User:Dckewon5131/최정묵

Choi Jeong-mook (from 1900 to ?) was a bureaucrat and legal professional during the Japanese colonial period, and his hometown was Byeokamjeong, Daedong-gun, Pyeongannam-do.

Life
He graduated from Gyeongseong High School in March 1918 and Gyeongseong Training School in March 1921, and served as a prosecutor at the Pyongyang District Court from December 20, 1923 to April 30, 1928. On May 24, 1928, he was registered as a lawyer at the Pyongyang District Court Inspection Bureau, and on November 20, 1929, he was appointed as a member of the Pyongyang Deputy Council and on March 14, 1930, he was appointed as a member of the Pyongyang Budget Committee. He also attended the Jeonseon lawyer Conference and the Pyeongannam Public Officials Conference held in April 1930.

He served as a member of the Pyongyang Association and a member of the Pyeongannam-do Provincial Council, and served as an executive member of the Pyongyang Interstate Relations Association in August 1937, and as a president of the Pyongyang lawyer Association in March 1939. From May 11, 1939 to May 11, 1943, he served as a preliminary member of the Pyongyang Probation Review Board, and in 1941, he served as the promoter and councilor of the Joseon Imbo Bureau. On July 30, 1941, when the Japanese Government-General of Korea enacted a designated lawyer system related to the Security and Defense Security Act, it was selected as a national designated lawyer.

In November 1941, he attended a meeting calling for recruitment of volunteers as a civilian representative and insisted on actively recruiting volunteers, and served as an executive member and a special member of the Shenyang Front Public Officials Competition, which was determined to destroy the conscription system in 1943. He served as a director of the National Federation of Korean Residents in 1944, a member of the Council of the Dialogue Alliance in February 1945, and a member of the Central Committee of the Korean Government-General from June 6 to August 1945 until liberation. pro-Japanese group It was included in the 708-member Central Committee, others, and the 705-member Pro-Japanese Anti-National Activities Committee.