I also read many articles that said that child sex offender Cho Doo-soon could not find a new place to live and would stay in his current house for the time being.



Jo Doo-soon signed a lease contract for a multi-family house in a neighboring neighborhood for more than two years after being released from prison, ahead of the expiration of the contract for the residence in Sanhyeon.



However, the landlord, who belatedly learned that the tenant was Cho Doo-soon, demanded that the contract be terminated, and the residents' resistance also gave up the castration move.



It seems that it will not be easy to find a new house as the personal information of Jo Doo-soon's wife has spread to nearby real estate.



Recently, friction over the residence of serious sex offenders continues.



Ahead of the release of Kim Geun-sik, who raped 11 minors, the local government directly protested that it would close the road, and residents also held a rally in front of the house of Park Byeong-hwa, a former sex offender who was released from prison.



Under the current law, even if you are a serious sex offender, you cannot restrict your place of residence after you are released from prison.



In 2014, a protective accommodation law to isolate high-risk sex offenders was announced, but it did not materialize.