Korean Air ‘nut rage’ mum grilled over illegal maids
SEOUL: The matriarch of the troubled Korean Air dynasty was grilled over allegations she used company resources to illegally hire foreign housekeepers, as a probe into the scandal-hit family widened.
Lee Myung-hee, 69, who was questioned by police twice last month over multiple assault allegations, was interrogated yesterday by immigration authorities over claims she hired more than 10 Filipina maids to work at her family home on false pretences, by claiming they were working for Korean Air.
Korean law permits only ethnic Koreans or those married to Koreans to work as housekeepers.
The authorities suspect Lee had the airline’s human resources department and its Manila branch recruit the housekeepers and provide the Filipinas with documentation.
“I didn’t,” she replied to questions on whether she ordered Korean Air officials to hire the housekeepers, removed evidence by letting them leave the country after the allegations emerged and had bought their silence.
“I will cooperate closely,” she told reporters after she appeared at the Korea Immigration Service.
A week earlier, a Seoul court turned down a request from prosecutors to arrest Lee over allegations of assault against drivers, housekeepers and company employees as well as construction workers renovating her home and building a Korean Air-affiliated hotel.
The alleged abuses range from cursing and screaming at employees to kicking, slapping and even throwing a pair of scissors at them.
A video that emerged last month showed a woman, reportedly Lee, shoving a female construction worker and throwing a pile of documents on the ground.
But the court said there was a low risk of Lee fleeing or seeking to destroy evidence, and that the charges were disputable.