Asia

Samsung Chairman suspected of tax evasion

Lee Kun-hee
Former Samsung Group Chairman Lee Kun-hee (C) leaves after his trial at a Seoul court in this file photo taken October 10, 2008. Photo: Reuters

South Korean police said Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Kun-hee was suspected of evading tax for 8.2 billion won ($7.5 million), and of using bank accounts held by employees that held 400 billion won, Yonhap News Agency said on Thursday.

Police have been investigating alleged misappropriation of company funds used to pay for interior renovations of residences of his and his family's.

A series of scandals have dogged the family of Samsung, the country's biggest business empire. The chairman's son Jay Y. Lee, heir to the group, was released from a prison earlier this week after an appeals court halved his sentence for bribery and corruption to 2-1/2 years and suspended it for four years.

The elder Lee has been hospitalized since suffering a heart attack in 2014.

Samsung declined comment and police were not immediately available for comment.

In 2009, Lee was convicted and later pardoned for tax evasion after being embroiled in a scandal that he was using so called "borrowed named" accounts held by trusted employees.

Yonhap said police had found evidence of fresh bank accounts held by employees that Lee had used.

($1 = 1,087.3000 won) ($1 = 1,088.2000 won)

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Samsung Chairman suspected of tax evasion

Lee Kun-hee
Former Samsung Group Chairman Lee Kun-hee (C) leaves after his trial at a Seoul court in this file photo taken October 10, 2008. Photo: Reuters

South Korean police said Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Kun-hee was suspected of evading tax for 8.2 billion won ($7.5 million), and of using bank accounts held by employees that held 400 billion won, Yonhap News Agency said on Thursday.

Police have been investigating alleged misappropriation of company funds used to pay for interior renovations of residences of his and his family's.

A series of scandals have dogged the family of Samsung, the country's biggest business empire. The chairman's son Jay Y. Lee, heir to the group, was released from a prison earlier this week after an appeals court halved his sentence for bribery and corruption to 2-1/2 years and suspended it for four years.

The elder Lee has been hospitalized since suffering a heart attack in 2014.

Samsung declined comment and police were not immediately available for comment.

In 2009, Lee was convicted and later pardoned for tax evasion after being embroiled in a scandal that he was using so called "borrowed named" accounts held by trusted employees.

Yonhap said police had found evidence of fresh bank accounts held by employees that Lee had used.

($1 = 1,087.3000 won) ($1 = 1,088.2000 won)

Comments