Millennium Post

South Korea court rejects arrest warrant for Samsung heir

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SEOUL: A South Korean court on Thursday refused to authorise the arrest of the heir to the Samsung business empire, in a setback to prosecutor­s probing a corruption scandal engulfing President Park Geun-hye.

Officials on Monday sought the arrest of Lee Jae-yong on charges of bribery, embezzleme­nt and perjury, sending shock waves through the group, which is a major part of the South Korean economy and includes the world’s largest smartphone maker. It is already reeling from the debacle over the recall of its flagship Galaxy Note 7 device and reports have suggested it could face sanctions from overseas authoritie­s if Lee is punished.

Lee, who became Samsung’s de facto head after his father suffered a heart attack in 2014, is accused of bribing Choi Soon-sil, Park’s secret confidante at the centre of the scandal, and receiving policy favours from Park in return.

But the court rejected the request on grounds of insufficie­nt evidence, which could mar investigat­ors’ plan to question Park – impeached by parliament last month – on charges of bribery. A spokesman for the prosecutio­n team described the decision as “very regrettabl­e” but said they will “carry on with our probe without wavering”. Analysts questioned the decision. Kim Nam-geun, a Seoul lawyer and a political commentato­r, accused the court of being soft on Samsung because of media pressure and the potential wider economic impact of Lee’s arrest.

“A court usually approves arrest warrants over bribery cases involving such an enormous amount of money and circumstan­tial evidence,” Kim said.

Samsung is South Korea’s largest business group and its revenue is equivalent to about a fifth of the country’s GDP. As well as the investigat­ion of Park, the decision could weaken prosecutor­s’ probes into the heads of other conglomera­tes implicated in the scandal, said Choi Chang-ryol, a professor of politics at Yongin University.

“It would be far easier for prosecutor­s to quiz Lee if they have him under detention, and eventually build a bribery case against Park as well,” he said.

Lee, 48, was seen early on Thursday leaving a detention centre where he had awaited the decision for the previous 18 hours, following a hearing by the court.

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