Samsung鈥檚 Lee receives 30-month prison term in bribery trial
SEOUL 鈥 A South Korean court sentenced Samsung Electronics vice chairman Jay Y. Lee to two and a half years in prison, the court said on Monday, which will have major ramifications for his leadership of the tech giant as well as Korea鈥檚 views toward big business.
With this, Mr. Lee will be sidelined from major decision making at Samsung Electronics as it strives to overtake competitors, and from overseeing the process of inheritance from his father, who died in October, crucial to keeping control of Samsung.
Mr. Lee, 52, was convicted of bribing an associate of former President Park Geun-hye and jailed for five years in 2017. He denied wrongdoing, the sentence was reduced and suspended on appeal, and he was released after serving a year.
The Supreme Court then sent the case back to the Seoul High Court, which issued Monday鈥檚 ruling.
Under South Korean law, only a jail term of three years or fewer can be suspended. For longer sentences, the person must serve out the term barring a presidential pardon. With Mr. Lee returning to jail, the year he already served in detention is expected to count toward the sentence.
Monday鈥檚 sentencing can be appealed to the Supreme Court, but because the Supreme Court has already ruled on it once, chances are lower that is legal interpretation will change, legal experts said.
鈥淚n a case sent back by the Supreme Court, there is a narrower range of options for the judges鈥 bench… but it鈥檚 also true that the Supreme Court can鈥檛 really touch the final court鈥檚 sentencing,鈥 said Rha Seung-chul, a lawyer not connected with the case. 鈥 Reuters


