San Francisco Chronicle

Another former president faces corruption charges

- By Hyung-Jin Kim Hyung-Jin Kim is an Associated Press writer.

SEOUL — South Korean prosecutor­s formally charged jailed ex-President Lee Myungbak with a range of corruption charges on Monday, making him the country’s fourth leader to face a criminal trial in about two decades.

Last Friday, Lee’s conservati­ve successor, Park Geun-hye, was sentenced to 24 years in prison in a separate corruption scandal for which she was removed from office following months of antigovern­ment rallies.

The Seoul Central District Prosecutor­s’ Office said it charged Lee with taking a total of 11 billion won ($10 million) in bribes from the country’s spy agency, Samsung and others.

The bribes include 700 million won ($636,000) from the National Intelligen­ce Agency’s official funds and $5.8 million in legal expenses that Samsung paid on behalf of his private auto parts company, DAS, a prosecutor­s’ statement said.

It said Lee’s government provided Samsung with favors such as a 2009 pardon of its convicted chairman, Lee Kunhee, in return for the bribes. Lee had been earlier fined and sentenced to a suspended threeyear prison term in connection with losses at a Samsung affiliate and tax evasion.

Lee Myung-bak also has been charged with embezzling about 35 billion won ($33 million) in funds from DAS and evading corporate taxes totaling 3 billion won ($281,270), according to the prosecutor­s.

Most of Lee’s alleged crimes took place while he served as president from 2008 to 2013 or when he was a leading conservati­ve ruling party candidate before winning the 2007 election, prosecutor­s said.

Lee was a Hyundai executive and a Seoul mayor before becoming the country’s first president with a business background.

He has been held at a Seoul detention center since his arrest last month. He has accused the current liberal government of President Moon Jae-in of retaliatin­g against him for the 2009 death of Moon’s friend, liberal ex-President Roh Moo-hyun, who leapt to his death during a corruption investigat­ion of his family while Lee was in office.

South Korea has taken a series of steps aimed at rooting out corruption in recent years, but high-profile graft scandals involving politician­s and business leaders often occur. Almost all South Korean presidents have been arrested or embroiled in scandals at the close of their terms or after leaving office.

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