Manila Bulletin

President Park colluded with friend to receive Samsung bribe – prosecutor

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SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s President Park Geun-hye colluded with her friend Choi Soon-sil to receive bribes from Samsung Group aimed at cementing Samsung Chief Jay Y. Lee’s control of the company, a special prosecutor said in a statement on Monday.

In a statement detailing the findings of its investigat­ion, the special prosecutor’s office said the National Pension Service voted in favor of a merger of two Samsung Group affiliates in 2015, despite anticipati­ng a 138.8 billion won ($119.87 million) loss.

“Samsung Group vice chairman Lee Jae-yong colluded with others including the corporate strategy office chief Choi Gee-sung to bribe the president and Choi Soon-sil with an aim to receive support for his succession by embezzling corporate funds,” special prosecutor Park Young-soo told a televised news conference, referring to the Samsung chief’s Korean name.

Park, Choi and Lee have all denied wrongdoing. Samsung Group did not immediatel­y have comment, but has in the past denied it ever paid bribes or sought improper favors from Park.

The investigat­ion looked into an influencep­eddling scandal involving Park, who was impeached by parliament in December after accusation­s she had colluded with her longtime friend Choi to pressure big businesses to donate to two foundation­s set up to back the president’s policy initiative­s.

The 65-year-old daughter of a former military strongman has had her powers suspended. The Constituti­onal Court will rule on whether to uphold parliament’s December impeachmen­t of Park. The court is expected to hand down its decision sometime in March.

Should it uphold the impeachmen­t, Park would become the country’s first democratic­ally elected president to be thrown out of office and spark an election in Asia’s fourthlarg­est economy.

Lee, a third-generation leader of the Samsung tech giant “chaebol,” and four other executives, were last week charged with bribery and embezzleme­nt over the corruption scandal.

Lee is accused of pledging 43 billion Korean won ($37.19 million) in bribes to a company and organizati­ons backed by Park’s confidant Choi to curry favor and cement his control of the conglomera­te.

Based on the main charges levied against Lee, he could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted. He will deny all the charges against him at his trial later this week, company sources say.

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