Do Kwon Blames China’s 3rd Party To Deny Allegations Of Forgery
Key Points:
- Do Kwon told the Montenegro court that his passport was obtained from a third party and was unaware of the forgery.
- In addition, he also asserted that he had not made any financial contributions to the former finance minister of Montenegro, Milojko Spajić.
- The Terra founder will remain in custody until a judge delivers a verdict on the forgery charges on June 19 local time.
Do Kwon appears to be proving his innocence to the forgery allegations in a Montenegro court with a complete shift to a Chinese 3rd party.
South Korean news agency Segye Ilbo reported that Do Kwon told the Montenegro Basic Court that he had received his passport and allegedly forged travel documents, including a Costa Rican passport, through third-party “agencies”.
Do Kwon, founder of Terraform Labs, told the Montenegro court that he was not aware that the passport he used to travel was believed to be forged, but blamed a Chinese third-party agency.
Do Kwon, said he has carried this passport “for many years”. Traveling with his Costa Rican passport, he had no reason to doubt its authenticity.
“I received my Costa Rica passport after filling in the documents required by a Singaporean agency that was recommended to me by a friend. I received my Belgian passport through another agency,”
He spoke at the court hearing held on June 17.
The prosecution asked Kwon for more details about the agency he used to make his passport, but Kwon said he couldn’t “remember exactly,” adding that he only knew his name. of that agency is “in Chinese”.
In addition to denying forged travel documents, Kwon denied allegations that he made financial contributions to Montenegro’s former finance minister, Milojko Spajić. Spajić also denied having a relationship with Kwon but multiple news outlets in Montenegro reported their rumored financial relationship.
After the hearing, Judge Ivana Becić announced she would deliver a ruling on the forgery charges on June 19 local time. Kwon will be held in extradition detention for up to six months while a local court considers South Korea’s extradition request.
DISCLAIMER: The information on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. We encourage you to do your own research before investing.
Join us to keep track of news: https://linktr.ee/coincu
Foxy
Coincu News