Crypto exchanges Upbit, Bithumb raided over lawmaker's cryptocurrency scandal
SEOUL, May 15 (Yonhap) -- Prosecutors raided two of South Korea's local cryptocurrency exchanges Monday as part of an investigation into the snowballing suspicions surrounding independent lawmaker Kim Nam-kuk's digital assets, officials said.
A team of investigators from the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors Office seized transaction records and other materials from Upbit and Bithumb, they said.
The move came as Rep. Kim has come under fire following revelations he owned around 800,000 Wemix coins in 2021, worth around 6 billion won (US$4.5 million), a significant amount inconsistent with his frugal image. Suspicions have arisen over where the money came from and whether he used insider information.
The first-term lawmaker, who quit the main opposition Democratic Party on Sunday, has also faced allegations he traded cryptocurrency coins while he was attending at least two meetings of the judiciary committee of the National Assembly, which took place in May and November of last year.
Kim operates his digital wallets at Upbit and Bithumb.

This photo taken May 15, 2023, shows a customer service center in Seoul of Bithumb, one of the two local cryptocurrency exchanges, alongside Upbit, raided by prosecutors that day for an investigation into the snowballing suspicions surrounding independent lawmaker Kim Nam-kuk's digital assets. (Yonhap)
brk@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
(LEAD) S. Korea's Coast Guard apprehends 22 Chinese after illegal entry attempt
-
(Asiad) S. Korea blank China to reach men's football semifinals
-
N. Korea slams IAEA's adoption of resolution on Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program
-
(LEAD) (Asiad) S. Korea takes 2 silvers in roller skating relays
-
S. Korea's Coast Guard apprehends 21 Chinese after illegal entry attempt
-
(News Focus) Travis King's release an opportunity for rapprochement in U.S.-N. Korea ties?
-
DP averts crisis following court's rejection of Lee's arrest; focus shifts to unity
-
5 years after signing, future of inter-Korean military accord unclear
-
In desperation, N. Korea, Russia turn to one another for mutual assistance rivaling U.S.-S. Korea cooperation
-
Yoon seeks to carve out bigger role for S. Korea in Indo-Pacific, world