Candidate for Justice Minister Han Dong-hoon said today (15th) that he was leaving the prosecution, saying, "I was obsessed with madness and lynched, but I fought facts and common sense as weapons."



A candidate, who is still the deputy director of the Judicial Research and Training Institute, said, "I have resigned" while posting to the prosecution's internal network today.



This is a resignation letter posted ahead of the appointment of Minister.



One candidate said, "It's never been easy, but he wanted to give an answer that was consistent with justice and common sense," he confessed as he left the prosecution.



He said, "I liked this job where the standard of working was justice and common sense." "The more powerful the opponent has political and economic power, the more he thought about it, and he was never swayed by external pressure or favors. I heard it," he recalled of his 20 years of prosecutorial life.



One candidate emphasized, "Not all of the things I did were correct, but if I gave the wrong answer, it would have been because of my lack of ability, not my lack of will to fairness or justice."



He wrote, "For the past few years, I was lynched by power because of my side of the investigation, but in the end the fiction and reality were revealed." I did.



'Channel A case' following the investigation into the family of former Justice Minister Cho Kuk



One candidate said, "When someone asks, 'Why are you staying?', the answer has been 'there is still work to be done in the prosecution'. It was about setting a precedent that was overcome.”



He continued, "I remember the people I worked with rather than the noisy events I had." "I was not able to convey my feelings at that time because I was not an interesting person. It was good to work with good people. finished