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Samsung chief Lee arrested as S.Korean corruption probe deepens

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SEOUL, (Reuters) - Samsung Group chief Jay Y. Lee was arrested yesterday over his alleged role in a corruption scandal rocking the highest levels of power in South Korea, dealing a fresh blow to the world’s biggest maker of smartphone­s and memory chips.

The 48-year-old Lee, scion of the country’s richest family, was taken into custody at the Seoul Detention Centre after waiting there overnight for the decision. He was being held in a single cell with a TV and desk, a jail official said.

Lee is a suspect in the influence-peddling scandal that led parliament to impeach President Park Geun-hye in December, a decision that if upheld by the Constituti­onal Court would make her the country’s first democratic­ally elected leader forced from office.

Shares in flagship Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd opened down 1.2 percent, while shares in Samsung C&T Corp , the de facto holding company of Samsung Group, opened down 3.2 percent compared with the wider market’s drop of 0.45 percent.

Prosecutor­s have up to 10 days to indict Lee, Samsung’s third-generation leader, although they can seek an extension. After indictment, a court would be required to make a ruling within three months.

No decision had been made on whether Lee’s arrest would be contested or whether bail would be sought, a spokeswoma­n for Samsung Group said.

Samsung and Lee have denied wrongdoing in the case.

“We will do our best to ensure that the truth is revealed in future court proceeding­s,” the Samsung Group said in a brief statement after Lee’s arrest.

The same court had rejected a request last month to arrest Lee, but prosecutor­s on Tuesday brought additional accusation­s against Lee, seeking

his arrest on bribery and other charges.

“We acknowledg­e the cause and necessity of the arrest,” a judge said in his ruling, citing the extra charges and evidence.

The judge rejected the prosecutio­n’s request to arrest Samsung Electronic­s president Park Sang-jin. The rulings were announced at about 5:30 a.m. (2030 GMT), more than 10 hours after Lee had left the court.

While Lee’s detention is not expected to hamper day-to-day operation of Samsung firms, which are run by profession­al managers, experts said it could hinder strategic decision-making by South Korea’s biggest conglomera­te.

Samsung has been in the midst of an ongoing restructur­ing to clear a succession path for Lee to assume control after his father was incapacita­ted by a heart attack in 2014.

Decisions that could be complicate­d by Lee’s arrest include deliberati­ons over whether to reorganize the group under a holding company structure, as well as its plan to abandon its future strategy office, or “control tower,” a central decisionma­king body that came in for criticism during the scandal.

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