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==Effects==
==Effects==
The exact nature of the "special consideration" may vary. Prosecutors and judges, for their part deny that there is any impropriety at all.<ref name="Park"/> However, as stated by the ''[[Doosan Encyclopedia]]'', the practise may extend as far as former judges and prosecutors being given a favourable ruling at their first trial in private practise, regardless of its merits.<ref name="Naver">{{citation|url=http://100.naver.com/100.nhn?docid=744498 |periodical=Naver Encyclopedia|title=전관예우 (前官禮遇) |accessdate=2010-06-18}}</ref> Because of the perception that it will offer them an advantage in their cases, clients thus prefer to engage the services of defense attorneys who have previously served as judges or public prosecutors.<ref name="Park"/> Judges-turned-lawyers are thus able to command much higher fees than their competitors.<ref name="KT20100323">{{citation|url=http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/04/113_62834.html|date=2010-03-23|accessdate=2010-06-24|title=Lawyers, Judges and Prosecutors Play Blame Game|periodical=[[The Korea Times]]|last=Kang|first=Hyun-kyung}}</ref> These factors have resulted in "deep-rooted distrust in the criminal justice system" by the public.<ref name="Park"/><ref name="KT20100323"/>
The exact nature of the "special consideration" may vary. Prosecutors and judges, for their part deny that there is any impropriety at all.<ref name="Park"/> However, as stated by the ''[[Doosan Encyclopedia]]'', the practise may extend as far as former judges and prosecutors being given a favourable ruling at their first trial in private practise, regardless of its merits.<ref name="Naver">{{citation|url=http://100.naver.com/100.nhn?docid=744498 |periodical=Naver Encyclopedia|title=전관예우 (前官禮遇) |accessdate=2010-06-18}}</ref> Because of the perception that it will offer them an advantage in their cases, clients thus prefer to engage the services of defense attorneys who have previously served as judges or public prosecutors.<ref name="Park"/> Judges-turned-lawyers are thus able to command much higher fees than their competitors.<ref name="KT20100323">{{citation|url=http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/04/113_62834.html |date=2010-03-23 |accessdate=2010-06-24 |title=Lawyers, Judges and Prosecutors Play Blame Game |periodical=[[The Korea Times]] |last=Kang |first=Hyun-kyung |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120925072715/http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/04/113_62834.html |archivedate=2012-09-25 |df= }}</ref> These factors have resulted in "deep-rooted distrust in the criminal justice system" by the public.<ref name="Park"/><ref name="KT20100323"/>


In 2003, a [[Supreme Court of South Korea]] spokesperson admitted that cases taken up by former Supreme Court officials had a far lower rate of dismissal than cases in general.<ref>{{citation|title=대법관출신 변호사 전관예우 {{bracket|Special treatment given to former Supreme Court officials-turned-lawyers}}|date=2003-08-31|accessdate=2010-06-24|last=Gang|first=Hoe-cheol|url=http://www.hani.co.kr/section-005000000/2003/08/005000000200308312055257.html|periodical=[[Hankyoreh]]}}</ref> In a 2006 article about the ''jeon-gwan ye-u'' phenomenon, South Korean newspaper ''[[Hankyoreh]]'' reported that of 32 former Supreme Court judges who had retired since 1990, 29 had since gone into private practise, indicating the potential extent of the phenomenon. The group of retired judges as a whole exhibited an unusually high acceptance rate for their cases of 63.2%, among whom the two highest were Yi Don-hoe at 94.3% and Song Jin-hun at 92.7%.<ref>{{citation|periodical=[[Hankyoreh]]|title="전관예우 ‘몸통’은 대법관 출신 변호사들" {{bracket|"The 'root' of the special consideration for former officials: former Supreme Court judges}}|url=http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/society/society_general/164730.html|date=2006-10-16|accessdate=2010-06-24|last=Im|first=Ju-yeong}}</ref> A 2008 statistical analysis of the problem in the ''[[Hankook Ilbo]]'', centred on seven former Supreme Court judges who retired in 2005 to take up private practise, found that from July 2006 to June 2008, only 26% of their 225 civil cases which went before the Supreme Court were dismissed, in comparison to an average rate of 58 to 63% for all lawyers.<ref>{{citation|title=대법관 출신 전관예우 여전 {{bracket|Special consideration for former Supreme Court judges same as before}}|periodical=[[Hankook Ilbo]]|date=2008-11-11|accessdate=2010-06-24|last=Yi|first=Jin-hoe|last2=Gim|first2=Jeong-u|url=http://news.hankooki.com/lpage/society/200811/h2008111102430722000.htm}}</ref> Below the Supreme Court, the ratio of former District Court officials who took on district court criminal cases from 2004 to 2006 (as a proportion of all lawyers appearing before the district court) ranged from a high of 100% (18 out of 18) in [[Suwon]], to a low of 32% (9 out of 28) in [[Cheongju]]; eight out of the nine top-ranking districts in this regard were in the [[Seoul National Capital Area]].<ref>{{citation|date=2006-09-05|accessdate=2010-06-24|periodical=[[The Dong-a Ilbo|Dong-A Ilbo]]|title=구속수사 건수 줄고… 변호사 전관예우 여전 {{bracket|Number of arrest investigations decreasing; special treatment of former officials unchanged}}|url=http://www.donga.com/fbin/output?f=c_s&n=200609050058&main=1|last=Park|first=Min-hyeok}}</ref>
In 2003, a [[Supreme Court of South Korea]] spokesperson admitted that cases taken up by former Supreme Court officials had a far lower rate of dismissal than cases in general.<ref>{{citation|title=대법관출신 변호사 전관예우 {{bracket|Special treatment given to former Supreme Court officials-turned-lawyers}}|date=2003-08-31|accessdate=2010-06-24|last=Gang|first=Hoe-cheol|url=http://www.hani.co.kr/section-005000000/2003/08/005000000200308312055257.html|periodical=[[Hankyoreh]]}}</ref> In a 2006 article about the ''jeon-gwan ye-u'' phenomenon, South Korean newspaper ''[[Hankyoreh]]'' reported that of 32 former Supreme Court judges who had retired since 1990, 29 had since gone into private practise, indicating the potential extent of the phenomenon. The group of retired judges as a whole exhibited an unusually high acceptance rate for their cases of 63.2%, among whom the two highest were Yi Don-hoe at 94.3% and Song Jin-hun at 92.7%.<ref>{{citation|periodical=[[Hankyoreh]]|title="전관예우 ‘몸통’은 대법관 출신 변호사들" {{bracket|"The 'root' of the special consideration for former officials: former Supreme Court judges}}|url=http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/society/society_general/164730.html|date=2006-10-16|accessdate=2010-06-24|last=Im|first=Ju-yeong}}</ref> A 2008 statistical analysis of the problem in the ''[[Hankook Ilbo]]'', centred on seven former Supreme Court judges who retired in 2005 to take up private practise, found that from July 2006 to June 2008, only 26% of their 225 civil cases which went before the Supreme Court were dismissed, in comparison to an average rate of 58 to 63% for all lawyers.<ref>{{citation|title=대법관 출신 전관예우 여전 {{bracket|Special consideration for former Supreme Court judges same as before}} |periodical=[[Hankook Ilbo]] |date=2008-11-11 |accessdate=2010-06-24 |last=Yi |first=Jin-hoe |last2=Gim |first2=Jeong-u |url=http://news.hankooki.com/lpage/society/200811/h2008111102430722000.htm |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100811123610/http://news.hankooki.com/lpage/society/200811/h2008111102430722000.htm |archivedate=2010-08-11 |df= }}</ref> Below the Supreme Court, the ratio of former District Court officials who took on district court criminal cases from 2004 to 2006 (as a proportion of all lawyers appearing before the district court) ranged from a high of 100% (18 out of 18) in [[Suwon]], to a low of 32% (9 out of 28) in [[Cheongju]]; eight out of the nine top-ranking districts in this regard were in the [[Seoul National Capital Area]].<ref>{{citation|date=2006-09-05|accessdate=2010-06-24|periodical=[[The Dong-a Ilbo|Dong-A Ilbo]]|title=구속수사 건수 줄고… 변호사 전관예우 여전 {{bracket|Number of arrest investigations decreasing; special treatment of former officials unchanged}}|url=http://www.donga.com/fbin/output?f=c_s&n=200609050058&main=1|last=Park|first=Min-hyeok}}</ref>


==Suppression efforts==
==Suppression efforts==
Efforts were made as early as 1973 to control the issue of ''jeon-gwan ye-u'', by placing limits on the ability of retired prosecutors and judges to open their own law firms.<ref>{{citation|periodical=[[Hankook Ilbo]]|last=Jeong|first=Jeong-hun|title=유사종교로서의 전관예우 {{bracket|Special treatment for former officials a quasi-religion}}|date=2008-10-29|accessdate=2010-06-25|url=http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/SERIES/57/318842.html}}</ref> Later, a new law was proposed in 1998, specifying that a lawyer who was once a judge or a prosecutor must not serve as a lawyer within two years at criminal trials of a court of which he was a member directly before.<ref name="Naver"/> The law did not pass the [[National Assembly of South Korea|National Assembly]] due to pressure from the assembly's own Legal Affairs Committee as well as the legal profession at large; however, it was again proposed in 1999, and passed in January 2000.<ref name="EB">{{citation|title=Encyclopædia Britannica Online (Korea)|chapter=전관예우|url=http://preview.britannica.co.kr/bol/topic.asp?article_id=rkb03a217|accessdate=2010-06-24}}</ref> In December 2004, the Judicial Reform Commission proposed the creation of a voluntary central judicial ethics council as a means of controlling the problem.<ref>{{citation|url=http://article.joins.com/article/article.asp?ctg=12&Total_ID=430771|periodical=[[JoongAng Ilbo]]|date=2004-12-29|accessdate=2010-06-25|last=Ha|first=Jae-sik|title=변호사 `전관예우` 제동 건다 {{bracket|Putting the brakes on lawyers' "special treatment of former officials"}}}}</ref> In March 2010, the [[Grand National Party]] proposed widening the restrictions, barring judges-turned-lawyers from taking cases in the entire region where they previously served as district judges for a period of one year.<ref>{{citation|last=Kang|first=Hyun-kyung|date=2010-03-22|accessdate=2010-06-24|url=http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/04/116_62770.html|periodical=[[The Korea Times]]|title=Inter-Party Negotiations on Judicial Reform Start Today}}</ref>
Efforts were made as early as 1973 to control the issue of ''jeon-gwan ye-u'', by placing limits on the ability of retired prosecutors and judges to open their own law firms.<ref>{{citation|periodical=[[Hankook Ilbo]]|last=Jeong|first=Jeong-hun|title=유사종교로서의 전관예우 {{bracket|Special treatment for former officials a quasi-religion}}|date=2008-10-29|accessdate=2010-06-25|url=http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/SERIES/57/318842.html}}</ref> Later, a new law was proposed in 1998, specifying that a lawyer who was once a judge or a prosecutor must not serve as a lawyer within two years at criminal trials of a court of which he was a member directly before.<ref name="Naver"/> The law did not pass the [[National Assembly of South Korea|National Assembly]] due to pressure from the assembly's own Legal Affairs Committee as well as the legal profession at large; however, it was again proposed in 1999, and passed in January 2000.<ref name="EB">{{citation|title=Encyclopædia Britannica Online (Korea)|chapter=전관예우|url=http://preview.britannica.co.kr/bol/topic.asp?article_id=rkb03a217|accessdate=2010-06-24}}</ref> In December 2004, the Judicial Reform Commission proposed the creation of a voluntary central judicial ethics council as a means of controlling the problem.<ref>{{citation|url=http://article.joins.com/article/article.asp?ctg=12&Total_ID=430771|periodical=[[JoongAng Ilbo]]|date=2004-12-29|accessdate=2010-06-25|last=Ha|first=Jae-sik|title=변호사 `전관예우` 제동 건다 {{bracket|Putting the brakes on lawyers' "special treatment of former officials"}}}}</ref> In March 2010, the [[Grand National Party]] proposed widening the restrictions, barring judges-turned-lawyers from taking cases in the entire region where they previously served as district judges for a period of one year.<ref>{{citation|last=Kang |first=Hyun-kyung |date=2010-03-22 |accessdate=2010-06-24 |url=http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/04/116_62770.html |periodical=[[The Korea Times]] |title=Inter-Party Negotiations on Judicial Reform Start Today |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120925072704/http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/04/116_62770.html |archivedate=2012-09-25 |df= }}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 34: Line 34:


==Sources==
==Sources==
*{{citation|url=http://www.kipa-evaluation.co.kr/admin/upload/k07-20.pdf|title={{asiantitle|법관 임용방식의 발전 과정과 개선 방안||Appointment method of legal officials: development process and plan for improvement|a}}|publisher=Korea Institute of Public Administration| date=December 2007 |last=Jang|first=Jun-o|last2=Yi|first2=Cheon-hyeon|last3=Choe|first3=Sun-yong}}
*{{citation|url=http://www.kipa-evaluation.co.kr/admin/upload/k07-20.pdf |title={{asiantitle|법관 임용방식의 발전 과정과 개선 방안||Appointment method of legal officials: development process and plan for improvement|a}} |publisher=Korea Institute of Public Administration |date=December 2007 |last=Jang |first=Jun-o |last2=Yi |first2=Cheon-hyeon |last3=Choe |first3=Sun-yong |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722134238/http://www.kipa-evaluation.co.kr/admin/upload/k07-20.pdf |archivedate=2011-07-22 |df= }}
*{{citation|last=Park|first=Hyungkwan|date=April 2010|volume=22|issue=4|journal=Federal Sentencing Reporter|title=The Basic Features of the First Korean Sentencing Guidelines|doi=10.1525/fsr.2010.22.4.262|pages=262–271}}
*{{citation|last=Park|first=Hyungkwan|date=April 2010|volume=22|issue=4|journal=Federal Sentencing Reporter|title=The Basic Features of the First Korean Sentencing Guidelines|doi=10.1525/fsr.2010.22.4.262|pages=262–271}}
**Freely available draft version: {{citation|chapter=The Basic Features of the First Korean Sentencing Guidelines|url=http://www.msccsp.org/nasc2009/downloads/HyungkwanPark_supplemental_material_NASC2009.pdf|last=Park|first=Hyungkwan|title=Annual Conference of the National Association of Sentencing Commissions|publication-place=Baltimore, Maryland|date=August 2009}}. Slides [http://www.msccsp.org/nasc2009/downloads/HyungkwanPark_NASC_2009.ppt here]. Note that the pagination differs significantly.
**Freely available draft version: {{citation|chapter=The Basic Features of the First Korean Sentencing Guidelines|url=http://www.msccsp.org/nasc2009/downloads/HyungkwanPark_supplemental_material_NASC2009.pdf|last=Park|first=Hyungkwan|title=Annual Conference of the National Association of Sentencing Commissions|publication-place=Baltimore, Maryland|date=August 2009}}. Slides [http://www.msccsp.org/nasc2009/downloads/HyungkwanPark_NASC_2009.ppt here]. Note that the pagination differs significantly.

Revision as of 08:17, 21 April 2017

Jeon-gwan ye-u
Hangul
전관예우
Hanja
前官禮遇
Revised RomanizationJeon-gwan ye-u
McCune–ReischauerChǒn'gwan ye'u
Alternative transcriptions include "jeon-kwan ye-woo"

Jeon-gwan ye-u refers to an informal arrangement in the South Korean legal system whereby retired judges and public prosecutors who go on to become lawyers in private practise receive special treatment from their incumbent former colleagues. A paper from the Korea Institute of Public Administration describes it as one of the four major problems caused by the way in which South Korea appoints judicial officers.[1] The term may also be used more broadly to refer to preferential treatment for retired regulators who go on to take private-sector jobs in the industries which they were previously responsible for regulating, a form of regulatory capture.[2]

It is variously translated into English as:

  • "privileges of former post"[3]
  • "allowing privileges associated with one's former post"[4]
  • "special consideration to former judges and prosecutors"[5]
  • "honorable treatment to retired colleagues"[2]

Roots

Jeon-gwan ye-u is said to be a result of South Korea's system of legal education and appointment of judges. All law students who pass the bar examination (formerly limited to 300 students, though the cutoff was raised to 1,000 in the early 2000s) attend a two-year course at the Judicial Training Research Institute before being considered for appointment as a judge or public prosecutor; this training offers them the opportunity to develop close bonds with one another. Those who are not appointed have the option of becoming defense attorneys, or pursuing other professions.[5] Judges and public prosecutors are thus appointed to their positions at a young age, and many retire early, in their 40s and 50s, in order to work as private attorneys.[1][5]

Effects

The exact nature of the "special consideration" may vary. Prosecutors and judges, for their part deny that there is any impropriety at all.[5] However, as stated by the Doosan Encyclopedia, the practise may extend as far as former judges and prosecutors being given a favourable ruling at their first trial in private practise, regardless of its merits.[6] Because of the perception that it will offer them an advantage in their cases, clients thus prefer to engage the services of defense attorneys who have previously served as judges or public prosecutors.[5] Judges-turned-lawyers are thus able to command much higher fees than their competitors.[7] These factors have resulted in "deep-rooted distrust in the criminal justice system" by the public.[5][7]

In 2003, a Supreme Court of South Korea spokesperson admitted that cases taken up by former Supreme Court officials had a far lower rate of dismissal than cases in general.[8] In a 2006 article about the jeon-gwan ye-u phenomenon, South Korean newspaper Hankyoreh reported that of 32 former Supreme Court judges who had retired since 1990, 29 had since gone into private practise, indicating the potential extent of the phenomenon. The group of retired judges as a whole exhibited an unusually high acceptance rate for their cases of 63.2%, among whom the two highest were Yi Don-hoe at 94.3% and Song Jin-hun at 92.7%.[9] A 2008 statistical analysis of the problem in the Hankook Ilbo, centred on seven former Supreme Court judges who retired in 2005 to take up private practise, found that from July 2006 to June 2008, only 26% of their 225 civil cases which went before the Supreme Court were dismissed, in comparison to an average rate of 58 to 63% for all lawyers.[10] Below the Supreme Court, the ratio of former District Court officials who took on district court criminal cases from 2004 to 2006 (as a proportion of all lawyers appearing before the district court) ranged from a high of 100% (18 out of 18) in Suwon, to a low of 32% (9 out of 28) in Cheongju; eight out of the nine top-ranking districts in this regard were in the Seoul National Capital Area.[11]

Suppression efforts

Efforts were made as early as 1973 to control the issue of jeon-gwan ye-u, by placing limits on the ability of retired prosecutors and judges to open their own law firms.[12] Later, a new law was proposed in 1998, specifying that a lawyer who was once a judge or a prosecutor must not serve as a lawyer within two years at criminal trials of a court of which he was a member directly before.[6] The law did not pass the National Assembly due to pressure from the assembly's own Legal Affairs Committee as well as the legal profession at large; however, it was again proposed in 1999, and passed in January 2000.[13] In December 2004, the Judicial Reform Commission proposed the creation of a voluntary central judicial ethics council as a means of controlling the problem.[14] In March 2010, the Grand National Party proposed widening the restrictions, barring judges-turned-lawyers from taking cases in the entire region where they previously served as district judges for a period of one year.[15]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Jang, Yi & Choe 2007, p. viii
  2. ^ a b "Tougher rules on ex-officials' hiring to curb cronyism", Korea Herald, 2011-06-03, retrieved 2012-07-06
  3. ^ Jang, Yi & Choe 2007, p. xiii
  4. ^ "Editorial: Be Thorough With Judicial Reform", Hankyoreh, 2004-12-30, retrieved 2010-06-24
  5. ^ a b c d e f Park 2010, pp. 263–4
  6. ^ a b "전관예우 (前官禮遇)", Naver Encyclopedia, retrieved 2010-06-18
  7. ^ a b Kang, Hyun-kyung (2010-03-23), "Lawyers, Judges and Prosecutors Play Blame Game", The Korea Times, archived from the original on 2012-09-25, retrieved 2010-06-24 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ Gang, Hoe-cheol (2003-08-31), "대법관출신 변호사 전관예우 [Special treatment given to former Supreme Court officials-turned-lawyers]", Hankyoreh, retrieved 2010-06-24
  9. ^ Im, Ju-yeong (2006-10-16), ""전관예우 '몸통'은 대법관 출신 변호사들" ["The 'root' of the special consideration for former officials: former Supreme Court judges]", Hankyoreh, retrieved 2010-06-24
  10. ^ Yi, Jin-hoe; Gim, Jeong-u (2008-11-11), "대법관 출신 전관예우 여전 [Special consideration for former Supreme Court judges same as before]", Hankook Ilbo, archived from the original on 2010-08-11, retrieved 2010-06-24 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ Park, Min-hyeok (2006-09-05), "구속수사 건수 줄고… 변호사 전관예우 여전 [Number of arrest investigations decreasing; special treatment of former officials unchanged]", Dong-A Ilbo, retrieved 2010-06-24
  12. ^ Jeong, Jeong-hun (2008-10-29), "유사종교로서의 전관예우 [Special treatment for former officials a quasi-religion]", Hankook Ilbo, retrieved 2010-06-25
  13. ^ "전관예우", Encyclopædia Britannica Online (Korea), retrieved 2010-06-24
  14. ^ Ha, Jae-sik (2004-12-29), "변호사 `전관예우` 제동 건다 [Putting the brakes on lawyers' "special treatment of former officials"]", JoongAng Ilbo, retrieved 2010-06-25
  15. ^ Kang, Hyun-kyung (2010-03-22), "Inter-Party Negotiations on Judicial Reform Start Today", The Korea Times, archived from the original on 2012-09-25, retrieved 2010-06-24 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)

Sources