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Juvenile Justice (Korean: 소년 심판) is a 2022 South Korean legal drama television series that premiered on Netflix on February 25, 2022. [1] [2] Written by Kim Min-seok and directed by Hong Jong-chan, it stars Kim Hye-soo, Kim Mu-yeol, and Lee Sung-min.
Delayed Justice (2020–2021) Delicious Proposal (2001) Delightfully Deceitful (2023) Delivery (2021) Delivery Man (2023) Descendants of the Sun (2016) Designated Survivor: 60 Days (2019) Desperate Mrs. Seonju (2024–2025) Destined With You (2023) Detectives in Trouble (2011) Devilish Charm (2018) Diary of a Night Watchman (2014) Diary of a ...
Noh Chak-Hee, a brilliant but ruthless corporate lawyer, is the adopted "granddaughter" of the founder of Seoul's most prominent law firm. Just as she is about to receive a promotion to partner after successfully defending a pharmaceutical company for manufacturing harmful birth control pills, the police arrest her for manipulating a woman who had taken the pills into attempting suicide.
And while the NYPD made 275 juvenile gun arrests in 2016, he said there have already been 438 this year. NYPD Chief of Crime Control Strategies Michael Lipetri says juveniles made up 12% of run ...
Hong Jong-chan (Korean: 홍종찬) is a South Korean television director.He started with co-directing MBC's The Legend in 2007, and went on to direct drama such as Padam Padam, Doctor Stranger, My Secret Hotel, Dear My Friends, Life, Her Private Life, Link: Eat, Love, Kill, and Netflix original series Juvenile Justice.
In Wisconsin, juvenile justice workers are seeking access to tools used in the adult criminal justice system to manage behavior after a youth counselor was killed in an alleged assault by a 16 ...
Set in Hankuk University Law School, the series tells the story of students and professors who come across an unusual case. A professor at a prestigious law school and his students get involved in an unprecedented case. It is a drama about the process of prospective lawyers realizing authenticity, law, and justice. [5]
The Social Security Fairness Act, which would increase benefits for 2.8 million retirees, has bipartisan support but time running out.