South Korea’s Constitutional Court has delivered a landmark ruling on Thursday, formally dismissing the nation’s impeached police chief for his instrumental role in supporting former President Yoon Suk Yeol’s short-lived imposition of martial law in December 2024. Commissioner General Cho Ji-ho became the first National Police Agency chief to be removed from office through constitutional proceedings.
The court determined that Cho actively undermined legislative processes by deploying hundreds of police officers to the National Assembly complex, intentionally obstructing lawmakers from reaching the main chamber to vote on revoking Yoon’s emergency decree. The ruling further condemned Cho’s infringement upon the National Election Commission’s independence by directing police personnel to assist military forces in seizing two NEC offices—actions allegedly justified by unverified claims of electoral fraud.
Evidence presented revealed that Cho and Seoul’s police commissioner were summoned to a secure location hours before the martial law declaration, where they coordinated implementation strategies with Yoon’s defense minister. Following the decree, approximately 300 officers encircled parliamentary entrances alongside heavily armed special operations units with aerial support, creating an unprecedented blockade against legislative activities.
Despite the military-police barricade, a determined group of lawmakers including current President Lee Jae Myung scaled perimeter fences to establish quorum and unanimously overturn Yoon’s order within hours. The court rejected Cho’s defense that his deployments aimed to maintain public order, noting that the extreme measures taken by parliamentarians demonstrated the severity of the obstruction.
Cho, who faced impeachment by legislators and arrest shortly after Yoon’s power grab, was previously granted bail in January due to medical requirements for cancer treatment. He now awaits separate criminal proceedings on rebellion charges, while former President Yoon faces life imprisonment or capital punishment for his central role in the crisis.
