SEOUL—South Korean prosecutors on Tuesday raided the country’s spy agency as part of a probe into allegations that it meddled in the presidential election in December, a news report said.
A team of about 25 prosecutors and investigators from the Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office seized digital files and documents from the National Intelligence Service (NIS) in the capital, Yonhap news agency said.
The agency’s anti-North Korea psychological warfare team allegedly posted a slew of politically sensitive comments on the Internet against the opposition candidate to influence public opinion ahead of the December poll.
The raid follows the questioning of former NIS director Won Sei-Hoon on Monday in connection with the case.
For 14 hours, Won was grilled over whether he ordered NIS agents to post politically sensitive remarks on the Internet against the opposition candidate, Yonhap said, citing prosecutors.
Nobody at the Prosecutors’ Office was immediately available to comment.
Won reportedly denied the charges against him, claiming that the agency’s anti-North Korea team was doing its job in countering Pyongyang’s attempts to influence the election results.
Won is suspected of attempting to influence voter sentiment ahead of the presidential election in favour of the conservative ruling party candidate Park Geun-Hye, who narrowly defeated liberal rival Moon Jae-In to become South Korea’s first female president.
He has been barred from leaving the country pending the result of the investigation.
Police wrapped up their four-month probe in March