Yoon conviction locks in South Korea’s post-martial-law legal reckoning

Seoul Central District Court convicted former President Yoon Suk-yeol of leading an insurrection tied to his December 3, 2024 martial-law declaration and sentenced him to life in prison.
Yoon conviction locks in South Korea’s post-martial-law legal reckoning
Why it matters
The life sentence removes any near-term path for Yoon to re-enter politics and hardens the legal consequences for senior officials linked to the 2024 martial-law episode. Prosecutors’ failure to secure the death penalty clarifies the upper bound of punishment in this case, shaping plea and litigation strategy for related defendants. The ruling also sets a concrete judicial finding that the martial-law declaration constituted insurrection leadership, tightening legal exposure for anyone alleged to have planned, ordered, or executed the action.
TOPICS

Law & Public Safety Court Rulings Criminal Justice World & Politics Politics

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