Power can’t defeat public sentiment Published: 05 Aug. 2024, 20:01 Lee Ha-kyung The author is a senior columnist of the JoongAng Ilbo. Prosecutor General Lee One-seok would come to work during the weekends to help his juniors polish up indictments.

Implying the heaps of documents he had combed through, the ridges on his thumb are worn down. The chief prosecutor strolls instead of playing golf. He abstains from drinking and hotel meals, suggesting a disciplined and stoic life as if he were a monk.

The prosecutor general, who retires on Sept. 15, reprimanded Lee Chang-soo, head of the Seoul Central Prosecutors’ Office, for offering exceptional treatment for first lady Kim Keon Hee when prosecutors questioned her over her suspicious past. The prosecutor general quoted the famous axiom that the law must not surrender to power.

First lady Kim Keon Hee arrives for questioning by the prosecution at a secret office of the Presidential Security Service over her acceptance of a luxury handbag from a mysterious pastor and her alleged manipulation of stock prices, July 20. [NEWS1] Kim complied with the interrogation more than four years after she was implicated in the Deutsch Motors stock manipulation case — and five months after the exposure of her acceptance of a luxury handbag from a suspicious pastor. The first lady chose a Presidential Security Service office for her questioning.

Prosecutors had to hand in their smartphones before entering the premises. They were ridiculed for.