AP/ December 21, 2012, 4:12 AM

North Korea: American citizen detained for crime

Updated at 12:26 p.m. ET

PYONGYANG, North Korea North Korea said Friday that an American citizen has been detained after confessing to unspecified crimes, confirming news reports about his arrest at a time when Pyongyang is facing criticism from Washington for launching a long-range rocket last week.

The American was identified as Pae Jun Ho in a brief dispatch issued by the state-run Korean Central News Agency in Pyongyang. News reports in the U.S. and South Korea said Pae is known in his home state of Washington as Kenneth Bae, a 44-year-old tour operator of Korean descent.

An expert said he is likely to become a bargaining chip for the North, an attempt to draw the U.S. into talks. Five other Americans known to have been detained in North Korea since 2009 were all eventually released.

North Korean state media said Pae arrived in the far northeastern city of Rajin on Nov. 3 as part of a tour.

Rajin is part of a special economic zone not far from Yanji, China, that has sought to draw foreign investors and tourists over the past year. Yanji, home to many ethnic Korean Chinese, also serves as a base for Christian groups that shelter North Korean defectors.

"In the process of investigation, evidence proving that he committed a crime against (North Korea) was revealed. He admitted his crime," the KCNA dispatch said.

The North said the crimes were "proven through evidence" but did not elaborate.

KCNA said consular officials from the Swedish Embassy in Pyongyang visited Pae on Friday. Sweden represents the United States in diplomatic affairs in North Korea since Washington and Pyongyang do not have diplomatic relations.

Karl-Olof Andersson, Sweden's ambassador to North Korea, told The Associated Press he could not comment on the case and referred the matter to the U.S. State Department.

The State Department was not immediately able to provide any additional information about the report.

The operator of a Korean language website for the Korean community in the Northwest, Chong Tae Kim of JoySeattle.com, said the detainee's father lives in Korea and his mother lives in Lynnwood, Wash.

"She hopes the State Department and Swedish Embassy help with his release," he said Friday. "She's trying not to speak to reporters, fearing that could affect her son's release."

The office of U.S. Rep. Suzan DelBene says it has reached out to the mother and is pressing the State Department for information.

"We are very concerned about it and seeing what can be done on our end to help with this," said spokesman Viet Shelton.

State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said on Dec. 11 that Washington was "obviously aware" of reports that a U.S. citizen was detained in North Korea. She didn't confirm the reports.

In Seoul, the Segye Ilbo newspaper reported last week that Bae had been taking tourists on a five-day trip to the North when he was arrested. The newspaper cited unidentified sources.

News of the arrest comes as North Korea is celebrating the launch of a satellite into space on Dec. 12, in defiance of calls by the U.S. and others to cancel a liftoff widely seen as an illicit test of ballistic missile technology.

The announcement of the American's detainment could be a signal from the North that it wants dialogue with the United States, said Cheong Seong-chang, an analyst at the private Sejong Institute in South Korea. He said trips by former U.S. Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter to North Korea to secure the release of other detained Americans created a mood for U.S.-North Korea talks.

"North Korea knows sanctions will follow its rocket launch. But in the long run, it needs an excuse to reopen talks after the political atmosphere moves past sanctions," Cheong said.

Cheong said he expects that the American will be tried and convicted in coming months. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has the power to grant amnesty and will exercise it as a bargaining chip, Cheong said.

Nuland said earlier this week that Washington had been trying to reach out to Kim.

"Instead, that was met not only with an abrogation of agreements that had been made by the previous North Korean regime, but by missile activity both in April and in December," she told reporters.

She said Washington had no choice but to put pressure on Pyongyang, and was discussing with its allies how to "further isolate" the regime.

In April 2009, a North Korean rocket launch took place while two American journalists, Laura Ling and Euna Lee, were in North Korean custody after allegedly trying to sneak into the country across the Tumen River dividing the North from China.

They were sentenced to 12 years of hard labor before being released on humanitarian grounds after Mr. Clinton flew to Pyongyang to negotiate their release.

Subsequently, three other Americans were arrested and eventually released by North Korea. All three are believed to have been accused of illegally spreading Christianity.

North Korea has several sanctioned churches in Pyongyang but frowns on the distribution of Bibles and other religious materials by foreigners. Interaction between North Koreans and foreigners is strictly regulated.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
16 Comments Add a Comment
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cbsnews_viewer says:
There is no reason to want to go to North Korea unless one wants to be a slave. Being a tour operator is deluding one's self while enriching this totalitarian slave state. All they are doing is delaying the eventual collapse.
The United States is using the strategy of containment against North Korea. You can not expect perfect solutions, but it has stopped this aggressor nation.
Many North Koreans, with exceptions, want to get the hell out of there.
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Rafterman11 says:
CHUCK766 replies: The use of the phrase," 'con nut bags" really shows your lack of intelligence.

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No, its shows my reality of dealing with you paranoid Obama nutbags, who believe every far right wing conspiracy theory about Obama, no matter how outrageous and easily disprovable. Of course, I also call people far left wing nutbags when they say ridiculous stuff about Bush, like he was behind 9/11. But, for every far left wing Bush-hater nutbag, there are 100 far right wing Obama-hater nutbags. The paranoia on the right about Obama is truly astounding.

I have no patience for conspiracy theories or hidden agenda accusations.
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Rafterman11 replies:
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...as I said, left wing nutbags too. Take off the tin foil hat. Its interfering with normal thought process.

Bush and/or some mysterious black organization wasn't behind 9/11. Pi$$ed off Muslims were. Deal with it.
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joesapper says:
An Obama letter must be enroute explaining why the check was late .

It is good thing that the kid likes Mickey Mouse or perhaps Mickey would be getting marched out in the middle of the night in cuffs accused for the blame of all the crime of others .

The action on Libya is zero , other than some poor idiot is behind bars for making a video , so post like this as sour as they are have no effect like the lie and actions that cause the video guy to be in jail over Christmass . It is a sham & a shame , and they know it .
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rjack61 says:
Blackbreered, you are right. Let his parents, friends or the South Koreans negotiate a release for him.
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ammo17 says:
north korea also detained the uss pueblo,so what does one person being detained by this country mean.
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john92021 says:
I wonder what the going price for a US citizen is?
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tsigili says:
Those who seek to aid the people of NK, find themselves imprisoned.

That's the risk they take, to try to provide help.
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WiseAsOwl says:
Dang North Koreans.... They'd better watch it... Obama will give them another warning, if they keep this up... If that doesn't work, he'll hit them with his purse... or something.... Isn't it good to see firmness in a president...
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Rafterman11 replies:
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I love how you 'cons later reality to match your rant. Obama is timid? Tell that to bin Laden and several dozen alqueda leaders who got drone missiles up their bungholes. Tell that to Pakistan, who got their "sovereignty" ignored. Tell that to Khadafi.

Oh, but that's right. You 'con nutbags think Obama should declare war the instant the smallest conflict comes up.

LOL.
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Well_You_Aint_Me says:
"North Korean state media said Pae arrived in the far northeastern city of Rajin on Nov. 3 as part of a tour. Rajin is part of a special economic zone not far from Yanji, China, that has sought to draw foreign investors and tourists over the past year."

Good luck with your tourism NK. not many people will want to visit if they are going to be arrested.
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Blackbeered says:
Any "American" stupid enough to go to North Korea needs to be left there.
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dpattan replies:
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Yep
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