Wife of ousted president Yoon, and ally, indicted by special prosecutors
[August 29, 2025]
By KIM TONG-HYUNG and HYUNG-JIN KIM
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The wife of South Korea's jailed ex-President
Yoon Suk Yeol and his former prime minister were indicted Friday as part
of investigations into his administration and his attempt to overcome
opposition by declaring martial law.
Yoon set off South Korea’s most serious political crisis in decades when
he attempted to overcome an opposition-dominated legislature that
blocked his agenda by abruptly declaring martial law. His decree lasted
only hours but triggered months of turmoil that paralyzed politics,
disrupted foreign policy and rattled the economy.
Yoon was impeached, then removed from office in April and rearrested
last month after his conservative party lost a special election to
choose his successor. The new government has appointed three special
prosecutors to investigate both the period of martial law and suspicions
of corruption that dogged Yoon through his term in office.
Yoon's wife, ex-prime minister becomes the latest figures to be
indicted
A team led by Special Prosecutor Min Joong-ki said it charged Yoon's
wife, Kim Keon Hee, with violating financial market and political
funding laws and receiving bribes, about two weeks after she was
arrested.
A separate team led by Special Prosecutor Cho Eun-suk said former Prime
Minister Han Duck-soo was charged with abetting Yoon’s imposition of
martial law, which investigators say amounted to a rebellion, as well as
falsifying and destroying official documents, and lying under oath.

Dozens of people have been arrested or investigated over Yoon’s martial
law debacle, corruption allegations involving his wife, and other
controversies from his three years in office, including an alleged
cover-up of a marine’s drowning death during a 2023 flood rescue
operation.
Key suspects include former Defense Minister Kim Yong Hyun, who has been
accused of planning martial law with Yoon and sending troops to the
National Assembly in an unsuccessful attempt to block lawmakers from
voting to lift it. More than 60 people were separately indicted for
rioting at a Seoul court which issued the warrant for Yoon’s first
arrest in January.
Assistant special prosecutor Park Ji-young told a televised briefing
that Han was the highest official who could have blocked Yoon’s attempt
to impose martial law. Park said Han still played an “active” role in
Yoon’s martial law declaration by trying to get Yoon’s decree passed
through a Cabinet Council meeting as a way to give “procedural
legitimacy” to it.
Han has maintained he conveyed to Yoon that he opposed his martial law
plan.
Cho’s team earlier requested the Seoul Central District Court to issue a
warrant to arrest Han. But the court on Wednesday dismissed that
request, saying it determined that there were little chances that Han
would flee or destroy evidence.

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Kim Keon Hee, right, the wife of South Korea's ousted former
President Yoon Suk Yeol, arrives at the special prosecutor's office
in Seoul, South Korea, on Aug. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon,
File)

Kim is the first former first lady to be jailed in Korea
While Yoon’s self-inflicted downfall extended a long streak of South
Korean presidencies ending badly, Kim is the first former first lady to
be arrested and indicted.
Nearly every former South Korean president, or their family members and
aides, have been mired in scandals near the end of their terms or after
they left office.
The last two presidents elected from earlier iterations of Yoon's party
– Park Geun-hye and Lee Myung-back — were both sentenced to lengthy
prison terms over corruption charges before being pardoned and released.
Yoon’s surprising but poorly-planned martial law imposition came amid an
intense standoff with the liberals, but many critics have speculated
Yoon's move was mainly likely an attempt to frustrate then an
opposition-led push to open an independent investigation into his wife's
allegations.
Kim and Yoon are suspected of exerting undue influence on the
conservative People Power Party to nominate a favored candidate in a
2022 legislative by-election, allegedly at the request of election
broker Myung Tae-kyun. Myung is accused of conducting free opinion
surveys for Yoon that used manipulated data, possibly helping him win
the party’s presidential primaries before his election as president in
March 2022.
Before her arrest, Kim apologized for causing public concern but also
hinted she would deny the allegations against her, portraying herself as
“someone insignificant.”

In a statement released through her lawyers on Friday, Kim didn’t make
specific comments about her charges, but said the media was reporting
suspicions as though they were “confirmed fact” and that she plans to
“quietly attend the trials.”
Han, who was appointed prime minister, the country’s No. 2 post, by
Yoon, was South Korea’s acting leader after Yoon was impeached in
mid-December.
After Yoon was formally dismissed as president in a Constitutional Court
decision, Han was supposed to continue to head the caretaker government
until the June presidential election, but resigned to run for the
election. He withdrew from the race after failing to win the People
Power Party's nomination.
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