The former chairman of Samsung should be jailed for seven years, prosecutors
in South Korea have told local media.
Lee Kun-hee
resigned
as chairman and chief executive in April 2008 following a government
investigation into allegations of bribery and financial misdeeds.
Along with other former senior Samsung executives, Lee faces charges
including breach of trust and tax evasion.
Samsung is among the
largest
global manufacturers of hi-tech products such as memory chips, mobile phones
and LCD screens.
The group has annual revenues in excess of $150bn. First-quarter net profits
at key group member Samsung Electronics rose 37 per cent to $2.2bn.
Lee, the son of the company's founder, began running Samsung 20 years ago and
presided over a period of unprecedented growth.
When Lee was originally indicted, prosecutors declined to detain him, warning
that this could have a negative effect on the country's economy.
Samsung's Byzantine corporate structure is apparently at the centre of its
latest woes. A dizzying array of cross-holdings concentrates control in the
hands of the founding family, despite huge outside investment.
Lee himself owns only 1.9 per cent of Samsung Electronics, for example.
Problems worsened for Samsung late last year when a former legal executive
alleged that the company had used a secret $205m fund to
bribe
officials and journalists.
Prosecutors later admitted that they had found no evidence of bribery, but
the investigation drew attention to other irregularities.
Lee was convicted in the mid-1990s of giving bribes to two of South Korea's
former presidents, but received a presidential pardon and returned to run the
company.
Prosecutors have alleged that some of Samsung's financial manoeuvring was
part of a plan to pass control of Samsung to Lee's 40 year-old son Lee Jae-yong,
who has subsequently resigned from his senior position at Samsung Electronics.
Comments
Have your say on this article