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English teachers busted stealing liquor in Busan

English teachers busted stealing liquor in Busan
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Feb. 10 2010 - 11:25 am
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Nice, guys.

Hat tip to Galbijim.

On February 9 the Haeundae police station in Busan has arrested without detention 27-year-old foreign English instructor D and one other person on charges of entering a nightclub at a luxury hotel while drunken, then stealing liquor. According to police, D and a friend entered the basement nightclub of the hotel at approximately 5:50 am on February 8 and stole liquor.

D and the friend, drunken, opened the locked doors of the nightclub, which had closed for the night, and were caught by police and security guards when the security alarm went off.



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Comments



by Steve Irwin
on 02/10/2010 12:14 pm

hahahahahahahahaha


by Anonymous
on 02/10/2010 12:51 pm

Smooooooth.


by King Baeksu
on 02/10/2010 01:24 pm

Next time, if these big noses are willing to go a bit earlier and in drag, they'll find plenty of Korean guys willing to offer them bottles of the same exact booze for free.

Much better to get "booked" at the club than down at the station, ain't it?


by Anonymoi
on 02/10/2010 02:17 pm

Dicks


by Flint
on 02/10/2010 03:53 pm

But they were drunk so it is ok. And they may have led a hard life.

Oh right, those excuses only work for Koreans.


by Steve Irwin
on 02/10/2010 04:00 pm

i wish the cops found something "else" on them...idiots!!!


by kushibo
on 02/10/2010 08:00 pm

But they were drunk so it is ok. And they may have led a hard life.

Oh right, those excuses only work for Koreans.


It's a bit premature to say they haven't yet worked for these mooks as well.


by AnonymousCommenter
on 02/10/2010 11:50 pm

Um...this is unrelated, but for some reason a username/password authentication screen came up when I tried to get on KoreaBeat. What's up with that?


by korea-beat
on 02/11/2010 01:09 am
http://us.asiancorrespondent.com/korea-beat

Hm, I'm not sure. If you're a registered user, then you'll have to sign in.


by Anonymous
on 02/11/2010 01:12 am

I hope that the person who writes these articles doesn't actually teach English themselves... terrible grammar.


by korea-beat
on 02/11/2010 01:15 am
http://us.asiancorrespondent.com/korea-beat

It's a translation, mate. What sounds like an awkward run-on sentence in English here could be because a) it sounds better in the original, or b) it's an awkward run-on sentence in the original.


by JohnT
on 02/11/2010 03:41 am

Idiots. I've said it a million times, you break the law, you deserve to be punished for it. If they did break the law, they shouldn't expect people to feel sorry for them either, drunk or not.

I don't think this should be on the front page of every Korean newspaper though-and I'm not saying it is btw.

I strongly doubt the "I was drunk" excuse is going to work for any foreigner in Korea especially in Busan and I dare say the justification of, "We have to think about their families" won't work for them as well.






by kushibo
on 02/11/2010 03:54 am

JohnT wrote:
I don't think this should be on the front page of every Korean newspaper though-and I'm not saying it is btw.

It's a man-bites-dog kinda story. And teachers of any stripe behaving badly gets an extra bit of spotlight focused on it.

I strongly doubt the "I was drunk" excuse is going to work for any foreigner in Korea especially in Busan and I dare say the justification of, "We have to think about their families" won't work for them as well.

My limited experience observing cases in court would suggest that foreign residents who demonstrate remorse and provide a mitigating reason also tend to end up with the courts going easy on them.


by shinbone
on 02/11/2010 05:26 am

s'just how we do in busan. gangster as hell.


by JohnT
on 02/11/2010 08:15 am

Maybe the courts will go easy on them. With the demonizing of English teachers over the last five years, I don't have any faith. Is this story worth the cost of ink and/or air time? I can see the Korean media using this story just to get locals worked up over foreigners in Korea.

Just out of curiosity, would a Korean national stealing a couple of bottles of booze find themselves the target of Korean national media outlets?

I know some drunk Korean dude that lived by me got arrested for smashing out a convenience store window with a big ass rock. That never made it into the newspapers. At least my gf didn't read or hear anything about it. Not that it all means anything I guess.


by ric flair
on 02/11/2010 01:08 pm

I work for a Korean employer. My boss is my third Korean boss....I can fairly conclude that they are A-holes who will never learn English.


by kushibo
on 02/11/2010 02:15 pm

Just out of curiosity, would a Korean national stealing a couple of bottles of booze find themselves the target of Korean national media outlets?


If they were teachers, quite possibly yes.


by JohnT
on 02/12/2010 02:29 am

Ah, but as Koreans like to say whenever the hell it suits them, "English teachers aren't real teachers!"


by Anonymous
on 02/23/2010 10:20 am


Ah, but as Koreans like to say whenever the hell it suits them, "English teachers aren't real teachers!"

They're not real teachers and I'm not Korean.


by Darth Babaganoosh
on 02/23/2010 01:30 pm

They're not real teachers

Except for those who actually have their teaching credentials, right?

My boss is my third Korean boss....I can fairly conclude that they are A-holes who will never learn English.

Wow. THREE whole Korean bosses. That certainly makes you an authority on the entire Korean-boss demographic. I'm sure you'll pardon me while I laugh in your face.


by Anonymous
on 03/08/2010 06:18 pm

Those guys sound like great craic!


by Burebo
on 03/18/2010 11:43 pm

Wow Korea must be a peaceful place if a story like this generates so much discussion. Here in Lithuania a couple of drunken English guys broke into my gun range and managed to get their hands some automatic weapons, not just a few bottles of liquor. That didn't make any newspapers.




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