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Free Chol Soo Lee (Documentary)

Thursday, March 30, 2023 | 6:30pm to 8:30pm

The City College of New York
259 Convent Avenue – Shepard Hall Rm 291
New York, NY 10031

View Video: https://vimeo.com/showcase/5068611

In 1973, Chol Soo Lee was arrested for the gang-related murder of Yip Yee Tak, a Chinese American man who had been shot to death in San Francisco’s Chinatown. Following a flawed investigation, which leaned on the eyewitness testimony of three white tourists, and no interviews with members of the local Chinatown community, Lee was wrongfully convicted of the murder and sentenced to life in prison.

Free Chol Soo Lee traces the investigative work that Korean American journalist K.W. Lee began, and the national and then global Asian American movement that formed leading eventually to Chol Soo Lee’s release in 1983. The film then follows Lee after his release and the varied turns his life took.

Join Third World Newsreel and the Documentary Forum at CCNY for this Indie Lens Pop up screening in advance of its PBS screening in April, to see the film, hear from co-directors Julie Ha and Eugene Yi; producer Su Kim; activist Sooknam Choo, who was part of the campaign; with moderator and activist Mitchel Wu, a friend of Chol Soo Lee. In this time period especially, as Asian communities are challenging rising anti-Asian bias, attacks and more – this documentary about a pan-Asian movement across the US that successfully challenged racial profiling and injustice is an inspiring and relevatory program.

Co-Sponsor
Asian American / Asian Research Institute – CUNY

Author Bio

Julie Ha’s storytelling career spans more than two decades in ethnic and mainstream media, with a specialized focus on Asian American stories. She was former editor-in-chief of IKoreAm Journal, a national Korean American magazine. Free Chol Soo Lee, which premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival, is her first documentary film.


Eugene Yi is a filmmaker, editor, and writer from Los Angeles. His editing work has been in Berlinale, TriBeCa, and The New York Times. He was a contributing editor for KoreAm Journal, a national Korean American magazine.