
Guest post by trusted source in South Korea
A special prosecutor has formally sought the death penalty against former President Yoon Suk Yeol, and life imprisonment against former Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun.
The sole basis for this unprecedented move is the declaration of a state of emergency — an authority explicitly granted to the presidency under South Korea’s Constitution.
There were:
– No civilian deaths
– No armed clashes
– No ideological purges or mass repression
Yet prosecutors are now pursuing the maximum possible punishment.
This is not normal law enforcement. It is the retroactive criminalization of constitutional authority. If exercising emergency powers can later be reframed as a capital crime, no future leader will ever act decisively in a real national crisis. Political survival will replace national security judgment.
South Korea is a key U.S. ally. What happens here matters far beyond its borders. If a former president in an allied nation can face execution over a constitutional dispute with zero civilian casualties, it sets a precedent that should alarm every free society.
This is precisely the kind of story that deserves international scrutiny. Silence from the United States only emboldens the use of prosecutorial power as a political weapon.
The former President Yoon Suk Yeol is currently being held in prison by the pro-China regime that took power away from Yoon Suk Yeol and his party. A radical prosecutor has charged Yoon Suk Yeol with rebellion charges in connection with his short-lived imposition of martial law in December 2024.
Yoon Suk Yeol has been persecuted since the new leaders took control of the country.
This is a very serious situation that is not making headlines in the US.
The post Former South Korean President Faces Death Penalty by Current Pro-China Administration – They Already Have Him and His Wife in Prison appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
