Bogor Regency hands over case of alleged job trading by 4 civil servants to police
Bogor Regency (ANTARA) - The Bogor Regency Government, West Java, has handed over a case of alleged job trading by four civil servants (ASN) to law enforcement authorities for further processing.
The Head of the Bogor Regency Inspectorate, Arif Rahman, in Cibinong on Tuesday, stated that the handover was carried out after an investigative audit found indications of transactions among the four ASN.
“Based on the audit results, indications of transactions among the four civil servants were found. Therefore, this case has been handed over to law enforcement authorities,” said Arif.
He explained that the investigative audit had been conducted since 11 March 2026 through a series of steps, starting from data collection, document tracing, to confirmation and clarification with relevant parties.
However, the examination results found no evidence of money flowing to the Human Resources and Human Resources Development Agency (BKPSDM), the Performance Evaluation Team (TPK), or other authorised parties in the position promotion process.
“No evidence of money flowing to BKPSDM, TPK, or other related parties was found. The transactions only occurred among the four civil servants concerned, based on transfer evidence and bank statements,” said Arif.
He emphasised that the clarification process conducted with several parties does not immediately indicate involvement in the case, but is part of efforts to strengthen data and uncover facts comprehensively.
In response to these findings, the Bogor Regency Government has assured that violations committed by ASN will be firmly addressed in accordance with applicable laws and regulations.
In addition to disciplinary sanctions as regulated in Government Regulation Number 94 of 2021 on Civil Servant Discipline, this case is also being processed through legal channels as it is indicated to contain criminal elements.
Arif added that the handover of this case is part of the local government’s commitment to building clean and corruption-free governance, free from practices of corruption, collusion, and nepotism.
The alleged job trading practice is said to have originated from ASN members offering structural positions to several employees since 2022 in exchange for money paid in instalments.
The Inspectorate is still continuing to collect data and statements to ensure the validity of the findings before determining further steps.