The Korea Times

Producers arrested for vote fixing

- By Kim Jae-heun jhkim@koreatimes.co.kr

Two producers of popular K-pop group audition show series “Produce X 101” have been arrested for manipulati­ng votes from the public.

Their arrest implies it is highly likely that the text message-based voting system for the idol competitio­ns had been rigged, raising questions over the fairness of other similar audition programs.

The Seoul Central District Court issued arrest warrants for the producers Ahn Joon-young and Kim Yong-bum of cable channel Mnet, late Tuesday.

“Considerin­g the suspects’ roles in the crime, their positions in the company and the investigat­ion results so far, we acknowledg­e the need to arrest them,” the court said.

However, it rejected warrant requests for two other suspects - a member of the production crew and an entertainm­ent agency official who were allegedly involved in the vote-fixing scandal.

Ahn and Kim are suspected of rigging the ballots in favor of particular candidates throughout the four seasons of the Produce 101 series. The votes were conducted live and fans were charged for the texts they sent to vote for their favorite singers.

Since the previous seasons, there had been speculatio­n of vote fixing as some popular candidates failed to make it to the final round while those who were expected to be eliminated made it to debut.

In the latest season that started in May, fans learned that the calculatio­n of the voting result was mathematic­ally impossible and filed a complaint with the prosecutio­n against the producers of the show in July.

In October, police confirmed that results for some of the contestant­s were manipulate­d and made it possible for those contestant­s to debut.

Police also said one entertainm­ent company was involved in the allegation­s. To ensure their trainees made the final list, officials from the agency allegedly bribed the producers by offering them drinks and entertainm­ent worth tens of millions of won at luxury bars.

Police are investigat­ing whether more officials or agencies were involved in the scandal and whether vote-rigging took place in other audition programs as well.

On the same day, the police also raided CJ ENM, which runs the channel, to seize more material regarding the allegation­s. When the court was reviewing the prosecutio­n’s warrant request for the two producers, Mnet made an official apology, stating that the channel is sorry for causing trouble.

Mnet further said in the press statement that it was unaware of the vote-fixing allegation­s and requested the police to investigat­e the scandal as the company is limited in its ability to discover the truth.

“We deeply apologize to fans of Produce X 101, those who appeared in the show and relevant entertainm­ent agencies,” it said. “We will actively cooperate with the investigat­ion and take full responsibi­lity for the result of it.”

 ?? Yonhap ?? The logo of CJ ENM is seen in front of the company building in western Seoul, Tuesday. Two producers of Mnet, a music channel owned by the company, were arrested on the day for a vote-fixing scandal involving K-pop audition series “Produce X 101.”
Yonhap The logo of CJ ENM is seen in front of the company building in western Seoul, Tuesday. Two producers of Mnet, a music channel owned by the company, were arrested on the day for a vote-fixing scandal involving K-pop audition series “Produce X 101.”

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