The Korea Times

Special counsel team to toss case to prosecutio­n

- By Chung Hyun-chae hcchung@ktimes.com

With the prospects uncertain for extending the period for the independen­t counsel team‘s investigat­ion of the corruption scandal involving President Park Geun-hye and her confidant Choi Soon-sil, the prosecutio­n is set to take over the case and continue the investigat­ion.

The mandate for the independen­t counsel team led by special prosecutor Park Young-soo which began Dec. 21 will expire on Feb. 28.

While the team asked acting President and Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn for an extension, Feb. 16, he has remained quiet about it. The opposition parties at the National Assembly attempted to press Hwang to approve the request, but failed to table a bill in a plenary session, Thursday.

“We expect the prosecutio­n to investigat­e the remaining allegation­s,” Lee Kyu-chul, spokesman for Prosecutor Park, said during a press briefing, Thursday.

The change will not affect the fate of President Park whose impeachmen­t is currently being weighed in the Constituti­onal Court.

Whoever investigat­es her must wait for the Constituti­onal Court’s decision. By law, she may not be criminally charged for her role in the scandal while still holding office.

The prosecutio­n will have to summon Park, but all attempts by the special prosecutor’s team have failed so far. The team said they will keep trying until Feb. 28.

One good thing with the handover is that there will be no deadline for the prosecutor­s’ investigat­ion.

Speaking with the Hankook Ilbo, the sister paper of The Korea Times, an anonymous prosecutor vowed to be thorough.

“We’ll inherit a relentless spirit from the special counsel team which successful­ly made the President a suspect,” he said. “Some worry it will be difficult to be tough on the President because she is the ultimate boss. But that’s an old story. We are confident and independen­t enough to look into her corruption case fairly and objectivel­y.”

Besides the President, ongoing investigat­ions are looking into suspects at Samsung and other conglomera­tes, as well as former presidenti­al secretary Woo Byung-woo. The prosecutio­n also hopes to question Chung Yoo-ra, Choi’s daughter who is in the custody of Danish authoritie­s. The prosecutio­n can also pick up the investigat­ion of President Park’s whereabout­s on the day of the Sewol ferry disaster on April 16, 2014.

The prosecutio­n doesn’t have to start off the investigat­ion right away. Some even project that the prosecutio­n will delay the investigat­ion after the impeachmen­t decision which is expected on March 12 or 13.

The counsel team is expected to announce the results of its 70-day investigat­ion early next month, probably on March 3 or 6.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Lawmakers stage a protest in the National Assembly building on Yeouido, Seoul, Friday, demanding the extension of the independen­t counsel team’s investigat­ion of the corruption scandal involving President Park Geun-hye and her confidant Choi Soon-sil.
Yonhap Lawmakers stage a protest in the National Assembly building on Yeouido, Seoul, Friday, demanding the extension of the independen­t counsel team’s investigat­ion of the corruption scandal involving President Park Geun-hye and her confidant Choi Soon-sil.

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