South Korea can seek extradition linked to 2014 ferry sinking -U.S.
judge
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[July 03, 2021]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Friday
said a South Korean man wanted on embezzlement charges related to a 2014
ferry sinking that killed 304 people, mainly high school students, is
subject to extradition to his home country.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Judith McCarthy said South Korea had demonstrated
probable cause to extradite Yoo Hyuk-Kee on all seven counts he faced.
Yoo will remain in federal custody as the case progresses to a district
judge, also in the federal court for the Southern District of New York.
Yoo, in his late 40s, was a fugitive for six years prior to his arrest
last July in a northern suburb of New York City.
"It's a lengthy and thoughtful decision, but one that I think is wrong,"
Yoo's lawyer Paul Shechtman said in a phone interview. "Our intention is
to appeal."
In her 80-page decision, McCarthy also said she lacked authority to
decide whether South Korea waited too long to prosecute Yoo. She said
that was up to the U.S. Secretary of State as he manages the countries'
diplomatic affairs.
The office of U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss, which has said Yoo was
extraditable, declined to comment.
Yoo is the second son of Yoo Byung-un, the founder of the Evangelical
Baptist Church in South Korea, and whose family controlled the operator
of the Sewol ferry that capsized off the country's southwest coast in
April 2014.
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A vessel involved in search and rescue operations passes near the
upturned South Korean ferry "Sewol" in the sea off Jindo April 17,
2014. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Investigators said the ferry was overloaded,
structurally unsound, and traveling too fast.
The patriarch was found dead of unknown causes in an orchard two
months later. His older son, Yoo Dae-Kyun, received two years in
prison for embezzlement, according to court papers.
South Korean prosecutors accused Yoo Hyuk-Kee of using his power as
a business and religious leader to defraud various companies out of
29 billion Korean won ($25.7 million), including money that could
have helped make the ferry safe.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Jane Wardell)
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