Prof. Kyung-Shim Chung, a professor at Dongyang University with his daughter, was named as an assistant researcher and received an allowance from the Gyeongbuk Office of Education. .

A student from the Department of English, Dongyang University, made a statement as a witness at Professor Chung's follow-up trial held at the Seoul Central District Court's Criminal Agreement 25-2 (Jung Seop Lim, Kwon Sung-soo, Kim Sun-hee, Deputy Judge).

The fact that Mr. A was witnessed is to cover the facts surrounding Professor Chung's various charges over charges of unfair payment.

Professor Chung was accused of developing an English gifted education program and textbooks from May to December 2013 with research funds received from the Gyeongbuk Office of Education, leaving Mr. A and his daughter Jo Mo, who did not participate in the development, as assistant researchers, and claiming these benefits. There is.

It was found that Mr. A, who had established a friendship with Professor Chung while attending Dongyang University in 2012-2016, sent the allowance deposited at the request of Professor Chung to his account.

Mr. A said on this day, "I have never been asked to work as an assistant researcher for Professor Jeong, but I have been asked to work as an assistant researcher." "There is no."

Mr. A said, "(Professor Jung was not named as an assistant researcher, but related to the payment of labor costs)." (Professor Chung after the money was deposited) (I can't hear why) I did it. "

Professor Chung assigned A to the assistant researcher's job, and A said that he did not work due to personal circumstances, or after A received the money, he said, "I didn't work, but I was sorry to receive the money. "It's right when I get it," he said, but Mr. A denied "it's different."

Professor Chung's lawyer on this day also claimed that Professor Jung originally tried to use Mr. A as an assistant researcher, but Mr. A was busy at the time, and he was urgently changing the writing staff of the writing manual.

Again, A said, "It's different."

Mr. A replied, "Did you get paid after work is over?" When the judge asked, "Have you paid money in advance from the school or the accused (Professor Chung) when you were working part-time, research assistant, or working?"

At the trial, B, the general manager of a hotel in Busan, who was found to have issued a false suspicious internship confirmation letter from Professor Jeong's daughter, was also witnessed.

He responded with the intention of "no" to the question of the prosecution, "Have you ever heard that a high school student living in Seoul went to Busan for three years and had an intern every weekend?"

Professor Chung's lawyer pointed out that Mr. B had no contact with college interns, citing that it was highly likely that the president of the hotel would have directly stamped the CEO's seal on the internship confirmation form.

(Photo = Yonhap News)