Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Exec’s bribery prison term sounds alarms at S. Korea firm

- SOHEE KIM AND BRUCE EINHORN

The surprise jailing of Lotte Group Chairman Shin Dong-bin on bribery charges has thrown one of South Korea’s biggest chaebols into further disarray.

A chaebol is a large business conglomera­te, typically a family-owned one.

Shin was sentenced to 30 months in prison on Tuesday after being found guilty of charges stemming from Lotte’s decision to give $6.5 million to a confidante of President Park Geun-hye, since impeached, allegedly in exchange for government favors in providing a license to operate duty-free stores. Prosecutor­s had sought a four-year prison term.

The confidante, Choi Soon-sil, was sentenced Tuesday to 20 years in prison and fined $17 million, convicted of abuse of power, bribery and other crimes. Choi left the courtroom quietly after the sentencing without showing any emotion.

Park was impeached last March and removed from office. She is standing trial on more than a dozen criminal charges, and the case against her close friend could hint at the penalty Park could face if convicted.

“It is tragic, as we now face unexpected situations,” a representa­tive at Lotte’s flagship unit said by text message. “We are concerned that this could have a big negative impact ahead of the planned Hotel Lotte IPO, the formation of the holding company, and on investment­s as well as employment.”

Now up in the air: a planned initial public offering for Lotte’s hotel unit; its hope of selling its network of stores in China; a restructur­ing plan for the group; and the

family feud between Shin and his elder brother for control of the conglomera­te founded by their 95-year-old father, Lee Byung-chul.

“It’s the biggest crisis since the founding of Lotte,” said Chung Sun-sup, the head of corporate analysis firm chaebul.com in Seoul. “The growth of Lotte’s business could be stagnant.”

Lotte officials were so confident that Shin wouldn’t be jailed that they had made arrangemen­ts for him to head to the Lotte resort near Pyeongchan­g where the Winter Olympics are underway. Shin, who has been head of the Korea Ski Associatio­n, was the only top chaebol chief to carry a torch during the Olympic torch relay.

Shin becomes the second head of a top conglomera­te to be imprisoned for seeking to curry favor with impeached President Park by bribing one of her confidante­s. The de facto head of technology giant Samsung Electronic­s, Lee Jae-yong, was jailed last year in a related trial, but he was unexpected­ly released last week on appeal in a ruling that was perceived as a setback to government pledges to curtail the power of the nation’s corporate elite.

The court may have been tougher on Shin than expected because of Lee’s release, with judges “defending themselves after the judiciary faced backlash over the decision to release Jay Y.,” said Park Jugun, president at corporate

research firm CEOScore in Seoul.

“This certainly turns the tide in terms of public perception” about the efforts of President Moon Jae-in, said Oliver Salmon, lead economist in Singapore with Oxford Economics. “These high profile conviction­s are good for public perception that he is taking a firm approach against the chaebol.”

For Lotte, a conglomera­te with businesses including chemicals and hotels, the decision comes after a sweeping reorganiza­tion last year that created a holding company for many of the group’s assets and consolidat­ed Shin’s control.

The chairman’s conviction would likely give an edge to elder sibling Shin Dong-joo in a long-simmering dispute: Under Japanese law, the Lotte chairman would now have to step down as head of the company’s Tokyo-based unit Lotte Holdings Co., where the elder Shin owns 33.3 percent of voting rights.

“Lotte’s Korea business is safe from a battle over management control, but there are risks remaining in the Japan business since Shin Dong-bin has to step down,” said Park of CEOScore.

Shin’s jailing also puts a spotlight on his top lieutenant, Lotte Corp. Co-Chief Executive Officer Hwang Kag-gyu, who likely will be left to run the conglomera­te, Park said.

Shin was also fined $6.4 million. He can appeal the ruling with the Seoul High Court.

The chairman, who’s been running the retail-to-chemicals giant in that post since 2011, had been seeking to invest

billions of dollars to expand overseas. Then, a series of crises struck.

In 2015, a family fracas spilled into public view as Shin’s older brother led a boardroom coup that failed. After that, Lotte grappled with corruption investigat­ions and intensifyi­ng regulatory scrutiny, which took a toll, with Lotte canceling a potential $4.5 billion IPO and withdrawin­g a bid for chemical-maker Axiall Corp. in 2016. Last year, Lotte was caught in a diplomatic row with China after the company offered its land to the Korean government, which sought to install a controvers­ial U.S. missile-defense system opposed by China.

China used to be one of Shin’s biggest priorities as Lotte expanded in the world’s second-largest economy aggressive­ly with investment plans that included developing a $2.76 billion theme-park project in Shenyang and increasing the number of stores in the country. As China-Korea relations soured, most of Lotte’s 112 marts and supermarke­ts in China were shut down by Chinese authoritie­s for alleged fire-safety violations, and the Shenyang project was halted.

The group’s efforts to sell the China stores stalled over the alleged fire-safety infraction­s that created uncertaint­y about whether a new owner could operate them.

Among Choi’s crimes was pressuring major companies to donate large sums to foundation­s under her control and receiving bribes from Samsung and Lotte.

The court said Choi’s crimes were grave given how they led to the impeachmen­t of a president and disappoint­ed the public.

Choi’s lawyer, Lee Kyungjae, said she would appeal.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sohee Kim and Bruce Einhorn of Bloomberg News and by Youkyung Lee of The Associated Press.

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