Stalker Who Took a Selfie with Jungkook Yesterday Exposed for Alleged Plan to Move to Korea to Approach Him
On the 1st, Jungkook took to social media (SNS) to share glimpses of his daily life and spend time interacting with fans. While answering questions from fans, he once again showed his special affection for ARMY by spontaneously announcing that if anyone spotted him jogging along the Han River, he would take a selfie with them. In fact, later the same day, numerous fans managed to encounter Jungkook during his run and were able to take photos with him.
Jungkook also gave fans permission to upload their photos with him to social media, continuing his trademark friendly and approachable interactions. The gesture, which reflects his long-standing willingness to communicate openly with fans, was warmly received by supporters around the world.
However, one of the selfies that quickly went viral soon became the center of controversy after the woman pictured with Jungkook was accused of being a stalker who had allegedly planned her move to South Korea in order to get closer to the idol. A person claiming to know her personally posted a lengthy expose online, attempting to "reveal the truth" behind what appeared to be a chance encounter.
According to information shared by the whistleblower, the woman in the photo is Elena Beyazkaya, who was born in 2008 and is originally from Türkiye. The source claimed that she had been a fan of Jungkook long before moving to South Korea. In 2024, she reportedly uploaded a photo of herself posing in front of Jungkook's residence and shared it on social media. When criticized for allegedly stalking him and invading the singer's privacy, she responded by saying that the two "live in the same neighborhood."
This claim became one of the key reasons behind accusations that she had deliberately positioned herself near Jungkook. The whistleblower wrote:
"She graduated from Kimpo University in August 2025 after completing a Lever 4 language course, which leads me to believe that she moved to the same neighborhood afterward due to the two-hour commute from Kimpo to Jungkook's home address. She now attends KMU, which is 40-50 minutes commute from where she lives. I don't know about y'all, but the only reason I'd do a daily 50-minute commute is if were something near my place of residence that I didn't want to miss."
The person behind the expose further declared, "If Jungkook can't have privacy, neither can you, freak," before urging fellow fans:
"Don't engage with them or fuel their behavior. Ignore the as much as possible, because if no one gives them attention, they'll eventually get bored and stop."
"Don't engage with them or fuel their behavior. Ignore the as much as possible, because if no one gives them attention, they'll eventually get bored and stop."
Meanwhile, after his Han River run and photo session with ARMY as previously promised, Jungkook posted another Instagram story later that night that drew considerable attention. The message read: "I never intended for you to wait near my house. I will expose this."
In the accompanying video, Jungkook repeatedly threw powerful punches toward the camera with a visibly intense expression, appearing as though he was venting his frustration. Many fans interpreted the clip as a strong warning directed at sasaengs who continue to wait around and monitor his residence.
jungkook on instagram:
— ajk ⋆ (@archiveforJK) June 1, 2026
"i didn’t mean for you to wait around near my house. i’m seriously gonna expose this."
….. pic.twitter.com/JXAoDFQBc7
Invasions of Jungkook's privacy have reportedly become a recurring problem since June of last year. On the day of his military discharge, a Chinese woman was reportedly caught attempting to gain access to his home by repeatedly entering door passcode. Then, in August, a Korean woman was arrested after being caught trespassing in the parking area of his residence. In November, an Arab stalker allegedly remained outside Jungkook's home for nearly a week, causing disturbances throughout the neighborhood and prompting nearby residents to file complaints. From December of last year to January of this year, a Brazilian stalker reportedly visited his residence a total of 23 times, rang the doorbell hundreds of times, and even attempted to enter the property through an unlocked side door.
Following the latest controversy, fans have expressed even greater outrage toward those who are allegedly taking advantage of Jungkook's kindness while harboring intentions that could potentially harm him behind the scenes.
ARMYs Comments:
1. Brooo... If you were in front of me, I would have hugged you so tight! Thank you for exposing this. I was feeling so sad because of this incident, but now I'm laughing like a maniac.
2. Can't we donate some money and find someone to stalk them back consistently for a month? Maybe they'll learn through fear that stalking others is unethical and inhumane.
3. I hate stalkers. Just because Jungkook said, "if you catch me, let's get a selca," these stalkers took it as an opportunity to follow him and pretend they just happened to run into him. How disgusting must this person be to take pictures in front of his house?
4. Get real. If the homeowner feels uncomfortable with your presence, then it's wrong, and people should know that. It might stop others from doing the same. The members' private residences are not tourist attractions.
5. To be honest, my dream is to go to his house, beat up those stalkers, and then leave quietly before being deported. He is human too, and people need to respect that.
6. Stalkers outside his home demonstrate the same dangerous mindset and capabilities as many predators. Anyone who defends that behavior seriously need a reality check.
7. I'm disgusted by the fact that there are people who literally move to Korea just to be "closer" to BTS. Like... get a life!



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