Has South Korea's Lee Appointed Assistant Special Counsels for New Probe into Ex-President Yoon's Martial Law?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Appointment of assistant special counsels to investigate former President Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law.
- Indictment of former Defence Minister Kim Yong-hyun on serious charges.
- Legal mechanisms in place to ensure accountability.
- Potential political ramifications for South Korea's governance.
- Public trust in leadership is at stake.
Seoul, June 20 (NationPress) South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has appointed a team of six assistant special counsels to aid in a fresh investigation concerning insurrection allegations related to former President Yoon Suk Yeol's brief martial law declaration, as announced by the presidential office on Friday.
Independent counsel Cho Eun-suk proposed eight nominees for these positions and officially sought their appointments via the Ministry of Personnel and Management.
According to applicable law, the president must appoint assistant special counsels within five days after receiving such a request.
On Thursday, Cho's office revealed the indictment of former Defence Minister Kim Yong-hyun on multiple charges, including obstruction of official duties and complicity in the destruction of evidence related to the martial law declaration.
Furthermore, Lee is anticipated to appoint four additional assistant special counsels by Saturday to oversee a different probe into allegations of influence-peddling linked to the 2023 drowning incident of a Marine during a rescue operation, as reported by Yonhap news agency.
Previously, on June 19, the independent counsel investigating Yoon Suk Yeol's brief martial law imposition announced the indictment of Kim on charges of obstructing official duties.
In a press release, Cho confirmed that Kim was also indicted for aiding in the destruction of evidence connected to the martial law declaration on December 3. These charges were filed late Wednesday evening.
Kim has been incarcerated since December 27 and is undergoing trial for charges related to insurrection for advising martial law to Yoon and drafting the decree.
The new indictments emerged two days after Kim appealed a conditional bail ruling that the prosecution sought and the court granted, likely aiming for unconditional release when his six-month detention concludes on June 26.
Cho stated, "We have petitioned the court to expedite the consolidation of the new charges against Kim with the ongoing case, revoke the bail decision, and issue a new detention warrant."
This move by the special counsel seems designed to prevent Kim's release next week.
Under criminal procedure laws, the pretrial detention for an initial trial cannot surpass six months. Since the same charges cannot justify continued detention, Kim would be released unless a new warrant is issued based on additional charges.