Why This Cop Could Legally Destroy Evidence to Protect His Murderer Son

When active-duty detective Inspector Jang used his police connections to cover up his son's brutal murder of a 17-year-old student in Gwangju, South Korea, the public was outraged. But the most shocking part? Under South Korean law, the father cannot be prosecuted for destroying the evidence. In this video, we break down the controversial "familial privilege" loophole (Articles 151 & 155), its ancient roots, how it differs from Korea's recently reformed property laws, and the massive national debate on whether family loyalty should ever override justice. Support me on Patreon! 👉 patreon.com/c/HYBEBOY related video:    • How Korean Police Protected a Cop’s Killer...   reference: https://n.news.naver.com/mnews/articl... https://www.mt.co.kr/society/2026/07/... https://www.korea.kr/news/policyNewsV... https://www.lawtimes.co.kr/news/artic... https://www.yna.co.kr/view/AKR2024062...    • [광주 여고생 피살 사건④] 응급구조사가 꿈이었던 17살 이채원, 살인마 장...      • "모르는 사이"라더니 예전부터 노렸나..'공기계'에서 발견된 흔적 (자막뉴스...   #GwangjuCase #SouthKorea #TrueCrime #PoliceCorruption #CriminalLaw #JusticeSystem #LegalLoophole #KoreanLaw #TrueCrimeCommunity