New York Post

Seoul suicide shock

Hours before a key grilling, exec hangs self

- By HYUNJOO JIN and SE YOUNG LEE

One of the top executives at South Korea’s Lotte Group was found dead on Friday, a suspected suicide, hours before he was to be questioned by prosecutor­s conducting a criminal probe into the country’s fifth-largest conglomera­te.

Lotte Group confirmed the death of Vice Chairman Lee In-won, which comes after the group was riven by a family succession feud last year and subjected in June to widespread raids by government prosecutor­s.

Lee had been with the group for 43 years and was the most senior executive outside the Shin family that controls the conglomera­te.

He was a longtime CEO of Lotte Shopping, one of the group’s biggest businesses.

The police said Lee’s body was found on Friday morning under a tree along a walking and cycling path near Seoul. They said he had left home around 10 p.m. on Thursday. A four-page note was found in the executive’s car parked nearby.

An autopsy showed Lee’s death appeared to be a “typical case of death by hanging,” which appeared to be suicide, police said.

“When I arrived after the call, the deceased was lying down, crouched here,” Hyung Dae-ryong, Seojong precinct police station chief, told reporters gathered at the site.

The deceased, wearing shorts and a black windbreake­r, appeared to have hung himself from a tree with a necktie, Hyung told reporters.

A maroon umbrella with the Lotte logo was found nearby.

Lee was the top lieutenant of Chairman Shin Dong-bin, who last year saw off a bitter challenge from his older brother for control of the 68year-old comglomera­te.

Founded by Shin Kyuk-ho, 93, as a maker of chewing gum, Lotte now owns properties in the beverage, hotel, fast food and financial services sectors, among others.

“He (Lee) oversaw Lotte Group’s overall housekeepi­ng and core businesses and accurately understood the minds of Chairman-in-Chief Shin Kyuk-ho and Chairman Shin Dong-bin to be carried out well in subsidiary compa- nies,” Lotte Group said in a statement.

Lee was also engaged in finding new growth opportunit­ies for Lotte, the group said.

A prosecutio­n team of about 200 people raided Lotte offices in June, looking into a possible slush fund as well as breach of trust involving transactio­ns among the group’s companies, sources said at the time.

Lee, who was 69, had been scheduled to appear before prosecutor­s on Friday morning, a Lotte official said.

A South Korean prosecutor, who declined to be identified by name, expressed condolence­s for Lee’s death and said prosecutor­s planned to reconsider the schedule for the ongoing probe.

Park Ju-gun, head of corpo- rate analysis firm CEO Score, said Lee’s death was likely to hamper the investigat­ion.

“Lee’s standing within Lotte was almost on par with that of the owner family members,” he said.

The investigat­ion into Lotte had already exacted a devastatin­g toll on its business, which ranges from hotels to retail to chemicals.

Its Hotel Lotte unit was forced in June to shelve an initial public offering to raise up to $4.73 billion, which would have made it the world’s largest this year.

Also in June, its Lotte Chemical unit withdrew from bidding for US-based Axiall Corp., citing its difficulti­es in South Korea. Rival Westlake Chemical ended up with a $2.33 billion deal for Axiall.

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 ??  ?? The body of Lotte Group Chairman Lee In-won (inset) is wheeled into an ambulance outside Seoul, South Korea, Friday.
The body of Lotte Group Chairman Lee In-won (inset) is wheeled into an ambulance outside Seoul, South Korea, Friday.

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