Official arrested in ‘nut rage’ probe

SEOUL—Prosecutors on Wednesday arrested a ministry official for leaking details of an ongoing investigation into the so-called “nut rage” involving Korean Air heiress Heather Cho, adding to suspicions that the government has been surreptitiously aiding the carrier.

The Seoul Seobu Prosecutors’ office said it arrested an official of The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport identified by his surname Kim for passing information about the probe to a Korean Air executive.

The arrest came a day after the ministry requested an investigation into Kim after finding suspicious interactions between him and the carrier’s executive known only by his surname Yeo, during a ministry audit launched on December 17.

The prosecution raided Kim’s home and office and seized his mobile phone and computer hard disk. They are in process of analyzing his phone log and related communication records.

Kim was one of six ministry officials who grilled Cho and other Korean Air employees over the December 5 incident that sparked a public uproar.

Kim allegedly read the whole text of the ministry’s investigation report to Yeo, who is the managing vice president of Korean Air’s cabin crew operations.

On Wednesday, the prosecutors sought an arrest warrant for Yeo who also faces charges of pressuring airline employees to cover up the incident to protect Cho.

Kim, who worked at Korean Air for 15 years as a flight attendant and chief purser before being employed at the Land Ministry is known to be close acquaintance of Yeo. According to prosecutors, the two phoned each other about 30 times and exchanged 10 text messages since December 7, a day before the ministry launched the investigation.

Kim, however, denied the charges, saying he had not discussed the probe in detail.

The transport ministry, which launched the probe on the case earlier than the prosecution, has come under fire for its shoddy investigation.

The prosecutors also applied for an arrest warrant for Heather Cho who faces charges including violation of the aviation safety law, coercion and interference in the execution of duty. Cho was accused of deplaning a chief purser from Flight KE086 bound from New York to Incheon for not following proper protocol while serving macadamia nuts.

A court will hold a hearing on December 30 to review the warrant application for Cho and Yeo.

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