After moving near the house of a woman who refuses to meet, a man in his twenties who came to the house from time to time and harassed was arrested.



According to an SBS report, the Seoul Gwangjin Police Department arrested a 27-year-old man, Moo, and handed it over to the Dongbu District Prosecutor's Office on charges of constant invasion of housing and continuous harassment under the Minor Crime Penalty Act.



Lee moves near the house of victim A, who refuses to meet, and is accused of harassing him, sending text messages hundreds of times, waiting in front of the house several times.



I checked to see if the light was on in Mr. A's house, and I opened the door lock on the front door, pressed the password, or knocked on the door.



Anxious Mr. A reported 112 more than three times last month, and the police who were dispatched randomly accompanied Mr. Lee to the police station, but the crime did not stop.



Lee was arrested on the 25th of last month after being charged with a fine for violating the Minor Crime Penalty Act, but when a man broke into the building again, he was charged with habitual invasion of housing.



The police passed a plenary session of the National Assembly in March and applied for a warrant of arrest on the charges of habitual invasion instead of the stalking punishment law, which has not yet been enforced.



The Seoul Eastern District Law issued an arrest warrant on the 27th of last month in consideration of repeated stalking by men and the condition of victims complaining of fear.



Contrary to the will of the resident, entering the entrance of an apartment or multi-family house, the common hallway, or the stairs can also be punished as a crime of invading housing under the criminal law.



Criminal Attorney Kim Eui-ji of L&S at the law firm said, "This case is difficult to apply to the stalking punishment law, which will be enforced from October this year, but if a similar case occurs in the future, the law will be applied and it will result in more severe punishment. .