User:Dckewon5131/신재영 (1863년)

Shin Jae-young (4 January 1863 – 18 May 1931) was a Japanese colonial official who participated in the trial of the righteous army at the end of the Korean Empire. The domicile was Pyeongsan.

Life
He went to Japan in 1883 and studied maritime affairs and political science. Two years later, after returning to Korea after studying abroad, he was dispatched to Busan Maritime as an diplomatic junior official and put into practice.

From 1895, he served as a preliminary judge while serving in various positions under the Ministry of Justice, and in 1905, he passed through the Army Court, and rose to Naejangwongyeong. In 1907, he served as the principal of the Army Children's School, the judge of the Military Court, and the governor of Yangju-gun, Gyeonggi-do, and the following year, the judge of the Pyongyang Public Prosecution Center, in 1909, he was appointed as a judge of the Gyeongseong Public Prosecution Service and returned to the judiciary.

After the conclusion of the annexation treaty between Korea and Japan, he was appointed as the head of Hamheung-gun County under the Governor-General of Joseon in 1912 and received the Korean Merger Memorial Medal. Shin Jae-young also received the Daisho Memorial Hall in 1915 and Seobo award, the Hun 6th in 1920. He was appointed as the county governor of Gowon-gun in 1921 and retired in 1923.

a trial for the righteous army
Before and after the annexation of Korea, Shin Jae-young was involved in the process of suppressing the righteous army uprising by sentenced the righteous army chiefs to heavy punishment, including the death penalty. There are a total of 12 righteous army cases in which he participated in the trial as a judge.

After death
It is also included in the list of 106 pro-Japanese anti-national activities during the early Japanese occupation period, officially announced by the Committee on the Truth and Reconciliation of Pro-Japanese Anti-National Acts in 2006. It was also selected on the list of prospective people to include in the pro-Japanese life dictionary released by the National Research Institute in 2008.