Samsung’s Lee leaves S.Korea prosecution office after questioning

13 January, 2017 | Uncategorized
Samsung Electronics vice chairman Jay Y. Lee is surrounded by media as he leaves the office of the independent counsel in Seoul, South Korea, January 13, 2017. (Photo: Kim Do-hoon/Yonhap via Reuters)

SEOUL – Samsung Group leader Jay Y. Lee has left the South Korean special prosecutor’s office, more than 22 hours after arriving for questioning on bribery suspicions in an influence-peddling scandal that could topple President Park Geun-hye.

Broadcaster YTN showed Lee leaving the special prosecution office without answering reporters’ questions, then heading to a waiting car.

Prosecutors have been investigating whether Samsung provided 30 billion won ($A34 million) to a business and foundations backed by Park’s friend, Choi Soon-sil, in exchange for the national pension fund’s support for a 2015 merger of two Samsung affiliates.

Yonhap News Agency said the special prosecutor was still considering whether to seek a warrant to arrest the 48-year-old Lee, the third-generation leader of South Korea’s largest conglomerate, or chaebol.

Yonhap cited the special prosecution office as saying Lee denied wrongdoing related to the key suspicions over which he was being questioned, and that investigators did not plan to summon him for further questioning.

An official in the special prosecutor’s office was not immediately available for comment. A Samsung spokeswoman declined to comment.

Lee was named as a suspect on Wednesday and summoned on Thursday morning for questioning.

The corruption scandal has engulfed the highest reaches of South Korea’s elite, with Park impeached by parliament in December, a decision that must be upheld or overturned by the country’s Constitutional Court.

Park, who has been stripped of her powers in the meantime, has denied wrongdoing.

Samsung has acknowledged making payments to two foundations at the centre of the scandal, as well as to a consulting firm controlled by Choi, but has repeatedly denied accusations of lobbying to push through the controversial 2015 merger of affiliates Samsung C&T Corp and Cheil Industries Inc.

 

– Reuters