South Korea's top court to rule on Samsung heir's
bribery case on August 29
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[August 22, 2019] By
Hyunjoo Jin and Heekyong Yang
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's Supreme Court is to rule next Thursday
on whether to uphold a reduced sentence given to Samsung Group heir Jay
Y. Lee or ask an appeals court to revisit a case that was part of a
graft scandal that brought down the president in 2017.
The ruling will be a test of South Korea's pledge to reform dominant
conglomerates criticised for cozy relationship with political leaders,
at a time when the Asia's fourth-biggest economy is facing a series of
headwinds.
The 51-year old Lee was convicted of bribing Choi Soon-sil, a close
friend of former President Park Geun-hye.
Prosecutors have alleged that he paid bribes to help secure control of
Samsung Group, South Korea's top conglomerate that owns Samsung
Electronics <005930.KS>, the world’s leading smartphone and chip maker.
He denied the charges.
He received a five-year jail term in 2017, but was released in 2018
after an appeals court reduced his punishment to a suspended prison
sentence on charges of bribery, embezzlement and other convictions.
Both Lee and state prosecutors appealed to the Supreme Court, leaving
the top court with the options of either upholding the appeals court's
ruling or asking it to reconsider its judgment, legal experts say.
Samsung declined to comment.
The Supreme Court is also set to rule on appeals court decisions in the
cases against Park and Choi.
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Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman, Jay Y. Lee, arrives at a court in
Seoul, South Korea, October 12, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Park, who was impeached following the scandal, received a jail sentence of 25
years, while Choi was jailed for 20 years. They were both fined of 20 billion
won ($16.53 million).
Park Sang-in, an economics professor at Seoul National University, said a trade
rift between South Korea and Japan could put pressure on the court to be lenient
with Lee, considering Samsung's role in the economy, but that could undermine
South Korea's image in financial markets.
Japan last month tightened controls on exports to South Korea of high-tech
materials used to make chips - the bread-and-butter business of Samsung
Electronics.
Samsung's biotech affiliate, Samsung BioLogics <207940.KS>, is also under
investigation from prosecutors over a suspected accounting fraud, with some
executives arrested for their alleged roles in the case.
(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin and Heekyong Yang; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore,
Robert Birsel)
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