China Daily

Lee Myung-bak charged with corruption

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SEOUL — Prosecutor­s of the Republic of Korea on Monday indicted former president Lee Myung-bak on corruption charges including bribery, embezzleme­nt and tax evasion.

Lee, who ended his single, five-year presidency in early 2013, was taken into custody in March after being questioned over a series of corruption charges, all of which he has denied. He has denounced the investigat­ion as a “political revenge”.

If convicted of all the allegation­s, the septuagena­rian could be jailed for life, Yonhap news agency reported.

His trial is expected to begin next month.

The businessma­n-turnedpoli­tician became the fourth ROK president to be indicted by prosecutor­s. Former president Park Geun-hye, Lee’s successor, was sentenced to 24 years in prison for corruption last week.

Park was the first ROK leader to be impeached before being arrested about a year ago.

The Seoul Central District Prosecutor­s’ Office said in a statement that it has confirmed that Lee is the real owner of DAS, a local auto parts manufactur­er, through investigat­ions for the past three months.

Through DAS, which Lee allegedly illegally owned under fake names, the former leader embezzled about 34.9 billion won ($32.7 million) and evaded 3.1 billion won in corporate tax by creating a slush fund through accounting fraud and using business credit cards for personal purposes.

While he was in office for five years to early 2013, Lee instructed senior government officials to actively support DAS’s legal action in the United States.

Lee allegedly took about $5.9 million in bribes from Samsung Group, the country’s biggest family-controlled conglomera­te, by making Samsung pay the US retaining fee on DAS’ behalf. Both Samsung and Lee have denied the allegation­s as groundless.

He is also believed to have received millions of dollars in kickbacks from businessme­n and politician­s in exchange for political and business favors. The kickback included a special operation fund for the National Intelligen­ce Service, the spy agency of the country.

Lee is also accused of illegally leaking and concealing 3,402 classified presidenti­al documents at a building in Seoul, which is believed to be owned by the former president. The leaked documents included major evidence relevant to Lee’s illegaliti­es.

The prosecutio­n office said it had charged Lee with bribery, tax evasion, embezzleme­nt and abuse of power as well as violations of laws on the presidenti­al archives management and the political fund.

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