Disgraced former South Korean leader Yoon Suk Yeol has been indicted on abuse of power charges, marking a dramatic escalation in legal troubles for the impeached president who was forcibly removed from office last month.
Mounting Legal Crisis
Prosecutors filed the new indictment Thursday, accusing Yoon of illegally declaring martial law on December 3, 2024 – an extraordinary move that saw armed troops deployed to parliament before opposition lawmakers physically stormed the assembly to block the decree. The Constitutional Court unanimously upheld Yoon’s impeachment in April, stripping him of presidential immunity and privileges.
This fresh charge supplements existing insurrection allegations from January, when prosecutors took the unprecedented step of indicting a sitting president as the “ringleader” of an attempted coup. Yoon faces:
- Life imprisonment or death penalty if convicted of insurrection
- Additional 5-10 years for abuse of power charges
- Separate bribery probe involving his wife Kim Keon Hee
Shaman Scandal Widens
The indictment follows Wednesday’s raid on Yoon’s Seoul residence as part of an investigation into his wife’s alleged receipt of luxury gifts through a shaman intermediary. Prosecutors are examining:
• Diamond necklaces and designer handbags funneled to the former first lady
• Suspicious ginseng shipments worth thousands of dollars
• Possible revival of stock manipulation charges against Kim
Political Fallout
With South Korea preparing for snap elections on June 3, Yoon’s downfall has:
• Left his conservative People Power Party in disarray
• Boosted opposition Democratic Party’s prospects
• Renewed scrutiny of presidential accountability in Asia’s fourth-largest economy
Yoon becomes the second South Korean president removed via impeachment after Park Geun-hye in 2017. His trial continues as prosecutors assemble evidence from the six-hour martial law standoff that ultimately ended his presidency.