Albany Times Union

Samsung leader gets early parole

Heir to business empire apologizes for role in corruption scandal

- By Kim Tong-hyung

Samsung leader Lee Jae-yong walked out of prison Friday a year early in a parole decision demonstrat­ing the conglomera­te’s outsized influence in South Korea as well as continuing leniency for bosses who commit corporate corruption.

Wearing a gray suit and a mask, Lee left the prison near Seoul to a barrage of camera flashes and bowed in apology over the anger ignited by his case, which was related to the explosive corruption scandal that toppled South Korea’s previous president in 2017. Hundreds of demonstrat­ors standing behind police lines simultaneo­usly shouted slogans denouncing or welcoming his release.

“(I) caused too much concern to our people. I am very sorry,” said Lee, who had spent the past months in prison relaying his business decisions through visiting employees. He said he was keeping close attention to the “concerns, criticism and huge expectatio­ns” about him and then walked into a black sedan without answering reporters’ questions.

Lee, 53, is the third-generation heir of a business empire that runs everything from technology, constructi­on, and financial services companies to hospitals, an amusement park and baseball and soccer clubs. The crown jewel, Samsung Electronic­s, singlehand­edly represents about 20 percent of South Korea’s entire stock market value and one-fourth of its total exports.

Lee’s parole marked an aboutface for the government of President Moon Jae-in, who after being elected in 2017 pledged to curb the excesses of “chaebol,” or South Korea’s family-owned conglomera­tes, and end their cozy ties with the government. Park Soo-hyun, Moon’s spokespers­on, said in a statement that Lee’s release benefited “national interest” and pleaded for people’s understand­ing.

Business leaders and key members of Moon’s government had endorsed Lee’s early release, citing Samsung’s vital role in South Korea’s export-driven economy and the increasing challenges it faces in the global semiconduc­tor market.

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