
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Oh Hwi-woong was executed for the 1974 murders of Jeong Si-hwa and his two young children despite a complete lack of physical evidence linking him to the crime scene. Despite having an alibi, he was found guilty. Decades later, even the presiding judge would be haunted by lifelong regret over signing the execution warrant. How did they allow an innocent man to hang?
Find our merch here: https://koreantruecrime-shop.fourthwall.com
Join our discord today! If you enjoy Korean True Crime, please rate, follow, and send feedback! It helps me continue to improve the show. If you'd like to support the show or find show sources for free, join Korean True Crime on Patreon.
By Mimi Mizicko4.6
5656 ratings
Oh Hwi-woong was executed for the 1974 murders of Jeong Si-hwa and his two young children despite a complete lack of physical evidence linking him to the crime scene. Despite having an alibi, he was found guilty. Decades later, even the presiding judge would be haunted by lifelong regret over signing the execution warrant. How did they allow an innocent man to hang?
Find our merch here: https://koreantruecrime-shop.fourthwall.com
Join our discord today! If you enjoy Korean True Crime, please rate, follow, and send feedback! It helps me continue to improve the show. If you'd like to support the show or find show sources for free, join Korean True Crime on Patreon.

17,263 Listeners

34,424 Listeners

7,622 Listeners

3,974 Listeners

6,711 Listeners

2,617 Listeners

26,077 Listeners

1,008 Listeners

29,175 Listeners

8,979 Listeners

6,166 Listeners

1,985 Listeners

472 Listeners

105 Listeners

1,910 Listeners