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A 40-year-old man in South Korea was arrested for sharing a fake AI-generated photo of an escaped wolf, Neukgu, causing an emergency alert. The deception delayed the wolf's capture by up to nine days and could result in a five-year prison sentence.
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South Korean police arrested a man Thursday for posting an AI-generated photo of an escaped wolf—an image convincing enough to fool city officials and trigger an emergency alert to thousands of residents. According to police, the stunt delayed the capture of an actual wolf, which had escaped from a zoo two weeks prior, by up to nine days.
Daejeon Metropolitan Police charged the unnamed 40-year-old with obstructing official duties by deception, specifically for "distributing fabricated wolf sighting images created using generative AI." When questioned, he told investigators he did it "just for fun."
The wolf at the center of this weird saga is Neukgu—a two-year-old male wolf that dug its way out of an enclosure at Daejeon's O-World zoo on April 8. Neukgu also happens to be part of a program to restore the Korean wolf, a species now considered extinct in the wild on the Korean Peninsula.
Hours after Neukgu went missing, the fake image appeared online. It appeared to show a light-brown wolf trotting through a road intersection near the zoo. The photo was convincing enough that Daejeon city government issued an emergency text to residents warning the wolf had moved toward the intersection—and displayed it at an official press briefing.
"A single AI-manipulated image delayed the capture of the wolf by as many as nine days," Daejeon police said. "The prolonged deployment of police and fire personnel caused significant disruption to their primary duty of protecting the public."

The man was arrested for distributing a fake AI-generated photo of an escaped wolf, which misled officials and triggered an emergency alert.
The distribution of the fake photo delayed the actual capture of Neukgu, the escaped wolf, by up to nine days.
The charge of obstructing official duties by deception can lead to a maximum penalty of five years in prison or a fine of 10 million Korean won.

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The AI-generated image of the wolf in South Korea that raised alarms. Image: Upscaled by Decrypt using AI
The hunt for Neukgu was not a minor operation. The city mobilized hundreds of firefighters, police officers, and soldiers, deploying drones and thermal cameras to track the 30-kilogram runaway. A nearby elementary school shut down over safety concerns. President Lee Jae Myung offered a public prayer for the wolf's safe return. Neukgu kept slipping away despite multiple confirmed sightings.
He was finally recaptured on April 17, after authorities received a tip about a sighting in a park near an expressway. Since then, Neukgu has become a local celebrity with its own meme coin—because, of course.
Police traced the arrested man through surveillance camera analysis and AI detection software. The case adds a concrete criminal dimension to a pattern increasingly documented across emergency situations: AI-generated images spreading fast enough to redirect official response before anyone can verify them. Similar fabricated visuals hit during the 2025 LA wildfires and Hurricane Helene—but neither produced a criminal arrest linked directly to the images.
If convicted, the man faces up to five years in prison or a fine of 10 million Korean won—about $6,700.