Samsung's Leader Is Out of Jail, Allowing US Factory Plans To Move Forward (arstechnica.com) 14
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Samsung Group's leader, Jay Y. Lee, is out of jail on parole today. Lee was serving a 30-month sentence for his role in "Choi-gate," a major 2016 South Korean political scandal that brought down South Korean then-President Park Geun-hye. In 2017, Lee was originally sentenced to five years in jail after being found guilty of bribery, embezzlement, capital flight, and perjury. An appeal and retrial cut Lee's five-year prison sentence down to 30 months after suspending the charges for bribery and embezzlement. Lee served 18 months of that sentence, and now he's out on parole.
Upon his release, Lee told reporters, "I've caused much concern for the people. I deeply apologize. I am listening to the concerns, criticisms, worries, and high expectations for me. I will work hard." Lee's release from prison is controversial. The pro-business side of South Korean politics wants to see Lee back on the streets because Samsung is a massive part of South Korea's economy, and jailing the leader has delayed major strategic decisions at the company. Civic groups say South Korea's business elite get a different set of rules from everyone else and that Lee's parole is the latest sign of that reality.
Samsung makes up anywhere from 10-20 percent of South Korea's GDP, depending on how the latest quarter is going. As the top dog at Samsung, Lee has the final say on major investments and acquisitions, and one of the big decisions he needs to make is where to build a $17 billion chip factory in the US. The plant could be operational as soon as October 2022, and with the world currently in the middle of a global chip shortage, there's pressure to get everything started. US businesses have even been lobbying South Korea to pardon Lee in the hopes that the deal would go through. Lee reportedly left prison to head to Samsung headquarters, but he still has more legal issues to deal with. In October, he will face another trial relating to the Samsung C&T merger, this time for accounting fraud and stock price manipulation.
Upon his release, Lee told reporters, "I've caused much concern for the people. I deeply apologize. I am listening to the concerns, criticisms, worries, and high expectations for me. I will work hard." Lee's release from prison is controversial. The pro-business side of South Korean politics wants to see Lee back on the streets because Samsung is a massive part of South Korea's economy, and jailing the leader has delayed major strategic decisions at the company. Civic groups say South Korea's business elite get a different set of rules from everyone else and that Lee's parole is the latest sign of that reality.
Samsung makes up anywhere from 10-20 percent of South Korea's GDP, depending on how the latest quarter is going. As the top dog at Samsung, Lee has the final say on major investments and acquisitions, and one of the big decisions he needs to make is where to build a $17 billion chip factory in the US. The plant could be operational as soon as October 2022, and with the world currently in the middle of a global chip shortage, there's pressure to get everything started. US businesses have even been lobbying South Korea to pardon Lee in the hopes that the deal would go through. Lee reportedly left prison to head to Samsung headquarters, but he still has more legal issues to deal with. In October, he will face another trial relating to the Samsung C&T merger, this time for accounting fraud and stock price manipulation.
Eh, what? (Score:5, Funny)
If regular folks like us can work remotely from home, surely he can work remotely from prison.
What a load. (Score:2)
Nothing was stopping Samsung from moving forward except the executives. What they did is pressure the government to let their corruption slide or they would sabotage the company and it worked.
Re: (Score:2)
Why was a convicted felon retained as head of the company? Why didn't the shareholders replace him?
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Exactly. Its not like the Samsung heir is going to physical build the factories, one brick at a time and noone else in the world can do it.
It's just trying to put pressure on the government to get him out.
Too big to fail? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
More importantly, the negative connotation of "To Big To Fail" is a very American thing. Companies are expected to stand on their own, and compete against others; conglomerate monopolies are "bad". That is
Let's (Score:2)
get him out of jail to build the factory, then throw him back in the slammer.
Work with criminals? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Ask yourself why Mr. Gates just lied to Anderson Cooper about his relationship with Mr. Epstein. Even though the facts are all verifiable.
Criminals should work! (Score:2)
UNLESS their crime relates to their job; such as bribery, fraud, or embezzlement should bar a person from management for a significant if not for their life. Samsung is seriously fucked up and South Korea if they can't replace management convicted of such crimes. There are plenty of sociopaths that would kill for a promotion and some good leaders all working their way up to leadership positions.
Epstein's social networking and attempted bribery schemes do not convict everybody he was trying to influence ev
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Work? (Score:2)
Won't he travel in a box to Lebanon, like CEOs of Asian companies like to do ?