South Korea’s Supreme Court upholds lower court ruling in ex-president Yoon’s obstruction case

SEOUL, July 9 (Reuters) – South Korea’s ​Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a seven-year prison ‌sentence handed down to former President Yoon Suk Yeol for obstructing authorities’ attempts to arrest him over his short-lived imposition of martial law ​in 2024.
The ruling came after the Seoul High ​Court in April increased his prison sentence to seven years ⁠from five, after finding Yoon guilty of additional charges.
There was ​no misunderstanding of any legal interpretations in the previous court’s ​ruling, the Supreme Court said.
The Supreme Court upheld the appeals court’s finding that Yoon was also guilty of fabricating documents and failing to ​follow the legal process required to impose martial law, ​which has to be discussed at a formal cabinet meeting, as well ‌as ⁠spreading false information to foreign media outlets.
After the ruling, Yoon’s lawyers said they would seek a ruling from the Constitutional Court following Thursday’s decision.
“We will challenge the constitutionality of this ​ruling through ​constitutional review procedures, ⁠including a constitutional complaint,” a lawyer for Yoon said.
Prosecutors, who had sought a 10-year prison ​term in the case, accused Yoon of ​abusing his ⁠power and hurting the public.
Yoon, 65, was also sentenced to life in prison in February on charges of masterminding an insurrection ⁠tied ​to his martial law declaration.
Facing seven ​other trials, Yoon has been in jail since July 2025.

Reporting by Heejin Kim ​and Joyce Lee; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Thomas Derpinghaus.

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