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The police are chasing a man as he stretches out his hand toward the bathroom window towards the hallway and is filming illegally. 



It seems that he committed the crime knowing the structure of the hallway in advance, reports UBC reporter Shin Hye-ji.



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Late at night, a man wearing a hat is striding into the one-room villa.



Without the slightest hesitation he stopped in front of a room and lifted his cell phone out the hallway window.



It's a short moment to flinch at the pretense of popularity, but after carrying your luggage behind you, you walk away leisurely.



What you can see through this window is none other than the bathroom.


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The windows are high so you can't see inside, but you can raise the camera like this and take a picture of the inside without difficulty.



At the time, in the bathroom where this man was filming, a resident, Mr. A, in his 20s, was taking a shower.



[Mr. A / Victim of illegal filming: The sensor light is on, in the hallway.

When a person passes by, the sensor light turns on. As usual, I thought, 'It's a passer-by from the next door,' but I found out that it was a cell phone with a lens, so I started screaming.]



It's been the fourth day since the incident, but the police are a suspect Unable to specify, Mr. A looked for a house to move to immediately.



[Mr. A / Victim of illegal filming: Because my house and I were exposed, that person may come again, and I am so afraid of that, I think that there is no possibility that he was the only one who took the picture, so I am concerned about that…

.]



Most of the old villas have windows facing the hallway to ventilate the bathroom, so secondary damage is a concern.



Police are tracking the suspect's movement through nearby CCTVs.



(Video coverage: Ahn Jae-young UBC)