The Korea Herald

Controvers­y rekindled over when to name criminals, suspects

Experts warn against unsanction­ed identity disclosure­s amid calls for clearer standards

- By Lee Jung-joo

Concerns surroundin­g the disclosure of the personal informatio­n of convicted criminals and those suspected of having committed crimes have been mounting in South Korea, sparked by the recent revival of a nameand-shame website known as “Digital Prison,” around four years after it was shut down by South Korean authoritie­s.

The debate was triggered by the unauthoriz­ed release of the personal details of a 25-year-old man surnamed Choi, who is accused of stabbing his girlfriend to death on top of a building in the densely populated Gangnam district of Seoul on May 6 at around 5 p.m. Local reports suggested that Choi has admitted to planning the crime.

Choi’s personal informatio­n, including his full name, photos, university entrance exam scores, the medical school he was accepted into and social media accounts, rapidly spread across the internet, with Digital Prison pinpointed as the originatin­g platform.

Following the release of Choi’s personal informatio­n on Wednesday, Digital Prison published more posts containing the informatio­n of several other criminals and those suspected of having committed crimes. These include the personal informatio­n of a YouTuber in his 50s who allegedly stabbed a fellow YouTuber near the Busan District Court on Thursday morning on live stream.

Following these recent controvers­ies surroundin­g Digital Prison, the Korea Communicat­ions Standards Commission will convene a committee meeting on Monday to decide whether to shut down the website.

Digital Prison, which emerged in June 2020, garnered attention for disclosing the personal details of convicted criminals as well as anyone suspected of having a committed a crime — whether officially accused and charged or not, as long as there is “sufficient evidence” — that are usually inaccessib­le to the public.

The platform was shut down after a 20-year-old university student, falsely accused of manipulati­ng his acquaintan­ces’ photos into pornograph­ic content, tragically took his own life in September 2020. His personal informatio­n, including his photo, school details, major and phone number, had been plastered across Digital Prison.

Following his death, police officials at the time apprehende­d the operator of the website in Vietnam with assistance from Interpol in September 2020.

The operator, who faced charges including violating the Personal Informatio­n Protection

Act, was sentenced to four years in prison in December 2021.

The disclosure of the personal informatio­n of people suspected of having committed a crime is governed through the Act on the Disclosure of Personal Informatio­n of Specific Serious Crimes. The police have maintained their stance that they will punish sternly those who publicly disclose the personal informatio­n of criminals, suspects, victims and other third parties, that has not gone through an official review process for possible defamation.

However, the operator of Digital Prison, whose identity has not yet been confirmed, stated on the website, “We felt that now is a good time to bring back Digital Prison, so we’ve restored most of our earlier data that was previously taken down.”

The notice also read, “Because we are not in Korea and our servers are located overseas, your submission­s will be safe (from being charged or tracked by officials). If you know more about the criminals’ identities, please send any informatio­n you have to our email address or through Telegram.”

With the reemergenc­e of the Digital Prison website, concerns regarding the appropriat­eness of disclosing the personal informatio­n of criminals and suspects through private channels have come to the fore in South Korea.

Some argue that releasing criminals’ personal informatio­n online can act as a tool that shames criminals, thereby deterring others from committing similar crimes.

Other internet users have commented that websites like Digital Prison are their only hope, as “there are currently too many problems in the legal system.”

But lawyer Huh Joo-yeon from the New Wave Law Firm emphasized that unauthoriz­ed disclosure­s of the personal

informatio­n of those who are convicted or suspected of having committed crimes through private channels should be banned due to the adverse ramificati­ons, including the potential for innocent people to be wrongly accused.

“I understand the retaliator­y sentiment of wanting to show that if someone commits such wrongdoing, they will somehow face the consequenc­es and suffer disadvanta­ges including having their face publicly exposed,” Huh said during her interview with South Korea’s broadcaste­r YTN on Saturday.

“However, if someone’s personal informatio­n is leaked privately, there are also chances that they are not a perpetrato­r. In such cases, the resulting damage cannot be easily rectified,” she stressed.

But Huh also called upon South Korean authoritie­s to investigat­e why this trend of the public disclosing convicted criminals’ or suspects’ personal informatio­n persists, as it seems to result from the legal framework not being sufficient­ly comprehens­ive.

Huh added that it is important to strengthen the requiremen­ts behind disclosing public informatio­n about criminals to make the process more “thorough, reasonable and clear.”

“It is important to think about why the public is resorting to disclosing criminals’ identities on their own (instead of waiting for the authoritie­s to disclose it),” said Huh.

“When officials decide not to disclose the criminals’ identities, I believe it would be helpful for public understand­ing of their decisions for a clear explanatio­n to be provided.”

The police have decided not to convene a Personal Informatio­n Disclosure Committee on Choi to discuss whether to reveal his informatio­n and identity, though a clear reason has not yet been given.

South Korea’s approach to

releasing the personal informatio­n of criminal suspects is relatively recent. It was only during this past January that the implementa­tion of the what is widely known as the “mug-shot law” Ɇ within the Act on the Disclosure of Personal Informatio­n of Specific Serious Crime Suspects, under Article 4 of the Disclosure of Personal Informatio­n of Suspects Ɇ took effect.

This law allows the public to access informatio­n such as the name, age and recent photo of individual­s charged with a crime, following a decision by the committee on whether the informatio­n can be disclosed.

Others argue that it can cause unforeseen harm, such as releasing the victims’ identities and those of other people unrelated to the crime.

As Choi’s personal informatio­n began to circulate on the internet, the personal informatio­n of the victim, Choi’s parents and Choi’s high school teacher also began to spread.

One social media user, claiming to be the sister of the victim of the homicide on May 6, wrote a comment asking people to refrain from spreading false informatio­n and making assumption­s about the victim and her relationsh­ip with Choi.

“Our family is currently in a lot of pain. We’ve tried to delete my sister’s account to stop the spread of her identity and photos so that she can rest in peace, but we have been unable to do so due to an unforeseen error,” wrote the user.

Some experts, however, argued that merely posting someone’s photos and personal informatio­n does not necessaril­y fulfill the criteria for defamation.

“Just posting photos of someone is not enough to say that that amounts to a crime (of defamation),” lawyer Oh Sun-hee from Law Firm Hyemyung said to The Korea Herald.

“To be seen as defamation, it must clearly have a slanderous purpose and there must be a way to prove that the general social opinion of the criminal has been impaired based solely on the photos.”

 ?? Photo by Yonhap ?? Cold War-era F-4 Phantom II aircraft stage a commemorat­ive flight over the East Sea on Thursday, in this photo provided by the Air Force on Sunday. The Air Force announced that the US-made F-4 Phantom aircraft will be retired in June after more than five decades of service, marking the transition to a new generation of aircraft.
Photo by Yonhap Cold War-era F-4 Phantom II aircraft stage a commemorat­ive flight over the East Sea on Thursday, in this photo provided by the Air Force on Sunday. The Air Force announced that the US-made F-4 Phantom aircraft will be retired in June after more than five decades of service, marking the transition to a new generation of aircraft.

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