Olympian's ex-fiancé arrested for stalking after allegedly lying about sex, family ties
이 글자크기로 변경됩니다.
(예시) 가장 빠른 뉴스가 있고 다양한 정보, 쌍방향 소통이 숨쉬는 다음뉴스를 만나보세요. 다음뉴스는 국내외 주요이슈와 실시간 속보, 문화생활 및 다양한 분야의 뉴스를 입체적으로 전달하고 있습니다.
The ex-fiancé of fencing gold medalist Nam Hyun-hee was arrested for stalking on Thursday after the truth emerged that the Olympian's husband-to-be was actually a woman.
The fiancé, 27-year-old Jeon Cheong-jo, also claimed to be an illegitimate scion of the Paradise hotel and casino conglomerate and had served over two years in prison for fraud.
According to the police, Jeon caused a disturbance when she repeatedly banged on the door and kept ringing the bell at the apartment entrance of Nam’s mother in Seongnam, Gyeonggi, at 1:10 a.m.
The Olympian’s family called the police when Jeon attempted to break in.
Nam reportedly left the Signiel Residence in Lotte Tower in Jamsil, Seoul, in which she had been living with Jeon on Wednesday after ending the relationship as allegations regarding the fiancé’s sex and her criminal record surfaced over the last couple of days.
The lifestyle magazine that first carried news of the couple's upcoming nuptials reported that Nam decided to end the relationship after several fraud victims came to their residence early Wednesday.
She learned from the victims that Jeon was using her name to swindle investors, with the victims telling her they gave Jeon money because they trusted the Olympian.
Nam also claimed that Jeon gaslighted her by making her believe she was pregnant using tampered pregnancy tests.
However, Nam told the magazine that she believed Jeon was a transgender man who had undergone a sex change operation.
She said Jeon had two ID cards, one registered as a man and another as a woman.
The police had confirmed that Jeon was indeed a woman with a record of 10 criminal convictions or charges.
Jeon was released from police custody at 6:30 a.m. after the initial investigation ended.
The police said they did not arrest Jeon as she was not a flight risk.
Instead, they restricted Jeon from approaching within 100 meters of Nam and banned all communication, including calls and text messages.
The authorities also gave an emergency smartwatch to Nam to immediately alert the police if Jeon attempted to assault her.
The fiancé reportedly told the authorities that she hadn't been able to sleep or eat in the last three days since the allegations emerged .
The hotel and casino group Paradise on Thursday said they will take legal actions against Jeon for spreading lies.
The relationship between Nam and Jeon became public after an interview with a lifestyle magazine was published on Monday.
In the article, Nam said she was marrying Jeon, who was introduced as a third-generation scion of a Korean conglomerate and once a professional horse rider, despite their 15-year age difference.
The Olympian ended her prior marriage of 12 years to another Olympian, Gong Hyo-suk, in August.
In the article, Nam said that the two first met at her fencing school when Jeon, accompanied by bodyguards, signed up for class.
Jeon introduced herself as the illegitimate son of the Paradise Group Chairman Philip Chun, claiming that she rode horses professionally and had won several international tournaments.
Jeon also claimed that she left Korea due to an injury to attend NYU, majoring in horse riding.
After the article was published, claims regarding Jeon’s past surfaced, including allegations that Jeon was actually a woman and that she was raised in Ganghwa, Incheon.
It also turned out that she attended the Korea Horse Racing and Livestock High School, an advanced vocational school in Namwon, South Jeolla. She reportedly quit school after the first year.
According to a court ruling, Jeon was sentenced to 15 months in 2020 and six months in 2021 on two counts of fraud.
In each case, Jeon approached the victims as a love interest, once as a woman and once as a man, and borrowed money without any intention of paying back.
In one of the cases, she used the same tactic by claiming to be the out-of-wedlock son of the Paradise Group.
She also allegedly swindled large sums of money out of dozens of victims under the pretense of marrying them.
In one of the cases, she approached the victim as a man and swindled them out of more than 70 million ($51,541) under the false promise that when she returned to her family’s business, she would hire the victim as an assistant.
The investigation found no family relationship between Jeon and the hotel and casino conglomerate.
In 2020, Jeon lent more than 30 million won and spent 10 million won with a credit card belonging to the victim’s father.
According to the verdict, she asked the victim to give her the credit card so she could buy furniture for their home since they would be getting married.
Early on, Nam defended onsJeon social media, claiming that she thanked everyone who congratulated her as well as those who expressed their concerns.
She added that she truly wanted to find true happiness and that she wanted to live happily with her daughter while adding that there seemed to be people with ill intentions.
Jeon also wrote on Instagram that she would take legal action against people who make malicious claims.
In an interview with local media, Jeon claimed that in time, the truth would become known.
Amid the continuing allegations, Paradise Group on Thursday publicly said the recent allegations and rumors surrounding the group and Chun had “significantly harmed the brand reputation.”
The group also confirmed that Jeon's claim to be a wedlock child of the group’s owner's family was untrue.
BY IM SOUNG-BIN, LEE SOO-JUNG [lee.soojung1@joongang.co.kr]
Copyright © 코리아중앙데일리. 무단전재 및 재배포 금지.
- Olympic fencer believed ex-fiancé had testicle transplant
- Pesticide-proof bedbugs now in majority of Seoul’s 25 districts
- Olympian's ex-fiancé arrested for stalking after allegedly lying about sex, family ties
- Korean student goes viral for baffling 'floating feet' dance video
- Ex-fiancé says Olympian knew everything including gender identity
- Body found in dumpster identified as Korean woman in U.S. cold case breakthrough
- Asiana fails to reach cargo unit sale decision leaving Korean Air merger in doubt
- Food costs begin to bite as even burgers, beer grow pricier
- [SHOWCASE] Taemin doesn't feel 'Guilty' for testing boundaries in new EP
- Seoul's cabbie restaurants offer quick, affordable meals