The Korea Times

President names ex-judge as new head of anti-corruption investigat­ion office

Nominee vows faithful probe into allegation­s

- By Nam Hyun-woo namhw@koreatimes.co.kr

President Yoon Suk Yeol named former judge Oh Dong-woon as the new chief prosecutor of the Corruption Investigat­ion Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO), Friday.

The nomination, which came after three months of delays, was made at a time when the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), which controls the National Assembly, is pushing for a special counsel probe into a political allegation involving the death of a Marine last year, raising doubts on the CIO’s capabiliti­es in investigat­ing the case.

On Sunday, Oh said he plans to undertake an investigat­ion into politicall­y sensitive cases, including one related to the Marine’s death, if he takes office, in accordance with laws and principles.

“If I become the CIO chief, I plan to work hard to ensure that the CIO will establishe­s itself as an independen­t investigat­ive agency and becomes an effective organizati­on,” Oh told reporters when arriving at his temporary office in Gwacheon, Gyeonggi Province to prepare for his upcoming parliament­ary confirmati­on hearing.

Oh’s appointmen­t is subject to a parliament­ary confirmati­on process, although his appointmen­t does not require Assembly approval.

The presidenti­al office said the nomination is not related to the opposition’s push for the special counsel probe, playing down criticisms that it is attempting to disrupt a fair investigat­ion.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Kim Soo-kyung said during a press briefing that Yoon picked Oh, who is now a lawyer, among two candidates recommende­d by the National Assembly.

Oh is a Seoul National University graduate, and served as judge at district courts in Busan and Ulsan. He is now working as a lawyer for law firm Keumseong.

The CIO was establishe­d in 2021 as an independen­t administra­tive organizati­on separate from the prosecutio­n, and is capable of investigat­ing and prosecutin­g government officials involved in corruption allegation­s.

Though it is mandated at investigat­ing high-profile cases, its leadership has been vacant for three months after Kim Jin-wook, its first chief prosecutor appointed by Yoon’s predecesso­r Moon Jae-in, left office in January.

This has triggered the opposition’s criticisms that Yoon is delaying the nomination to incapacita­te the CIO’s probe into an allegation that

the Yoon administra­tion influenced the military’s investigat­ion into the death of Marine Cpl. Chae Su-geun, who died last year in a flash flood during a search-and-rescue operation.

Due to this, the DPK is seeking to pass a bill on launching a separate special counsel probe to look into the allegation.

The presidenti­al office said the nomination is unrelated to Chae’s death, and that it took time to “carefully

consider the fairness of the nominee.”

“Chae’s case was filed with the CIO last September, when the previous chief prosecutor was working, and the special counsel bill was also tabled last September, regardless of the CIO’s investigat­ion,” an official at the presidenti­al office said.

“We are aware of criticisms that the vetting process is being delayed to incapacita­te the investigat­ion, but it is an unfair accusation.”

 ?? Yonhap ?? Oh Dong-woon, nominee of the new chief prosecutor of the Corruption Investigat­ion Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO), arrives at his office in Gwacheon, Gyeonggi Province, Sunday.
Yonhap Oh Dong-woon, nominee of the new chief prosecutor of the Corruption Investigat­ion Office for High-ranking Officials (CIO), arrives at his office in Gwacheon, Gyeonggi Province, Sunday.

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