User:Dckewon5131/임헌평

Lim Heon-pyeong (January 6, 1905 – July 10, 1969) was a Korean legal professional and businessman during the Japanese occupation, his hometown is Songdo-myeon, Gaepoong-gun, Gyeonggi-do.

Life
He is the younger brother of Lim Heon-young, who served as a government official during the Japanese colonial period. He graduated from the Department of Law at Kyoto Imperial University in Japan in 1930, and worked at the Agriculture Bureau of the Japanese Government-General of Korea in April 1930. In November 1932, he passed the Judicial Department of the Higher Civil Service Examination and in 1933 he passed the Administration Department of the Higher Civil Service Examination. From 1935 to 1941, he served as Uiryeong-gun, Gyeongsangnam-do (April 17, 1935 to August 11, 1937), Ulsan-gun, Gyeongsangnam-do (August 12, 1937 to September 30, 1939), and Jinyang-gun, Gyeongsangnam-do (October 1, 1939 to May 30, 1941) as the head of Ulsan-gun Farm and Ulsan-gun Migok Control Union.

While serving as Uiryeong-gun, Ulsan-gun, and Jinyang-gun of Gyeongsangnam-do, he actively cooperated in Japan's invasion war, such as dispensing war materials, distributing defense ideas, propaganda, and raising funds for national defense donations, and receiving a medal from the Japanese government on April 29, 1940. On May 31, 1941, he was appointed to the Gaesong Buyun, and on June 7, 1941, he was appointed as a member of the Joseon language test for employees of the Joseon Governor-General's level government office and a member of the Joseon language test for employees of Daewoo in Joseon.

He was placed fourth on September 30, 1941 and sixth on November 15, 1941, respectively, and served as a participant in Gyeonggi-do Province (appointed September 30, 1943), a member of the Gyeonggi-do Wage Commission (appointed October 21, 1943), and a minister of mining in Gyeonggi-do Province (appointed December 1, 1943). On 31 March 1944, he was placed third in the High Court. After liberation from Japanese colonial rule, he served as a lawyer in Seoul from July 1946 to March 1962, and served as CEO of Dongbang Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. from 1951 to 1969. pro-Japanese group It was included in the 708-member provincial participation hall section and the Joseon Governor-General's office section, the bureaucracy section of the National Research Institute's list of pro-Japanese biographical dictionaries, and the 705-member list of pro-Japanese anti-national activities.