The Phnom Penh Post

Billionair­e returns to China after arrest in US

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TECH billionair­e and JD.com founder Richard Liu has returned to China, the company said Monday, following a brief arrest in the US over allegation­s of criminal sexual conduct.

“He has been released without any charges and without requiremen­t for bail,” a spokeswoma­n for the company said in a statement.

“Mr Liu has returned to work in China.”

JD.com, the company which Liu founded in 1998, is an e-commerce juggernaut in China and the main competitor to industry leader Alibaba.

Liu, also known by his Chinese name Liu Qiangdong, was arrested over the misconduct allegation­s late Friday and released Saturday afternoon in the midwestern US city of Minneapoli­s, records from Hennepin County Jail showed.

The Minneapoli­s Police Department over the weekend said the investigat­ion remained active but would not confirm details of the arrest or the allegation­s against 45-year-old Liu.

“The individual was arrested Friday evening and released Saturday afternoon. He was released pending formal complaint,” public informatio­n officer John Elder told AFP.

In the state of Minnesota, “criminal sexual conduct” encompasse­s a broad spectrum of non-consensual sexual activity.

Firm denies allegation­s

China’s foreign ministry said on Monday that its consulate in Chicago was closely following developmen­ts in the case.

It was “seeking informatio­n and verificati­on from the related US authoritie­s”, ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying told reporters.

In an earlier statement posted to Chinese social media network Wei- bo, JD.com described the allegation­s as false. It appeared to contradict US police by adding authoritie­s found no evidence of misconduct and released Liu to continue his trip.

The Nasdaq-listed JD.com has made headway i n its battle with e-commerce giant Alibaba by operating its own logistics network and providing Chinese customers with same-day or next-day delivery for many of their purchases.

In June Google announced it would invest more than half a billion dollars in JD.com as part of a move to expand retail services around the world.

The firms will marry JD’s supply chain and logistics experience with Google technology to create “next generation” personalis­ed retail service in regions including Southeast Asia, the US and Europe, both companies said in a statement.

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