From today's paper........The NewsRegister in McMinnville, Oregon
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http://www.newsregister.com/news/story.cfm?story_no=181845
16 counts of child




laid to Kim
Published: July 3, 2004
By KATIE WILLSON
Of the News-Register
Sung Koo Kim, suspect in the Brook Wilberger disappearance and alleged serial panty thief, has been charged in his home county with downloading child











onto his home computer.
Downloading of images allegedly occurred from September 2001 through the morning of May 13, when Newberg police broke the case by arresting him in connection with panty thefts from George Fox University.
The Tigard resident was charged Thursday in Washington County with 16 counts of encouraging child sexual abuse, a Class B felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
Echoing arguments made by prosecutors in the three other Oregon counties - Yamhill, Benton and Multnomah - where Kim has been charged, Washington County prosecutor Jeff Lesowski called the suspect an "extreme public safety risk." Lesowski asked the judge to set bail of "at least $1 million," and his plea was granted.
Kim is now being held on bail of $4 million in Yamhill County and $10 million in Multnomah County in addition to $1 million in Washington and a lesser amount in Benton. His family posted the required 10 percent back when his bail totaled $1.53 million, but has remained behind bars in Multnomah County since it was raised into the millions in two counties.
A search of Kim's home, which the unemployed 30-year-old shares with his parents and sister, turned up 3,400 pairs of panties and bras, an extensive cache of guns and ammunition, 4,000 sex and torture videos and 40,000 computer images of women being tortured, raped, mutilated and murdered.
Lesowski said a grand jury is also hearing evidence on 11 alleged panty theft cases from Pacific University in Forest Grove. As in other counties, he said the work of building a case has been slowed because students scattered when school let out in June.
That would make Washington the fourth county to accuse Kim of campus panty thefts. It could also add yet more to Kim's burgeoning bail total.
Action is also scheduled next week on the bail front. Benton County District Attorney Scott Heiser plans to ask that Kim be held without bail, which is usually reserved for people charged with murder, aggravated murder or treason.
Meanwhile, Kim's privately retained lawyer, Janet Hoffman, plans to seek bail reductions in Yamhill and Multnomah counties. A hearing on the issue has been scheduled for July 23 in Yamhill County.
The South Korean native, who allegedly researched nations beyond U.S. extradition reach while he was out on bail, has also been identified as a suspect in the May 24 disappearance of Wilberger. She was last seen working outside an apartment complex adjacent to Oregon State University in Corvallis.
Kim had allegedly been stalking a woman at the same complex. He has denied involvement.