Surge in judicial complaints amid new laws as South Korea Assembly eyes remaining reform bills

One week after South Korea's judicial reform laws took effect on March 12—introducing constitutional appeals and penalties for 'law distortion'—complaints against top judges have risen sharply. The National Assembly is set to vote Thursday on the remaining two bills of the 'judiciary trio,' prompting fears of paralyzing the judiciary.

South Korea's judicial reforms, proclaimed March 12, criminalized 'legal distortion'—punishing judges, prosecutors, or investigators up to 10 years for intentionally misapplying laws. On the first day, a complaint targeted Chief Justice Jo Hee-de over handling of President Lee Jae-myung's election-law case. By March 14, a shareholder sued a judge for a lenient stock-manipulation sentence, highlighting risks of criminalizing routine rulings and bypassing appeals.

The new constitutional complaint system has also spiked: 44 filings at the Constitutional Court from March 12-15 (averaging 10 daily), versus prior norms. Officials project over 10,000 extra cases yearly, quadrupling last year's 3,092. Filers include Democratic Party lawmaker Yang Moon-seok (post-conviction for fraudulent loan), a YouTuber convicted of extorting influencer Tzuyang, and Telegram sex crime operator Cho Ju-bin.

Amid this, Democratic Party floor leader Rep. Jung Chung-rae announced a Thursday vote on the 'judiciary trio's' remaining bills: the Serious Crime Investigation Agency (SCIA) Act and Public Prosecution Office (PPO) Act. These aim to split investigation from indictment, curbing prosecutors by empowering special officers like labor inspectors. Jung stated: 'The ultimate goal... is to separate the two primary functions of law enforcement.'

The People Power Party dubs them the 'toxic judiciary trio,' while experts warn of threats to judicial independence.

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