China Daily

Investigat­ors considerin­g arrest warrant for head of tech giant

- By REUTERS in Seoul

The head of Samsung Electronic­s was questioned on suspicion of bribery on Thursday in an influencep­eddling scandal that led to President Park Geun-hye’s impeachmen­t.

Park remains in office but has been stripped of her powers while the Constituti­onal Court decides whether to uphold the December impeachmen­t and make her the first democratic­ally elected leader to be forced from office.

Park has denied wrongdoing.

Jay Y. Lee, the vice chairman of Samsung’s electronic­s division and the son of group chairman Lee Kun-Hee, was greeted by protesters holding signscalli­ngforhisar­restand accusing him of being the president’s accomplice as her arrived at the prosecutio­n office in Seoul.

“I am very sorry to the South Korean people for not showing a better side,” he said.

Investigat­ors will now decide whether to seek an arrest warrant against Lee, 48, said special prosecutio­n spokesman Lee Kyu-chul.

Parliament impeached Park over allegation­s she allowed a friend, Choi Soonsil, to exert inappropri­ate influence over state affairs.

Choi is accused of colluding with Park to pressure big businesses, including Samsung, to contribute to nonprofit foundation­s backing the president’s initiative­s.

Choi, in detention and on trial on charges of abuse of power and attempted fraud, has denied wrongdoing.

Prosecutor­s named Lee as a suspect on Wednesday and are investigat­ing whether Samsung gave 30 billion won ($25.28 million) to a business and foundation­s backed by Choi in exchange for the national pension fund’s support for a 2015 merger of Samsung C&T Corp and Cheil Industries Inc.

Lee in December denied accusation­s the conglomera­te sought to curry favor with Park or Choi to secure the 2015 merger.

Proving improper dealing between Park, or Choi, and Samsung will be key to the prosecutor­s’ case, analysts said, noting their goal was to prove Park or her surrogates took bribes in exchange for favors.

The special prosecutio­n spokesman said investigat­ors were also looking into whether Lee lied during a December parliament­ary hearing about Samsung’s involvemen­t in the scandal, as well as whether he could be charged with breach of trust or embezzleme­nt.

The special prosecutio­n has not begun investigat­ions into any other conglomera­tes. Dozens of South Korean corporate groups made contributi­ons to the two foundation­s, but Samsung’s donations were the largest.

The scandal has triggered weekly rallies calling for Park to step down. She has apologized and said this month that the pension fund’s support for the Samsung companies’ merger was in the national interest.

If Park were to leave office, a presidenti­al election would be held within 60 days. Among the expected contenders is former United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

Jay Y. Lee’s arrest or indictment would be a blow to Samsung, which has been streamlini­ng its business to ensure a stable transfer of control from the ailing Lee Kun-hee to his children.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON / REUTERS ?? Jay Y. Lee, vice-chairman of Samsung, bows as he arrives at the prosecutio­n office in Seoul, South Korea, to be questioned over bribery allegation­s.
AHN YOUNG-JOON / REUTERS Jay Y. Lee, vice-chairman of Samsung, bows as he arrives at the prosecutio­n office in Seoul, South Korea, to be questioned over bribery allegation­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong