"An early inspection indicates that there was no significant damage to the items stored in this location," they said.
"I think the opposition party's power in the assembly went to its head," says Mr Breen. "Now they've shot themselves in the foot."An embattled Yoon has become larger than life, rebranded as a martyr who saw martial law as the only way to save South Korea's democracy.
"If it wasn't for the good of the country, he wouldn't have chosen martial law, where he would have to pay with his life if he failed," a pro-Yoon rally attendee, who gave only his surname Park, told the BBC.This has also contributed to a widening chasm within the PPP. While some have joined pro-Yoon rallies, others crossed party lines to vote for Yoon's impeachment."Why are people worshipping him like a king? I can't understand it," said PPP lawmaker Cho Kyoung-tae, who supported Yoon's impeachment.
Kim Sang-wook, another PPP lawmaker who has emerged as a prominent anti-Yoon voice among conservatives, said he was pressured to leave the party after supporting Yoon's impeachment. And now YouTubers, according to Kim, have become the president's public relations machine.Worries have simmered over an increasingly ungovernable group within the conservative movement. And as influential left-wing YouTubers similarly rally anti-Yoon protesters, there are also concerns that political differences are being driven ever deeper into the fabric of South Korea's society.
"Much damage has already been done in terms of radicalising the right, and the left as well for that matter," US-based lawyer and Korea expert Christopher Jumin Lee told the BBC.
He added that at this point "any compromise with a conservative party that continues to embrace Yoon will likely be seen as anathema"."Together, we win!", he
It follows Meta incorporating an AI service into its messaging service, WhatsApp - a development it wasafter grumbling from users.
Media analyst Hanna Kahlert at Midia Research told BBC News the move followed the pattern of "social and AI trying to absorb each other".She said it was not, however, necessarily what customers actually wanted.