps.

 

 

 

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