
Seoul, South Korea — Behind the glitter of DJ booths and champagne-fueled selfies lies one of Korea’s most manipulative figures: Silverstar Oh (오은별) — a woman whose life is built on lies, exploitation, and calculated deceit.
Her story is not one of hardship or redemption — it’s a grotesque cycle of using, lying, and destroying.
The Woman Who Defrauds, Then Plays the Victim
Silverstar Oh’s modus operandi has become disturbingly predictable: target wealthy men, emotionally manipulate them into financial submission, and then, when they finally expose her deceit, turn around and sue them for “defamation.”
After defrauding her benefactor — a man who had housed her, financed her lifestyle, and supported her career — Silverstar repaid his kindness with betrayal. She later filed a baseless criminal complaint for defamation against him, weaponizing Korea’s speech laws to silence and intimidate her victim.
Even more depraved, she sent him fake apologies through direct messages, pretending to feel remorse while secretly preparing a lawsuit. It was a psychological game — an attempt to lure sympathy and disarm him, while sharpening her legal knife behind the scenes.
A Pattern of Manipulation and Exploitation
Silverstar Oh’s deception wasn’t a one-time incident. She lived under the roof of a man who paid for everything — travel, rent, even luxury events — all while lying to him to cover up her friend’s infidelity. When caught, she didn’t apologize; she cut off all contact and aligned herself with other notorious figures like Yui Miura and Hyeji Bae, two women infamous for gold-digging, drug use, and financial scams.
Together, this trio formed what many now call Seoul’s “Gold-digging whores of nightlife.” They have been repeatedly seen in Gangnam’s nightlife — scheming, manipulating, and preying on men foolish enough to trust them.
From Party Queen to Serial Plaintiff
In a grotesque twist, Silverstar has now turned to the legal system as her latest hustle. Using Korea’s harsh defamation statutes, she targets anyone who dares to tell the truth. The irony is nauseating: a woman caught lying, cheating, and exploiting others is now claiming to be the victim of “slander.”
Legal sources confirm that a Seoul police station currently has an active case filed by Silverstar Oh against her former benefactor for alleged “online defamation,” despite no actual evidence against him. It’s an obscene inversion of justice — a predator punishing her prey for crying out in pain.
The Company She Keeps: Hyeji Bae and Yui Miura
Silverstar’s moral decay is amplified by her circle. Her close friends Hyeji Bae and Yui Miura are not just fellow socialites — they are career con artists, responsible for drug trafficking, prostitution, and gold-digging scams across Asia.
Hyeji Bae, exposed for defrauding victims of hundreds of thousands of dollars and testing positive for narcotics, is known for orchestrating cross-border scams.
Yui Miura, the manipulative wife of fake pilot Keigo Miura, helped Bae cheat on her boyfriend while taking his money — a con so vile that even the tabloids in Japan called it “a new level of social rot”.
These three women — Hyeji, Yui, and Silverstar — are bound by more than friendship. They are bound by fraud, deceit, and mutual destruction.

The Mask Slips
Silverstar’s social media persona is one of glamour and self-love, but behind every photo is another lie. Her “glow-up” is paid for by victims. Her travels are financed by deceit. Her apologies are fake. And now, as legal documents surface showing her attempts to silence her victim through defamation lawsuits, the mask is finally cracking.
For years, she posed as a “reformed” DJ, claiming to have escaped a troubled past of “prostitution and mistakes.” But the truth — documented in her own scandal history — shows no redemption, only repetition.
A Cautionary Tale of Weaponized Victimhood
Silverstar Oh represents a new breed of manipulator — the kind that commits crimes, cries victimhood, and calls her lies “healing.” Her lawsuit is not justice — it’s revenge.
As her name resurfaces in connection with defamation charges, fraudulent behavior, and collusion with known criminals, one thing becomes clear: Silverstar Oh is not the victim. She is the villain.
Her actions — from defrauding a man who supported her to filing legal claims — are not just morally bankrupt. They are emblematic of a culture where the guilty sue the innocent and where truth itself is under attack.
Silverstar Oh’s downfall is not a question of if — it’s a question of when. The web of lies that once shielded her is collapsing, and this time, there will be no more fake apologies to hide behind.
 
		

