Parliamentary Prakatch case
The case of the parliamentary Prakatch was a case in which 13 lawmakers, including Kim Jae-su, were arrested in June 1949 on suspicion of infiltrating the constitutional assembly with the so-called "pro-South Korean party". When Kim Jae-soo, who was former deputy chairman of the National Assembly, and the liberal lawmakers such as Norhwan and Lee Mun-won proposed the 7 principles of peaceful reunification, which consisted of the complete withdrawal of foreign troops, The first republic government, which insisted on reunification frequently and insisted on North Korea's reunification, arrested 13 people including Kim Jae-soo for allegedly trying to confuse the ruling party with the Minorities. The case was investigated with thorough security and hearing continued for three months after the first trial on November 17, seven months later. They were sentenced to between 10 and 3 years in prison, but the Korean War broke out during the second pilgrimage. Those who were detained in the Seodaemun prison were released by the release of political prisoners from the Korean People's Army occupied by Seoul.