The Palm Beach Post

Samsung heir held in prison awaiting charges

Jay Y. Lee is the latest in a line of South Korean corporate titans to face jail time.

- By Sam Kim Bloomberg Bloomberg’s Jungah Lee contribute­d to this report.

While being questioned for allegedly bribing South Kore a’s p re s i d e n t , S a msung Group’s Jay Y. Lee is locked up at a prison notorious for housing convicted billionair­es, a serial killer and the hangman’s noose. That doesn’t mean he’s given up being the boss.

Lee doesn’t have a phone or computer and technicall­y is confined to his cell almost all day, yet he’s allowed to meet with lawyers in a separate room for as long as he’d like. He could use the attorneys to communicat­e with lieutenant­s at the conglomera­te and stay involved in the decision-making, said Kwon Young-june, a professor who researches corporate governance at Seoul’s Kyung Hee University.

“It’s a backward culture f o u n d i n a c o u n t r y l i k e South Korea,” Kwon said. “Executives can retain their posts even after being jailed because they also own the companies they run.”

Precedent is on Lee’s side. Hanwha Group Chairman Ki m S e ung-yo un a nd S K Group Chairman Chey Taewon continued to influence their businesses even after being convicted of crimes and imprisoned. Not only did they keep their titles while behind bars, they still have them.

T h e c a s e a g a i n s t L e e , who hasn’t been formally indicted, hasn’t advanced as far as those, with both Samsung and Lee denying he did anything wrong. Yet the conditions of his confinemen­t show how serious the consequenc­es of the investigat­ion have been so far.

The billionair­e businessma­n wears a standard blue p r i s o n u n i f o r m, i s o n l y allowed outside to exercise for an hour a day and can’t access the internet, according to a person familiar with his detention. His cell does have a TV set — though it’s made by rival LG Electronic­s Inc. and only shows prison-approved programs, the person said, asking not to be identified because the details aren’t public.

Lee, 48, is being detained for questionin­g in a corruption probe that prompted the impeachmen­t of President Park Geun-hye. The vice chairman of Samsung Electronic­s Co. is accused of bribery, perjury and other offenses related to Park and her confidante. The alleged motive is government support for a corporate merger making it easier for him to control the consumer-electronic­s giant.

A s p e c i a l p r o s e c u t o r appointed to investigat­e the Park scandal has until the end of this month to issue an indictment. If Lee ultimately is convicted on all charges, he faces a sentence of more than 10 years.

Samsung said Lee isn’t running the company from the detention center.

“It is too early to speculate about corporate management,” Samsung said in an email. “Currently, the priority is preparing the legal defense so the truth can be revealed in future court proceeding­s. Samsung Electronic­s has a strong management team in place, led by its three CEOs who are in charge of business operations.”

Lee is at the Seoul Detention Center, located outside the industrial city of Anyang, south of Seoul. His fellow inmates include Park’s former chief of staff, Kim Ki-choon, and Yoo Youngchul, a self-confessed cannibal on death row for killing about 20 people.

The compound houses an execution chamber. The nation’s last hanging was in 1997.

“It’s depressing, lonely and miserable,” said Park Lae-goon, 55, an activist who spent almost four months there in 2015 after being arrested on charges of leading illegal protests. “It’s certainly no place for wealthy businessme­n to feel comfortabl­e.”

And that may impede Lee’s ability to keep his hands on the tiller of the sprawling group, said Park Nam-gyoo, who teaches business management at Seoul National Universit y. Lee could still manage “low-intensity, maintenanc­e issues,” but he may not be able to spearhead the type of transforma­tion Samsung needs to ward off competitor­s, he said.

“A jail is no place for anyone to make strategic decisions that require massive investment­s and to lead a shift in the way a company thinks,” Park said. “That’s just not something you can achieve by talking to lawyers.”

Korea’s Justice Ministry, which oversees the prison system, declined to comment on Lee’s jailhouse life. Its website says inmates get three meals a day, with a combined nutritiona­l value of 2,500 calories. The facilities serve special foods on national holidays.

L e e wi l l e a t t h e s a me K o r e a n f o o d a s f e l l o w inmates, the person familiar with the matter said. Every meal includes soup, three side dishes and a bowl of rice. The menu changes daily, with choices including pork cutlets, seaweed soup and the Korean staple kimchi. Lee must clean his own tray after eating.

Upon arrival, each inmate receives the same items: soap, toilet paper, toothbrush, toothpaste, towel, quilt and pillow, according to the ministry’s website. Lee’s cell has a mattress on the floor, a small writing table, toilet and washstand.

Former inmate Park said h e c o u l d o n l y t a k e o n e shower a week, so he used a daily ration of three bottles of warm water to wash himself. His cell had heating wires embedded in the floor to warm the room during certain times — though the cell would be cold by the time he woke up.

That would be in stark contrast to Lee’s normal life as the de facto head of the nation’s biggest conglomera­te. He has a 13,000-squarefoot house that includes three floors undergroun­d in Seoul’s Hannam district, where he’s surrounded by fellow tycoons.

The neighborho­od overlooks the Han River and includes a Samsung-sponsored museum. A nearby Grand Hyatt hotel is popular with foreign dignitarie­s.

Lee, who also is a board member of Samsung Electronic­s, hasn’t relinquish­ed any of his corporate titles. That’s not unusual in South Korea.

Hyundai Motor Group’s Chung Mong-koo, who was convicted of embezzleme­nt, is still chairman. Hanwha’s Kim was sentenced to four years in prison and fined for embezzleme­nt. SK Group’s Chey was sentenced to four years in prison for embezzling corporate funds, and in 2015 he oversaw a corporate merger from behind bars.

Lee has been groomed his entire life to take over Samsung, which was founded by his grandfathe­r and transforme­d into a national powerhouse by his father, Lee Kun-hee. The conglomera­te includes electronic­s, shipbuildi­ng and insurance units and has combined revenues equivalent to about one-fifth of South Korea’s gross domestic product.

Lee’s father avoided jail time despite two criminal conviction­s while leading Samsung. The elder Lee — South Korea’s richest man with an estimated fortune of $15.7 billion — remains hospitaliz­ed after suffering a crippling heart attack.

 ?? JEAN CHUNG / BLOOMBERG ?? Samsung Electronic­s Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee (right) arrives at the Special Prosecutor’s Office in Seoul, South Korea, on Feb. 18.
JEAN CHUNG / BLOOMBERG Samsung Electronic­s Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee (right) arrives at the Special Prosecutor’s Office in Seoul, South Korea, on Feb. 18.

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