About 20 years ago, the couple who made a fuss at the house of singer-actor Rain (real name Ji-hoon Jung, 38) were sentenced to fines for repaying the price of rice purchased by her father in credit.



According to the legal community, Judge Yoo Chang-hoon, who was the sole criminal officer of the Seoul Western District Law, sentenced a fine of 700,000 won to Mr. A (79) and his wife (73), respectively, who were handed over to trial for violating the law on punishment such as violence (such as damage to communal property). .



Mrs. A claimed that Rain's father, Jeong Mo, and his wife, had a rice cake restaurant in a market in Yongsan-gu, Seoul 20 years ago, when they bought rice cakes for making rice cakes at a rice shop they run on credit and have not paid the price until now. .



In February of this year, Mrs. A and Mrs. B visited the house where Jung and B were living together, but because Mr. Jung did not meet, they screamed, "Please pay for the rice," and struck the door several times to open a door switch worth 200,000 won. After breaking and forcibly opening the door, I entered the door entrance and the yard without permission.



Earlier, Mr. A posted an article on the online community in 2018, when the controversial celebrity ``debt too'' (#debt too, I was also a group), and posted a statement on the online community that ``accused the singer Rain's parents'', and Rain's parents, who ran the rice cake shop, were his family. They claimed that they had not paid back after borrowing 25 million won worth of money from the rice shop they operated.



Mr. A filed a fifty million won civil lawsuit against Jeong in September last year, but lost in January this year.



Singer Rain filed for a temporary injunction against Mr. A in February of this year, and the court cited it in April of the same year.



The judge said, "The victim has suffered considerable mental suffering, but does not want to be punished, and takes into account the life cycles of both sides and the current situation of the elderly, who have lived through document exchanges in difficult times long ago."