Special prosecutor details coercion tools, probe stats in Yoon martial law findings

Building on initial results, special prosecutor Cho Eun-seok's team revealed military intelligence prepared baseball bats and other tools to coerce election officials, amid a 180-day probe indicting 27 and yielding new insights into the Dec. 3 power grab plot.

The special prosecutor dismissed Yoon's camp's 'wake-up call' narrative, calling the declaration a 'palace coup' to monopolize power—echoing prior findings on October 2023 preparations. New evidence showed military officers readying baseball bats, awls, and hammers to force National Election Commission staff into fabricating fraud claims from the April 2024 election.

The probe suggested possible 'spouse-related risks' as a motive but found no confirmed link to Kim Keon Hee. The 238-person team, after two extensions, handled 249 police cases (34 returned), with seven suspects detained and 27 indicted (three by military courts). Proceedings were live-broadcast for the first time.

Democratic Party leader Jung Chung-rae criticized unclear motives on insurrection and foreign collusion, pushing a second probe despite election-year optics risks. Concerns arose over excluding Unification Church allegations. A January first-instance ruling on former PM Han Duck-soo, as a key participant, looms. Deputy prosecutor Park Ji-young stressed courts will determine truth, calling for political restraint.

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Illustration of special counsel team discovering early 2024 martial law preparation documents by South Korea's Defense Counterintelligence Command, linked to former President Yoon Suk Yeol.
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Special counsel finds signs of martial law preparations since early 2024

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A special counsel team said on May 4 it has found signs that the Defense Counterintelligence Command prepared for martial law since the first half of 2024, well before former President Yoon Suk Yeol's declaration in December that year. The team is investigating allegations surrounding the ousted president not covered by previous probes.

Seven of the 37 general-level officers punished for alleged involvement in former President Yoon Suk Yeol's failed 2024 martial law bid have filed lawsuits against South Korea's Defense Ministry to overturn their disciplinary actions, ranging from expulsion to duty suspensions. The litigants include former Defense Intelligence Commander Moon Sang-ho and former Drone Operations Commander Kim Yong-dae. A ministry document submitted to Rep. Choo Mi-ae of the ruling Democratic Party revealed the suits, while another 29 generals have appealed but not yet sued.

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A special counsel team demanded a 30-year prison term for former President Yoon Suk Yeol on charges of benefiting the enemy by allegedly ordering military drones over Pyongyang in 2024. The team, led by Cho Eun-suk, also requested 25 years for former Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun on the same charges. Prosecutors believe the October 2024 dispatch aimed to provoke North Korean retaliation as a pretext for Yoon's failed martial law bid.

Five days after his life sentence for the 2024 martial law-linked insurrection, former President Yoon Suk Yeol appealed the ruling on February 24, 2026. His lawyers cited factual errors, legal misapplications, and political bias, vowing to challenge the verdict for historical accuracy amid ongoing political fallout in South Korea.

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Former President Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife Kim Keon Hee faced separate trials at the Seoul Central District Court on Tuesday over corruption allegations, the second such instance. Correctional officials arranged their appearances to avoid crossing paths, as they did not meet during a similar court date in November.

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