New York Post

’WEEK FROM HELL

Magazine office raid likely tied to Calif. university

- By KEITH J. KELLY kkelly@nypost.com

It was a breaking news story — but not exactly the type Newsweek was aching to report.

About two dozen investigat­ors from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office converged on the downtown newsroom of Newsweek on Thursday — taking photos of computers and servers, sources said.

In addition to the newsroom, the fifth floor of 7 Hanover Squarealso housesNews­week MediaGroup, the publicatio­n’s parent company — formerly knownasIBT­Media.

The investigat­ors, who arrived shortly before 8 a.m., focused on the computers’ serial numbers— andwalkedo­utsix hours later carrying several of the servers, sources said.

The probe is believed to be tied to Olivet University, the San Francisco school tied to the controvers­ial South Korean pastor David Jang, one source said.

Jang has close ties to the founders of IBTMedia.

Alawyer for the company, in a brief talk to shaken and mystified staffers roughly halfway through the raid, said the police action was part of a 17month- investigat­ion.

“People are very upset, because apparently there was a 17-month investigat­ion and no one told us anything,” said one person close to the company.

Late Thursday, Newsweek Media Group acknowledg­ed that agents from the DA’soffice had been searching their servers for the better part of the day.

“Representa­tives of the New York County[ Manhattan] District Attorney’ s Office visited the New York City offices of Newsweek Media Group today to conduct a search of the company’s computer servers to obtain technical informatio­n about the servers.

“The company provided the DA’s representa­tives with access to the computer servers on location to allow for a technical inspection within the law.

“No informatio­n regarding the company’s-content, stories, personnel, or sources was given and Newsweek Media Group has been assured by the DA’s office that the investigat­ion is not about any contentrel­ated issues,” the statement said.

Thecompany­said it is cooperatin­g with the probe.

Meanwhile, Etienne Uzac, a co-owner of Newsweek Media Group, was slapped with a $1.2 million federal tax lien by the IRS on Dec. 12, according to a record obtained by ThePost.

Uzac founded the company in 2005 with Jonathan Davis, and together they purchased the money-losing Newsweek in 2012. Uzac is married to Marion Kim, who is tied to Olive ta nd has served as a translator for Jang.

The IRS declined to comment on whether the raid Thursday had any connection to the outstandin­g tax lien.

Jang had used Korean and Chinese citizens with student visas who attended O liv et University to secret ly workonIBT matters in its early days, according to reports. The company denied the claim at the time.

Early reports — based on eyewitness sources — that NYC cops were involved in the raid were not accurate, NYPD sources told ThePost.

The police in the raid were connected only to the New York County District Attorney’s office.

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