
Korea National Power Quan Seng Dong said on the 10th: "Just Lee Jae-ming himself said during the election process, all prosecutions are just fabricated. If there is no crime, the trial will be announced in a dignified manner."
Korea National Power Quan Seng Dong said at the in-house countermeasures meeting held in the parliament that morning: "This is the minimum way to maintain authority as the president of the Republic of Korea, and the way to gain the trust of the people."
The South Korean court postponed the retrial date of South Korean President Lee Jae-ming's violation of the Public Office Election Law.
On the 9th, the Criminal Department of the Seoul High Court (Minister Judge Lee Jae-kwon) stated that according to Article 84 of the Constitution, the date of retrial of South Korean President Lee Jae-ming, which was originally scheduled to be abolished on the 18th, was designated as a future date.
Specifying (presumed) after the date refers to the situation where the next date is not specified when the date is changed, extended or renewed.
Previously, the retrial court issued a date of the first public trial as the 15th of last month before the presidential election, but according to South Korean President Lee Jae-ming's request to postpone the date until after the election, the date was postponed to the 18th of this month.
The Seoul High Court explained that the measure was taken in accordance with Article 84 of the Constitution. Article 84 of the Constitution stipulates: "The president will not accept criminal prosecution during his tenure except for civil strife or foreign exchange crimes."
As the postponement of the retrial trial, it is expected that all future trials will also be interrupted.
The day before, he stressed that the Seoul High Court court postponed the retrial date of South Korean President Lee Jae-ming's violation of the Public Office Election Law, "The court therefore added clues to the 'Measures taken under Article 84 of the Constitution', "Article 84 of the Constitution stipulates that 'the president will not accept criminal prosecution during his tenure except for civil strife or foreign exchange crimes'. This means that the new trial cannot be prosecuted, and the trial that has been detained by the court cannot be stopped."
He also said: "If a judge interprets the constitution without authorization, judicial consistency and authority will be shaken. A judge cannot break this principle on his own."
The power of the South Korean National Power East urged the Grand Court: "Justic judgments based on the constitution and law are the responsibility of the entire Ministry of Justice. The Grand Court should fulfill its responsibility for judicial justice."
criminal regarding the joint Democratic Party's promotion of the amendment to the Criminal Procedure Law, "The criminal defendants who accepted the five unique trials in the history of the constitutional government of the Republic of Korea have only made laws for the president, which has shaken the judicial system. The Democratic Party's indefinite extension of trials based on the Public Office Election Law is desolate."
Korea National Power Quan Singdong also questioned Lee Jae-ming's recent personnel arrangements: "I think national unity is a futile slogan. How can national unity be achieved by people who are intolerable to the people?"
He also pointed out: "At present, Lee Jae-ming actually has five criminal records. Kim Min-seok candidate has four criminal records. Secretary-General Kang Hoon-sik has three criminal records, including driving without a license. The president and the prime minister have both had a criminal record. Whether the "sovereign government" of the new government has a sense of identity, we have to ask."