Arab Times

Samsung scion receives prison term over bribery

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SEOUL, South Korea, Jan 18, (AP): Billionair­e Samsung scion Lee Jae-yong was sent back to prison on Monday after a South Korean court handed him a two and a half-year sentence for his involvemen­t in a 2016 corruption scandal that spurred massive protests and ousted South Korea’s thenpresid­ent.

In a much-anticipate­d retrial, the Seoul High Court found Lee guilty of bribing then-President Park Geun-hye and her close confidante to win government support for a 2015 merger between two Samsung affiliates. The deal helped strengthen his control over the country’s largest business group.

Lee’s lawyers had portrayed him as a victim of presidenti­al power abuse and described the 2015 deal as part of “normal business activity.”

Wearing a mask and black suit and tie, Lee was taken into custody following the ruling. He didn’t answer questions by reporters upon his arrival at the court.

Injae Lee, an attorney who leads Lee Jae-yong’s defense team, expressed regret over the court’s decision, saying that the “essence of the case is that a former president abused power to infringe upon the freedom and property rights of a private company.”

He didn’t specifical­ly say whether there would be an appeal. Samsung didn’t issue a statement over the ruling.

Lee Jae-yong helms the Samsung group in his capacity as vice chairman of Samsung Electronic­s, one of the world’s largest makers of computer chips and smartphone­s.

In September last year, prosecutor­s separately indicted Lee on charges of stock price manipulati­on, breach of trust and auditing violations related to the 2015 merger.

It isn’t immediatel­y clear what his prison term would mean for Samsung. Samsung didn’t show much signs of trouble during the previous time Lee spent in jail in 2017 and 2018, and prison terms have never really stopped South Korean corporate leaders from relaying their management decisions from behind bars.

Samsung is coming off a robust business year, with its dual strength in parts and finished products enabling it to benefit from the coronaviru­s pandemic and the prolonged trade war between United States and China.

Samsung’s semiconduc­tor business rebounded sharply after a sluggish 2019, driven by robust demand for PCs and servers as virus outbreaks forced millions of people to stay and work at home.

The Trump administra­tion’s sanctions against China’s Huawei Technologi­es have meanwhile hindered one of Samsung’s biggest rivals in smartphone­s, smartphone chips and telecommun­ications equipment.

Samsung Electronic­s said earlier this month that its operating profit for the last quarter likely rose by 26% from the same period a year earlier to 9 trillion won ($8.1 billion). The company will release its finalized earnings later this month.

Lee, 52, was originally sentenced in 2017 to five years in prison for offering 8.6 billion won ($7 million) in bribes to Park and her longtime friend Choi Soon-sil. But he was freed after 11 months in February 2018 after the Seoul High Court reduced his term to 2½ years and suspended his sentence, overturnin­g key conviction­s and reducing the amount of his bribes.

The Supreme Court last week confirmed a 20-year prison sentence for Park, who was convicted of colluding with Choi to take millions of dollars in bribes and extortion money from some of the country’s largest business groups, including Samsung, while she was in office from 2013 to 2016.

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