According to police, Kim and his Korean-American accomplice had been mocking up
bank account records, job certificates and Family Register documents for their
clients and training them for the visa interviews since September 2004,
charging KRW 4 million (approximately USD $4,363.20) per person.
The two made profits of W1 billion in all by doing so. Half of their 500
clients succeeded in getting a US visa. Their clients included mostly
20-something women who wanted the visa to work in the sex trade in large US
cities.
Kim, one of the women, told police the number of customers here dropped after
new anti-prostitution laws were introduced two years ago, and word is that
prostitutes can earn at least USD $10,000 a month in the US.
"As far as we know, some 200 Korean women were caught for prostitution in the US this year alone and 100 of them were deported," a police officer said. "The number of cases where the US Embassy seizes forged visa application documents rose to 200 a month. This is a serious stumbling block to Koreans being included in the US visa waiver program."