Criminal Sanctions on Trade Secret Infringements in Korea

Trade secret Infringers may be prosecuted as criminals in addition to civil litigations. The Korean UCPA stipulates that anyone who illegally acquires trade secret of others or uses or discloses to a third party a misappropriated trade secret may be imprisoned up to ten (10) years or fined in an amount of KRW50,000,000 (approximately US$50,000) or two (2) to ten (10) times of the monetary gains. The fine may amount to the 10 times of the value of the stolen trade secret. In Hyundai Motors case, two former engineers were punished to 3.5 years imprison and US$3 million fines respectively.

Further, the Korean Supreme Court held that the act of divulging trade secret to the competitor for the purpose of gaining economic benefit by former employees shall be punished as criminal violation of the fiduciary duty under the Criminal Code. Besides UCPA, trade secrets misappropriations may be prosecuted under the criminal code, too.

In addition to criminal sanction on individuals, companies may be punished by fine that is KRW50,000,000 (approximately US$50,000) or two (2) to ten (10) times of the value of the stolen trade secrets or monetary gains of infringers.

Criminal Procedure of South Korea

1. Initiation of Investigation


Investigation is initiated upon discovery of the possibility that a crime may have been committed. The ultimate responsibility in all investigative procedures is in the hands of the prosecutor. Based on collected evidences, the prosecutor assess the validity of the judgment that a crime has occurred, and take appropriate measures upon this ascertainment.

2. Booking, Arrest & Detention


Booking denotes the formation of a criminal case after initiation. An individual subject to investigation becomes a criminal suspect once a criminal charge has been determined by the investigation agency. In principle, prosecutors or police officers must obtain a warrant issued by a judge to arrest a suspect; however, there exist certain exceptions to these warrant requirements in cases that necessitate "Emergency Arrest" and "Arrest of Flagrant Offender". The prosecutor may detain the arrested suspect with a warrant of detention issued by the judge upon request by the prosecutor within 48 hours from the time of arrest. A suspect may request a preliminary hearing prior to detention, and an arrested or detained suspect may request a review of legality to the court. Through such process, the suspect may be released.

3. Prosecution


Suspects are indicted in cases when there is a prosecutor’s decision that such suspects must stand trial. On the other hand, prosecutors may dismiss a case without indictment. The ground such as ambiguous location of the suspect, in which case further proceedings are unfeasible, will lead to a stay of prosecution.

4. Trial and Sentencing


A judge hears trial upon motions filed by prosecutors. Sentencing occurs when defendants are found guilty of their charges. The punishment may include death penalty, imprisonment and fine, etc.