<Anchor>

CCTV was spotted by a male peeping out of the early morning hours of a female student living in a semi-suburban house. At the end of last month, someone tried to even shoot with a cell phone, but the police went into investigation. 

Reporter Jeon Yeon-nam reports. 

<Reporter>

A man wanders around and disappears.

A few seconds later, he steps over the fence and steals the room through the window.

[I can see everything!] The

girl screams and jumps over the wall and runs away.


On the 5th, at about 1:30 a.m., a man was caught on CCTV watching a middle school student A who was in the room crossing the fence.

At the end of last month, someone tried to take a picture of the amount of A washing in the bathroom with a cell phone from a window and installed a CCTV around the house.

[A Yang: It's my first time, so I came out and told my brother, my arm was shaking and my legs were shaking. I was scared.] I

didn't walk over the wall, but another man was seen looking at the room at least six times while walking in front of the house.

[A stepfather: Because it's half-basement, I can't help because I can see it when I put out my head with one wall in between. It's terrible because I think I was with my boy with one window in between.]


If you sneak past the wall and steal the house, you may be subject to a crime of invasion of the house, but the punishment level is imprisonment for not more than 3 years and a fine not exceeding 5 million won.

[Lee Soo-Yeon/Korea Women's Lawyers' Society: Invasion of housing has a high risk of leading to other serious crimes such as sexual crime, but the level of punishment is low. How to increase the legal form of residential invasion, and how to establish a new stalking punishment law (you can think of it.)] In

fact, about 300 cases occur each year when residential intrusion leads to sexual crimes such as forced harassment.

The police are tracking suspects after receiving the CCTV footage from the victim.