Case Summary
For readers researching selective screenshot complaint in Korea, this case note shows how the records were organized before the not-guilty outcome in korea was reached. The page is written as a case-specific reference, not a result guarantee.
In this matter, the defense argued that the complaint had been prepared around a distorted excerpt. That created a risk that one record, screenshot, file, or statement would be read too broadly.
A single message can look different once the full conversation, delivery route, and prior dispute are restored. Attorney Doyun Lee reviewed the original materials before the legal position was finalized, so the case could be presented through records rather than guesswork.
• Case type: obscene communication allegation under Korean criminal law.
• Main issue: the defense argued that the complaint had been prepared around a distorted excerpt.
• Core records reviewed: pre-complaint communications, selective screenshots, and objective timeline before the accusation.
• Result: not-guilty outcome.
1. Why the Label Was Not Enough
Before the result, there was a record to organize. That record determined which facts mattered and which assumptions should not control the case.
Here, the defense argued that the complaint had been prepared around a distorted excerpt. That made it important to separate what was actually proven from what was only assumed.
When the client is not fully comfortable in Korean procedure, the first explanation must be clear enough to survive translation, review, and later use.
2. What the Law Required
For an obscene communication allegation in Korea, the legal question is narrower than whether a message was offensive. The wording, delivery route, surrounding conversation, and sexual-purpose issue have to be read together.
The review focused on:
- Whether the message was sexual in legal meaning, not merely rude or insulting.
- Whether it was delivered to the other person in the way alleged.
- Whether the surrounding conversation supported or weakened a sexual-purpose finding.
The review focused on what the record actually proved, not on the broadest possible reading of the allegation.
• Materials Reviewed Before the Position Was Finalized
The record review focused on materials that could affect the outcome:
- The full chat or voice-message sequence.
- Screenshots compared with original device records.
- Timing of the complaint and any earlier dispute between the parties.
The most important points were:
- Pre-complaint communications.
- Selective screenshots.
- Objective timeline before the accusation.
This record-based approach reduced the risk that the decision-maker would rely on a broad impression.
4. Case Strategy
Instead of arguing from a conclusion, the submission moved from timeline to evidence to legal standard. That made the disputed points easier to read.
The response addressed weak points directly and used the stronger records where they actually helped.
5. Case Result
The matter ended with a not-guilty result.
For a similar matter, the same result should never be assumed without reviewing the original evidence. Outcomes in Korean legal matters depend on the evidence, procedural stage, opposing records, settlement or mitigation materials, and the applicable legal standard.
6. Lessons From This Case
If a similar report is made, preserve the original messages and review the legal meaning before contacting the other side.
The safest sequence is record preservation first, legal review second, and statement or filing third.
7. Key Review Map
| Category | What was reviewed | Why it mattered |
|---|---|---|
| Main issue | The defense argued that the complaint had been prepared around a distorted excerpt. | Kept the case from being decided by the label alone. |
| Record point 1 | Pre-complaint communications. | Linked the factual record to the legal element. |
| Record point 2 | Selective screenshots. | Reduced the risk of an overbroad reading. |
| Record point 3 | Objective timeline before the accusation. | Supported the final position at the correct procedural stage. |
| Result | Not-guilty outcome. | Case-specific outcome based on this record. |
8. Frequently Asked Questions
Q. Does this result predict another case?
A. No. This is a case-specific result, not a prediction for another matter.
Q. Is one sentence enough to decide an obscene communication case?
A. Usually no. The wording matters, but so do the conversation before and after, the delivery route, the parties’ relationship, and the first statement.
Q. What mattered most in this case?
A. The key work was connecting pre-complaint communications, selective screenshots, and objective timeline before the accusation to the legal standard and procedural stage.
Facing something similar? Every case differs, but an early consultation widens your options.
Contact Attorney Lee →Advertising Attorney: Doyun Lee, KBA-certified criminal law specialist. This is general legal information and does not guarantee any specific result.