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"I think it's a good decision for him to come back to the business because he is the leader of that business and he has been the person to pull Samsung up (to where it is) today," Park Yongmann, chairman and CEO of Doosan Corp., South Korea's oldest conglomerate with a history going back to 1896, told The Associated Press. "Samsung is a global company and it certainly has to have management stability." But questions about Samsung's corporate governance and its influence in South Korean society due to its size have long cast a shadow over its success. "I think it's a very pivotal point in Samsung's history right now," said Kim Joongi, a professor at Yonsei Law School in Seoul. "I think they really have to transform themselves to demonstrate to the markets that they've really turned a corner in terms of transparency, accountability and integrity," Kim said. "Because there is a considerable question mark as to whether they've been able to really reinvent themselves after this very embarrassing episode." Lee is just the most recent of a number of influential captains of industry to be pardoned. Hyundai Motor Co. Chairman Chung Mong-koo received one in 2008 after a conviction for embezzlement. Two other prominent business leaders received similar amnesties at the same time. Critics have said judges in South Korea are too tolerant of crimes committed by heads of the largely family-controlled industrial conglomerates, known as chaebol. Investors appeared to take the news positively, pushing shares in Samsung Electronics 1.2 percent higher to close at 819,000 won. The company's stock price soared 77 percent last year.
[Associated
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