SKorea prosecutors seek 12-year jail term for Samsung heir
-- Prosecution says Lee bribes aimed at cementing control of group
-- Lee has been pushing responsibility to others, prosecutor says
-- Prosecution's logic a "fictional construct", defence says
-- Lower court expected to rule by Aug 27
South Korean prosecutors today sought a 12-year jail term for Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee, over charges that include allegedly bribing the former president for government support to help Lee cement control of the group.
Lee, the de facto leader of one of Asia's largest conglomerates, has been in detention since February, on trial for charges ranging from embezzlement to perjury, in a scandal that led to the ouster of former president Park Geun-hye.
"Even though Lee is the ultimate receiver of the gains (from this bribery case), he has been pushing the responsibility to others accused," one of the team of special prosecutors told the court.
The court ruling is expected before Aug. 27, when Lee's current period of detention ends. Other charges he faces include wrongfully transferring assets overseas and hiding the proceeds of a crime.
The defence reiterated his denial of wrongdoing, questioning whether the prosecution was relying on public sentiment to secure a prison term for Lee, 49, whose father, the group patriarch Lee Kun-hee, was hospitalised in 2014.
The prosecution has said Samsung's intent behind supporting funds backed by Park, and sponsorsing the equestrian career of the daughter of her confidante, was to get government support for efforts to cement Lee's control of the smartphones-to-biopharmaceuticals business empire.
However, Lee's lawyers argued that his so-called overarching intention of cementing ownership control was "a fictional construct" made up by prosecutors, with moves such as the merger of two Samsung affiliates in 2015 aimed at ensuring survival and growth of individual companies.
In Lee's absence, Samsung Electronics reported record quarterly earnings in late July.
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