Presiding judge of South Korean ex-first lady's appeals trial found dead


Trial on former first lady Kim Keon Hee being held at Seoul High Court on April 28. - Photo: Seoul High Court

SEOUL: Appellate court judge Shin Jong-o, who presided over the appeals trial that sentenced former first lady Kim Keon Hee to four years in prison, was found dead near the Seoul High Court in southern Seoul at around 1am Wednesday (May 6), eight days after delivering the ruling.

The Seoul Seocho Police Station said Shin is believed to have fallen from a building, while police are investigating the exact circumstances of his death.

Police found what appears to be a suicide note that reportedly made no mention of the appellate ruling involving Kim. The note only said, “I am sorry. I am leaving by my own choice,” according to local reports. Police do not suspect foul play.

In the April 28 ruling, Shin overturned part of a lower court decision that had sentenced Kim to 20 months in prison after finding her guilty on some bribery charges linked to the Unification Church.

The appellate court found Kim partially guilty of violating the Capital Markets Act in connection with the Deutsche Motors stock manipulation case. It also found her guilty on all counts of influence-peddling under the Act on the Aggravated Punishment of Specific Crimes over her acceptance of valuables from the Unification Church.

The court sentenced her to four years in prison and a fine of 50 million won ($34,200). It also ordered the confiscation of a Graff necklace worth 62.2 million won and an additional forfeiture of 20.94 million won.

Born in Seoul, Shin began his judicial career in 2011 at the Uijeongbu branch of the Seoul District Court. - The Korea Herald/ANN

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Japanese father served with arrest warrant for killing son in Kyoto Prefecture; suspect was already arrested for abandoning child’s body
16 killed in bus-oil tanker crash in Sumatra: Indonesian official
Cambodia says strife in Southeast Asia could crimp energy crisis response
Malaysian man jailed in Singapore over role in crime group controlling 100 bank accounts; over S$4mil flowed through them
Australia unveils over US$7.2bil fuel security plan to boost reserves
Philippine President Marcos pledges to advance energy diversification, food security at Asean Summit
Four killed in post-poll unrest in India's West Bengal
Asean yet to reach consensus on recognising Myanmar elections
Sabah security agencies expand AI use in Esszone
Moody’s names Thailand among most resilient emerging markets

Others Also Read