A Chinese woman’s arrest was announced by South Korean police on Friday over allegations she kissed Jin, a part of the K-pop team BTS, without his permission during a public event next year.
According to the media company Associated Press, an official at Seoul’s Songpa police stop confirmed that the girl had been asked to appear for questioning in response to an incident of sexual abuse. However, the authorities did not disclose her personality, citing protection issues.
After authorities received an online issue, the investigation started.
According to reports in the media, Chinese officers assisted in finding the woman in South Korea. According to the information, the girl, who is in her 50s, has refused to appear for questioning.
Jin, whose full name is Kim Seok-jin, completed his necessary 18-month military company in June 2024. He held a free hugs function in Seoul the day after his release and the 11-year commemoration of BTS. Around 1, 000 viewers attended the event. During the meeting, a woman quickly kissed Jin on his face. A widely shared videos showed Jin appearing miserable.
According to Yonhap news agency, the woman after wrote in a website write-up,” My lips touched his throat. His body was so soft”.
After receiving a problem from a netizen, the girl was identified by the Chinese authorities with assistance, and she was booked last month.
Song was established in 2013 and has a sizable international following known as the” Army.” Jin, who is 32 years older, is the team’s eldest part.
Trending
- Study: Overwhelming Majority of EBT-Eligible Food Products Are Ultra-Processed
- Doug Ford wins rare third term in Ontario election, vows to fight Donald Trump’s tariffs
- Seven planets to align tonight: How and when to watch rare planetary parade in US
- Pro-Palestinian mob at Barnard College takes over building, injures employee, holds dean captive
- Professor sues U. Illinois, claims it discriminated against him as a ‘white male’
- VMI watchdog groups: Pro-DEI factions blocking efforts to reinstall meritocracy at college
- ‘Exclusionary regime’: Georgetown professor calls borders ‘ethically indefensible’
- Michigan State U. keeps closing hate incidents because victims go quiet