BTS Agency Founder Bang Si-Hyuk Faces Detention Warrant Request From South Korea Police
The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency said Bang is suspected of violating capital market laws by misleading early investors ahead of HYBE's listing and steering them to sell shares to a private equity fund linked to his associates.
Recommended For YouPolice allege that after HYBE went public the fund sold its stake and Bang received about 30 per cent of the profits under a prior shareholder agreement, earning roughly 190 billion won ($129.1 million) in illicit gains.
Bang has previously denied any wrongdoing.
HYBE did not have an immediate comment when contacted by Reuters.
Bang is also the founder of HYBE, the music powerhouse behind global Kpop supergroup BTS.
HYBE shares reversed course after the report and were down 2.9 per cent as of 0215 GMT, compared with a 1.8 per cent rise in South Korea's benchmark KOSPI.
The National Police Agency confirmed that the US embassy in Seoul recently sent a letter asking authorities to allow Bang to travel to the United States, despite a travel ban imposed during the investigation.
According to police, the letter sought a temporary suspension of the ban, citing plans for Bang and other senior executives to attend an event to mark U.S. Independence Day and hold talks related to the ongoing BTS global tour.
The US embassy in Seoul said it did not have anything to add on that matter.
Bang has been barred from leaving South Korea since August last year.
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