Little precedent, wide latitude for South
Korea court in impeachment trial
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[January 05, 2017]
By Joyce Lee
SEOUL (Reuters) - The South Korean court
that will rule on the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye has only
one precedent and little in the law books to go by, and several legal
experts said it will have wide discretion in deciding if she is fit to
remain in office.
Seven of nine experts interviewed by Reuters said they believed the
Constitutional Court's yardstick in deciding whether Park should remain
in office would be less than the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard
for criminal trials, making it more difficult for her to win the case.
South Korean law does not specify the standard needed by the
Constitutional Court to reach a ruling. It calls for criminal procedural
law to be applied during an impeachment trial "at a level that does not
clash with the nature of a constitutional trial".
Experts say this means that the Constitutional Court has discretion on
deciding which part of criminal procedure it will apply, including
whether to use a rigorous level of proof, a lower standard, or apply a
rigorous standard for some deliberations and a lower standard for
others.
Two experts, however, said a high standard would be needed to establish
grounds for upholding impeachment.
Park, 64, was impeached by parliament last month over an influence
peddling scandal. If the nine-judge Constitutional Court rules that she
did allow a friend to have influence over state affairs, as alleged, and
that it was an impeachable offence, she will be ousted, making her South
Korea's first democratically elected leader to be forced from office.
"This is not a criminal trial, it's a constitutional trial deciding
whether a president is no longer fit to carry out presidential duties,"
said Noh Hee-bum, a lawyer who worked as a Constitutional Court research
judge from 1998 to 2015.
"Although it's not expressly stipulated in law, it is the prevailing
view that the level of proof is not as severe."
That, some experts said, would make it more difficult for Park.
"The common view, a lower burden of proof, is comparatively unfavorable
to Park than a higher burden of proof would be," said Koh Moon-hyun, a
professor at the Soongsil University College of Law.
Park has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and her lawyers have argued
that the case should be thrown out.
"In an impeachment proceeding, proof beyond a reasonable doubt is
needed," her lawyer, Lee Joong-hwan, said in court on Tuesday, citing a
publication by the research institute attached to the Constitutional
Court.
"We can see that this means a rigorous level of proof is needed based on
evidentiary principles of criminal procedure," he said.
The parliament's impeachment committee and its legal counsel, who are
the prosecutors in the case, could not immediately be reached for
comment.
Two sessions of the trial have been held this week and Park did not
attend, as expected. Lee said he believes she will not appear, barring
special circumstances. The court can take several months to deliver a
ruling.
FRIEND AND HER DAUGHTER
Park is accused of violating her constitutional duty by allowing her
friend Choi Soon-sil to wield undue influence over state affairs and
colluding with her to pressure big businesses into making contributions
to foundations and enterprises backed by Choi.
[to top of second column] |
Park Geun-hye attends a national convention of the ruling Saenuri
Party in Goyang, north of Seoul, South Korea August 20, 2012.
REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won/File Photo
Choi is in custody as she undergoes criminal trial for abuse of
power and fraud, while her daughter, 20-year-old equestrian
competitor Chung Yoo-ra, has been detained by police in Denmark and
faces extradition proceedings after being charged with "committing
economic crime" in South Korea.
Both have denied any wrongdoing.
In South Korea's only previous presidential impeachment, the
Constitutional Court overturned a 2004 parliamentary impeachment of
then-President Roh Moo-hyun.
The 2004 case mainly involved Roh's public comments supporting a
political party as an election loomed, which the court said violated
a law requiring government officials to be politically neutral but
was not serious enough to warrant impeachment. The judges voted 6 to
3 to overturn that motion.
In that decision, the court cited five examples of grounds for
impeachment, and experts said the impeachment committee is likely to
argue in favor of at least three of them in Park's case - "acts of
corruption," "harming the national interest" and "violating the
people's basic rights".
As the only precedent, the Constitutional Court is expected to
closely adhere to the logic of the 2004 ruling - especially on what
constitutes grounds for impeachment, experts said.
Lee In-ho, a professor at Chung-Ang University School of Law, said
although the level of proof required to convince the judges was not
expressly spelled out in law, a high standard would be needed.
"In 2004, the Constitutional Court ruled that if facts do not verify
that the president directed, abetted or otherwise unlawfully
participated in the act in question, it is not grounds for
impeachment," Lee said. "I believe the judges will decide that a
rigorous level of proof similar to a criminal trial is needed."
For the impeachment to stand, at least six of the nine judges must
rule in favor of it.
The terms of two of them are set to expire soon - one on Jan. 31 and
the other on March 13 - potentially leaving just seven judges, the
minimum required. If the case goes past March 13, that could work in
Park's favor because the number of judges needed to uphold
impeachment remains at six.
Unlike in 2004, each judge's decision will be made public.
(Editing by Tony Munroe and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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