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.
Former President Yoon Suk Yeol appealed his life imprisonment sentence on Tuesday, February 24, 2026, five days after the Seoul Central District Court's February 19 verdict for leading an insurrection through his December 3, 2024, martial law declaration. The court had ruled Yoon's troop deployment to the National Assembly constituted insurrection, causing severe damage to democratic institutions.
Yoon's legal team issued a statement: "We have a responsibility to clearly point out the problems with this decision for not only court records but for future historical records." They criticized the "special counsel's overzealous indictment," the "contradictory decision of the court of first instance premised on it," and its "political background."
Yoon previously stated it was "difficult to accept the logic that troops going to the National Assembly amounted to insurrection," insisting his actions were "solely for the country and the people." He apologized for the "despair and suffering" caused by his "shortcomings."
The court emphasized Yoon's leading role, lack of remorse, and the social costs incurred. This appeal follows his impeachment, upheld by the Constitutional Court on April 11, 2025, and a separate five-year sentence for obstructing detention. The U.S. has reaffirmed its alliance commitment, viewing the matter as South Korea's judicial affair.
Part of the Yoon Suk Yeol Martial Law Insurrection Trial series.