In the wake of mass street protests in Seoul and other cities to demand Park's resignation, Choi Soon-Sil -- who has denied any criminal wrongdoing -- submitted to prosecutors in Seoul a day after flying back to the country from Germany.
Park and Choi have been close friends for 40 years. The precise nature of that friendship lies at the heart of the current scandal which has triggered a media frenzy in South Korea, with lurid reports of religious cults and shamanistic rituals.
Suggestions that Choi vetted presidential speeches and was given access to classified documents has exposed Park to public anger and ridicule and, with just over a year left in office, pushed her approval ratings off a cliff.
A task force, led by the head of the powerful Seoul Central District Prosecutor's Office, has been set up to investigate the leak of presidential documents and whether Choi meddled in state affairs.
"We hope that the various allegations can be thoroughly verified," presidential spokesman Jung Youn-Kuk told reporters ahead of Choi's questioning.
Choi is the daughter of a late shadowy religious leader and one-time Park mentor called Choi Tae-Min, who was married six times, had multiple pseudonyms and set up his own cult-like group known as the Church of Eternal Life.
Choi Tae-Min befriended a traumatised Park after the 1974 assassination of her mother, whom he said had appeared to him in a dream, asking him to help her daughter.
Choi Soon-Sil's ex-husband served as a top aide to Park until her presidential election victory in 2012.
A public apology by Park, in which she acknowledged seeking limited advice from Choi, did little to assuage public outrage and she has struggled to draw a political line under the crisis.
Park carried out a partial reshuffle of her key aides yesterday and is considering calls from her ruling Saenuri Party to form a neutral multi-party cabinet to restore public trust and national unity.
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