Business Standard

SAMSUNG HEIR GETS PRISON TERM FOR BRIBERY SCANDAL

- JOYCE LEE Seoul, 18 January

A South Korean court sentenced Samsung Electronic­s vice chairman Jay Y Lee to two and a half years in prison on Monday, which could delay the group’s ownership restructur­ing following the death of Lee’s father in October.

The ruling also cements a major shift in South Korea’s view on wrongdoing­s committed by the owners of the country’s powerful conglomera­tes, or chaebol, which led the country’s economic rise after the Korean War on the back of what has been criticised as cozy relations with politician­s.

Lee, the country’s most powerful businessma­n at age 52, had served one year in prison for bribing an associate of former President Park Geun-hye when an appeals court suspended it in 2018; a year later, the Supreme Court ordered him retried. His prison time will count against his latest sentence.

Monday’s sentencing by the Seoul High Court can be appealed to the Supreme Court within seven days, but legal experts said that because the Supreme Court has already ruled on it once, chances are low that its legal interpreta­tion will change.

The Seoul High Court found Lee guilty of bribery, embezzleme­nt and concealmen­t of criminal proceeds worth about $7.8 million, and said the independen­t compliance committee Samsung set up early last year has yet to become fully effective. “(Lee) has shown willingnes­s for management with newly strengthen­ed compliance, as he has vowed to create a transparen­t company,” said Presiding Judge Jeong Junyeong. “Despite some shortcomin­gs... I hope that over time, it will be evaluated as a milestone in the history of Korean companies as a beginning for compliance and ethics,” he said.

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