South Korean President
Park Geun-hye visited the United States between May 5 and 9, with Yoon accompanying Park as her chief spokesman. The sexual assault, or
sexual harassment in question, consisted of
groping the intern, and later calling her up to his room and answering the door either naked or in underwear (sources vary); those events occurred on May 7. On May 8, 2013, the intern reported those events to the American police.
Kwak Sang-do, Senior Secretary to the President for Civil Affairs, said the order for Yoon to return "didn't conflict with any South Korean or US laws," and that "Yoon's return from the US was a policy decision by the Blue House, and because he was only under indictment, it was not a criminal flight from justice for him to return to South Korea." Yoon apologized for his actions on May 11, 2013. On May 12, 2013, Present
Park Geun-hye fired spokesman Yoon Chang-jung in the middle of her trip to the United States after he was accused of
sexually assaulting a Korean American female intern from the
Washington, D.C. Embassy of South Korea. President Park and her office have apologized for Yoon actions on Monday. 23 women lawmakers of the
Democratic Party in South Korea condemned Yoon for having returned to South Korea in a rush to avoid a
U.S. police investigation into his alleged sexual assault and criticized the
Blue House for trying to cover up the scandal. It has also called for a more thorough investigation. Due to those allegations and demands, Ms. Park’s senior presidential press secretary and Mr. Yoon’s immediate supervisor,
Lee Nam-ki, who is said to have encouraged Yoon to return to South Korea as soon as possible to avoid being arrested by U.S. law enforcement, declared that he is willing to resign. On May 10, the
Democratic Party stated that the Washington scandal was a "foreseeable tragedy" because of Park’s refusal to heed her critics. ==References==