Park Jeong Won Associate

  • Phone.+82-2-565-9801
  • Fax.+82-2-565-9887
  • Email.jwpark@lkpartner.co.kr
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Practice Areas
  • Finance and Corporate Law
  • Civil Litigation
  • Criminal Defense
  • Administrative Law
  • Labor and Employment
  • Family Law
Profile

Park Jeong Won graduated from the Department of Law at Sookmyung Women’s University and earned her J.D. from Ewha Womans University Law School. After passing the Korean Bar Examination, she began her legal career.

During her time at Shina Law Firm LLC and Law Firm H, Ms. Park handled litigation across a broad range of practice areas, including civil, criminal, administrative, labor, and family law. She also advised local governments, central government ministries, universities, and private educational foundations. In addition, she has developed extensive experience in general corporate legal affairs, including reviewing corporate contracts and employment rules and advising on human resources, labor and employment, and personal data protection.

Ms. Park’s strengths lie in her meticulous analysis of the facts and her ability to develop clear and logically structured legal arguments. Drawing on her experience handling matters that span multiple areas of law, she provides clients with diligent legal advice and representation.

Education
  • Mokdong High School
  • Sookmyung Women’s University, Bachelor’s Degree in Law (2016)
  • Ewha Womans University Law School, J.D. (2020)
Experience
  • Attorney, LK PARTNERS (current)
  • Attorney, Law Firm H (2021–2025)
  • Attorney, Shina Law Firm LLC (2020–2021)
Qualifications
  • Attorney-at-Law, Republic of Korea (2020)
Representative Cases
  • Civil Litigation: Represented clients in disputes involving real estate, construction, and subcontracting matters
  • Finance: Successfully represented clients in multiple lawsuits involving contracts for difference (CFDs) and securities margin trading products
  • Criminal Matters: Secured decisions finding no sufficient grounds for suspicion in cases involving allegations of rape and intimidation
  • Criminal Matters: Secured police decisions not to refer cases to the prosecution involving allegations of obstruction of business, forgery and use of forged private documents, occupational breach of trust, and embezzlement
  • Criminal Matters: Secured decisions finding no sufficient grounds for suspicion in cases involving alleged violations of the Act on the Aggravated Punishment, etc. of Specific Economic Crimes, including embezzlement and fraud
  • Criminal Matters: Defended clients against allegations of conspiring to create or participating in the creation of slush funds
  • Criminal Matters: Secured a judgment of acquittal in a fraud case
  • Criminal Matters: Secured referrals to the prosecution in multiple criminal complaint cases, including referrals in all relevant matters following objections to police decisions not to refer the cases to the prosecution
  • Administrative Litigation: Successfully represented clients in litigation involving subsidy-related legislation, revocation of business permits, and business suspension orders
  • Labor and Employment: Represented clients in dismissal and disciplinary matters before Labor Relations Commissions, public officials’ appeals commissions, teachers’ appeals commissions, and administrative courts
  • Labor and Employment: Responded to complaints filed with the Ministry of Employment and Labor and defended clients in wage-related litigation
  • Labor and Employment: Reviewed agreements for executives and employees and handled damages litigation involving non-compete obligations
  • Labor and Employment: Advised clients on human resources management
  • Family Law: Handled numerous matters involving divorce, division of marital property, designation of custodial parents, and claims against third parties involved in extramarital relationships
Languages
  • Korean
  • English

Recent Works

Continuing Adultery Recognized Despite a "One-Off Lapse" Defense

1. Facts and Background Client A (the plaintiff) became aware of an inappropriate relationship between A's spouse and a third party, B, and retained LKP to seek consolation money. In the proceedings, B argued that the contact had been "merely a one or two-time lapse" and not a continuing relationship. The principal task was therefore to show, by objective evidence, that what had occurred was not an isolated incident but a continuing and repeated relationship. 2. Key Legal Issues In assessing damages for this type of misconduct, the continuity and repetitiveness of the relationship are generally relevant. The main issues were: (i) how to organize, in chronological order, the frequency, duration, and timing of the meetings to show continuity; (ii) how to combine indicators of overnight stays and travel (vehicle routes, entry/exit times) with a contextual reading of lawfully obtained messenger materials (forms of address, emotional language, and shared schedules); and (iii) how to compile and organize precedents distinguishing continuing relationships from isolated lapses, so as to persuade the court that this matter was different from a typical "one-off" deviation. 3. Implementation and Outcome LKP (i) organized, in chronological order, the frequency, dates, and locations of the meetings on the basis of materials provided by Client A; (ii) analyzed indicators of overnight stays and travel through objectively verifiable materials such as vehicle routes and entry/exit times; and (iii) used the contextual elements of the messenger exchanges — forms of address, emotional expressions, shared schedules — to demonstrate an emotional and relational continuity inconsistent with a one-off encounter. Precedents distinguishing continuing relationships from isolated lapses were also compiled and submitted as comparative materials, and at the hearing LKP showed that the assembled materials converged into a single, coherent set of facts. The court declined to accept B's "one or two times" defense, recognized that the relationship had been continuing and repeated, and rendered a judgment in favor of Client A. The case is of practical significance in showing how chronological aggregation of circumstantial evidence and contextual analysis of messenger exchanges can support proof of the continuity of an extramarital relationship.

2026.05.12

Year-Long Adultery Settled in Three Weeks via a Single Cease-and-Desist Letter

1. Facts and Background Client A (the plaintiff) had confirmed, through information from acquaintances and message records on the spouse's mobile phone, that an extramarital relationship between the spouse and a workplace colleague, B (the defendant), had continued for about one year. Considering child-rearing and her own employment, Client A did not wish to leave a litigation record; she wished to maintain the marriage and hold only B legally accountable. 2. Key Legal Issues The main issues were: (i) how to assess the evidentiary use and limitations of the messenger records and call logs obtained by Client A; (ii) how, given Client A's wish to avoid litigation, to design a strategy that placed cease-and-desist correspondence and settlement at the forefront; (iii) how, in the event B replied denying the relationship, to organize and convey, on an objective basis, the legal risks that would arise upon conversion to litigation, so as to elicit a willingness to settle; and (iv) how to draft, with care, a settlement agreement that included not only the financial settlement terms but also confidentiality, no-contact, and non-recurrence provisions. 3. Implementation and Outcome LKP (i) reviewed, as a first step, the evidentiary use and limitations of the messenger records and call logs obtained by Client A; (ii) given Client A's wish to avoid litigation, adopted a strategy that placed cease-and-desist correspondence at the forefront, and prepared and dispatched a cease-and-desist letter clearly setting out the facts of the conduct and the basis of legal responsibility; (iii) when B's response denied the relationship, organized and conveyed, on the basis of the available evidence, the specific legal risks that would arise on conversion to litigation, eliciting a willingness to settle; and (iv) drafted with care a settlement agreement that included confidentiality, no-contact, and non-recurrence provisions. A settlement was reached about three weeks after dispatch of the cease-and-desist letter; Client A obtained payment of the settlement sum and confidentiality and no-contact undertakings, bringing the matter to a conclusion without recourse to litigation. The case shows a settlement-oriented strategy designed around a client's wish for confidentiality and the preservation of her daily life.

2026.05.08

Early Settlement of an Adultery Dispute via a Cease-and-Desist Letter

1. Facts and Background Client A (the plaintiff) became aware of an inappropriate relationship between A's spouse and a third party, B, and tried to settle. B, however, denied responsibility, blamed Client A, and continued unsolicited contact, displaying an antagonistic attitude. Considering the welfare of the children and the need for daily stability, Client A wished, where possible, to resolve the matter without litigation. LKP was retained to develop a pre-litigation strategy that would change B's attitude through legal pressure and produce a settlement on reasonable terms. 2. Key Legal Issues As the matter aimed at out-of-court resolution, the principal issues were: (i) how to organize the facts and continuity of the relationship to neutralize defenses such as "merely a social acquaintance" or "a long-since terminated relationship"; (ii) how to convey to B, on an objective basis, the additional exposure (litigation costs, damages, reputational consequences) that would arise if the matter were litigated; and (iii) how to design protective settlement provisions — no-contact, non-disparagement, liquidated-damages, and confidentiality clauses — to deter recurrence. Drawing on family-practice know-how and relevant precedents, LKP prepared and dispatched a cease-and-desist letter that excluded emotional language and was firmly grounded in legal doctrine and precedent, securing a negotiating advantage at the pre-litigation stage. 3. Implementation and Outcome LKP (i) organized the facts of the relationship and its continuity from the materials Client A had provided, and reconstructed in chronological order the indicators bearing on B's awareness of the spouse's marital status; (ii) compiled, on an objective basis, the criteria typically applied to damages, the anticipated costs of litigation, and the foreseeable social exposure of a contested action, and incorporated those points into the cease-and-desist letter; and (iii) prepared guidance on settlement terms tailored to Client A's family, child-rearing, and workplace circumstances. The settlement agreement included no-contact, non-disparagement, confidentiality, and liquidated-damages provisions to deter recurrence. As a result, B changed position, engaged in negotiations on the basis of an acknowledgement of responsibility, and the matter was resolved early through a settlement that included payment, a written apology, and a cessation of contact, without recourse to litigation. The case illustrates a dispute-resolution strategy that prioritized the minimization of social exposure and the protection of the client's daily life and child-rearing environment.

2026.05.08