On December 11, 2008, an eight-year-old third grader (known by her
pseudonym "Na-young") was on her way to school when she was kidnapped by Cho Doo-soon (Jo Du-sun), a 57-year-old man living in
Ansan. Cho repeatedly raped Na-young in an abandoned public church restroom, and as the child resisted, he beat,
strangled and attempted to
drown her in a toilet until she lost consciousness. Her parents found Na-young near death, and she was taken to a local hospital where after an eight-hour surgery, she had a prolonged stay in the
intensive care unit. Doctors said Na-young sustained irreversible damage to her
genitals,
anus and
intestines, which initially required her to wear a
colostomy bag to replace her missing organs. Cho was arrested three days after the incident; he was a habitual
sex offender with 17 prior crimes, and had spent three years in prison for rape in 1983. Prosecutors had demanded
life imprisonment for Cho, and more than 400,000 angry
netizens signed a petition at Internet portal site
Daum calling for
capital punishment. A lower district court sentenced Cho to a 12-year jail term, citing his temporary loss of sound judgment due to
inebriation, which was upheld by the
Supreme Court in 2009. This relatively lenient sentence sparked widespread public outrage, prompting even then-President
Lee Myung-bak to express regret over the ruling during a Cabinet meeting. Cho was incarcerated in a
maximum security prison in
North Gyeongsang Province. Na-young's parents, represented by the
Korean Bar Association, filed a lawsuit against the prosecution for subjecting their daughter to unnecessary physical and
psychological distress; they cited the prosecution's hours-long, extended questioning soon after Na-young underwent major surgery during which she sat in discomfort and was forced to answer the same questions four times due to the prosecutors' inexperience with the electronic recording equipment, their inability to follow protocol in obtaining testimony from a
minor (taping her in plain sight of other patients at a hospital ward), and their delay in
exhibiting a key piece of evidence (the arrest videotape of Cho) which would have eliminated the need for her to take the
witness stand. Prosecutor-General Kim Joon-gyu later apologized to the family. In 2011, the
appellate division of the Seoul Central District Court upheld the court's previous decision ordering the government to pay () in
compensation to Na-young. ==Production==