Investing
South Korea prosecutors seek jail for Samsung boss on fraud, stock manipulation charges
© Reuters. Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee arrives at a court in Seoul, South Korea, October 26, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo
By Joyce Lee
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korean prosecutors sought on Friday a five-year jail term for the boss of Samsung Electronics (KS:) Jay Y. Lee over charges of accounting fraud and stock price manipulation involving an $8 billion merger of Samsung affiliates in 2015.
Lee has denied any wrongdoing. The hearing is the final lower court session before a ruling, which is expected within months, ending a trial that has lasted three years.
The case is the last against Lee, who was pardoned for an earlier, separate conviction and cemented last year his leadership position of Samsung as executive chairman.
During Friday’s hearing, prosecutors told the Seoul Central District Court that Lee, 55, and other former executives had violated the Capital Markets Act to make possible the 2015 merger that helped Lee assume greater control of the group’s flagship Samsung Electronics.
Prosecutors allege the executives’ involvement in the merger of group affiliates Samsung C&T and Cheil Industries included stock price manipulation and other wrongdoings that helped them gain at the expense of minority investors.
“The defendants undermined the foundation of the capital market to ease the leader’s succession,” the prosecution said.
“They abused the authority granted by the company and shareholders for the private interests of the group leader and abused extreme imbalance of information.”
Lee and the executives have denied wrongdoing, saying the merger and accounting processes that prosecutors have taken issue with were part of normal management activities. The defendants’ final arguments will be heard later on Friday.
Lee attended the hearing on Friday. A small group of supporters chanted his name outside the court during a recess, while detractors yelled angrily at him.
Analysts said depending on the verdict, Lee will find it easier or more difficult to shape the future of Samsung Electronics and its affiliates. An acquittal would give him more room to pursue major strategic decisions, particularly in mergers and acquisitions.
Lee was earlier convicted of bribing former South Korean President Park Geun-hye and went to jail for a total of 18 months from 2017 to 2021. He was subsequently paroled in 2021 and pardoned in 2022.
Read the full article here
-
Passive Income6 days ago
Are You Running Your Business, or Is Your Business Running You?
-
Side Hustles6 days ago
How Your Body Language Can Help Win a Disagreement
-
Side Hustles5 days ago
How to Be Unapologetically You and Why It Matters
-
Investing6 days ago
7 Marketing Strategies to Help Your Startup Grow and Scale
-
Side Hustles6 days ago
OpenAI Raises Record $6.6 Billion, Adds 50 Million New Users
-
Side Hustles4 days ago
Mark Zuckerberg Is Now Second Richest Person in the World
-
Investing4 days ago
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang: Demand For Blackwell AI Is Insane
-
Passive Income5 days ago
How AI-Driven Personalization Is Transforming the Retail Industry