South Korea's impeached president defies warrant after hourslong 
		standoff
		
		 
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		 [January 03, 2025]  
		By KIM TONG-HYUNG 
		
		SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean investigators left the official 
		residence of impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol after a near-six-hour 
		standoff on Friday during which he defied their attempt to detain him. 
		It’s the latest confrontation in a political crisis that has paralyzed 
		South Korean politics and seen two heads of state impeached in under a 
		month. 
		 
		The country’s anti-corruption agency said it withdrew its investigators 
		after the presidential security service blocked them from entering 
		Yoon’s residence for hours, due to concerns about their safety. 
		 
		The agency said its outnumbered investigators had several scuffles with 
		presidential security forces and expressed “serious regret about the 
		attitude of the suspect, who did not comply with the legal process.” 
		 
		It said detaining Yoon would be “virtually impossible” as long as he is 
		protected by the presidential security service. The agency plans to 
		“strongly demand” that the country’s acting leader, Deputy Prime 
		Minister Choi Sang-mok, instruct the service to comply with their 
		execution of the detainment warrant. 
		 
		Outside the residence, a large group of pro-Yoon protesters braved 
		freezing temperatures for hours, waving South Korean and American flags 
		while chanting slogans vowing to protect him. 
		
		
		  
		
		The National Police Agency said it planned to investigate the chief and 
		deputy chiefs of the presidential security service on suspicion of 
		obstructing official duty and summoned them for questioning on Saturday. 
		 
		Yoon, a former prosecutor, has resisted investigators’ attempts to 
		question him for weeks. The last time he is known to have left the 
		residence was on Dec. 12, when he went to the nearby presidential office 
		to make a televised statement to the nation, making a defiant statement 
		that he will fight efforts to oust him. 
		 
		Investigators from the country’s anti-corruption agency are weighing 
		charges of rebellion after Yoon, apparently frustrated that his policies 
		were blocked by an opposition-dominated parliament, declared martial law 
		on Dec. 3 and dispatched troops to surround the National Assembly. 
		 
		Parliament overturned the declaration within hours in an unanimous vote 
		and impeached Yoon on Dec. 14, accusing him of rebellion, while South 
		Korean anti-corruption authorities and public prosecutors opened 
		separate investigations into the events. 
		 
		A Seoul court issued a warrant to detain Yoon and a separate warrant to 
		search his residence on Tuesday, but enforcing them is complicated as 
		long as he remains in his official residence. 
		 
		Yoon’s lawyers, who filed a challenge to the warrant on Thursday, say it 
		cannot be enforced at his residence due to a law that protects locations 
		potentially linked to military secrets from search without the consent 
		of the person in charge. 
		 
		The office said it will discuss further actions but did not immediately 
		say whether it would make another attempt to detain Yoon. The warrant 
		for his detention is valid for one week. 
		 
		Yoon’s lawyers have also argued that the Corruption Investigation Office 
		for High-ranking Officials, which is leading a joint investigation with 
		police and military investigators, lacks the authority to investigate 
		rebellion charges. They said that police officers don’t have the legal 
		authority to assist in detaining Yoon, and could face arrest by either 
		the “presidential security service or any citizens.” They didn’t 
		elaborate further on the claim. 
		 
		If investigators manage to detain Yoon, they will likely ask a court for 
		permission to make a formal arrest. Otherwise, he will be released after 
		48 hours. 
		
		  
		
		[to top of second column] 
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            Police officers escort away a supporter of impeached South Korean 
			President Yoon Suk Yeol as Yoon faces potential arrest after a court 
			on Tuesday approved a warrant for his arrest, near the presidential 
			residence in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Ahn 
			Young-joon) 
            
			
			
			  
            During a background briefing to reporters, an official from the 
			anti-corruption agency said its investigators were able to approach 
			within 200 meters (yards) of Yoon’s residence but were stopped by a 
			barricade comprising around 10 vehicles and approximately 200 
			members of the presidential security forces and troops. The 
			official, who spoke on condition of anonymity per department rules, 
			said three of its prosecutors were eventually allowed to approach 
			the building but they weren’t able to confirm whether Yoon was 
			inside. 
            While the presidential security act mandates protection for Yoon, it 
			does not authorize the presidential security service to block 
			court-ordered detainments, which would amount to an infringement on 
			judicial authority, said Park Seong-bae, an attorney specializing in 
			criminal law. While the president mostly has immunity from 
			prosecution while in office, the protection does not extend to 
			allegations of rebellion or treason. 
			 
			“There’s a high possibility that the act of blocking the execution 
			of a detainment warrant would constitute an obstruction of official 
			duty,” he said. 
			 
			The law requiring consent of the person in charge for searches in 
			locations with potential military secrets could continue to hinder 
			Yoon’s detainment. Courts often require law enforcement officials to 
			obtain search warrants with detainment warrants in case they need to 
			search the site to locate the suspect, which is also what the 
			anti-corruption agency did in their pursuit of Yoon. 
			 
			It’s unlikely that the approval could come from the country’s acting 
			leader, Choi, as it would be difficult to see him as the person in 
			charge of Yoon’s residence, Park said. 
			 
			Park Chan-dae, floor leader of the liberal opposition Democratic 
			Party, called the anti-corruption agency’s withdrawal regrettable 
			and urged the agency to make another attempt to detain Yoon on 
			Friday. 
            
			  
			Kwon Young-se, who heads the emergency leadership committee of 
			Yoon’s conservative People Power Party, called the agency’s effort 
			to detain Yoon “highly unfair and exceedingly improper,” saying that 
			there is no risk of Yoon attempting to flee or to destroy evidence. 
			 
			Thousands of police officers gathered at Yoon’s residence on Friday, 
			forming a perimeter around a growing group of pro-Yoon protesters 
			who braved freezing temperatures for hours, waving South Korean and 
			American flags while chanting slogans vowing to protect him. There 
			were no immediate reports of major clashes outside the residence. 
			 
			Yoon’s defense minister, police chief and several top military 
			commanders have already been arrested over their roles in the period 
			of martial law. 
			 
			Yoon’s presidential powers have been suspended since the National 
			Assembly voted to impeach him on Dec. 14. Yoon’s fate now lies with 
			the Constitutional Court, which has begun deliberations on whether 
			to uphold the impeachment and formally remove Yoon from office or 
			reinstate him. At least six justices on the nine-member 
			Constitutional Court must vote in favor to remove him from office. 
			 
			The National Assembly voted last week to impeach Prime Minister Han 
			Duck-soo, who became acting president after Yoon’s powers were 
			suspended, over his reluctance to fill three Constitutional Court 
			vacancies ahead of the court’s review of Yoon’s case. 
			 
			Facing growing pressure, the new acting president, Choi, appointed 
			two new justices on Tuesday, which could increase the chances of the 
			court upholding Yoon’s impeachment. 
			
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