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Samsung Heir Freed From Prison After Court Reduces Sentence

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HONG KONG — Lee Jae-yong, heir to South Korea’s Samsung corporate empire, walked out of prison on Monday after an appeals court reduced and suspended his sentence for bribery and corruption.

His release deals a blow to prosecutors who had hoped Mr. Lee’s original five-year sentence would send a signal that the courts would no longer mete out only light punishments for lawbreaking corporate titans. Other senior executives at some of South Korea’s biggest companies have been accused and convicted on corruption charges over the years only to receive reduced sentences or get pardoned entirely. Many South Koreans see that kid-glove treatment as proof that major corporations hold too much sway over the country.

Mr. Lee’s case is now likely to go to the country’s Supreme Court, where prosecutors are expected to ask that the appeals court ruling be overturned, and his attorneys are likely to continue to ask that the charges against him be thrown out.

Mr. Lee — the 49-year-old de facto leader of the conglomerate and vice chairman of Samsung Electronics, the empire’s most valuable business — spent nearly a year in custody. He was arrested on charges that he paid bribes to a confidante of Park Geun-hye, then South Korea’s president, in exchange for political favors. Mr. Lee’s attorneys have said the payments were coerced.

In August, a lower court found Mr. Lee guilty of paying $6.7 million in bribes to help bankroll the equestrian career of a daughter of Choi Soon-sil, a longtime confidante of Ms. Park. It said Mr. Lee provided the bribes to win Ms. Park’s help in strengthening his control of Samsung, which he is inheriting from his father, Lee Kun-hee, Samsung’s chairman, who is in a coma. He was sentenced to five years in prison, an unusually lengthy term for a senior South Korean business leader.

But the appeals court on Monday ruled that about half of the sum cannot be seen as bribes. It also reversed several of the lower-court decisions, including the conviction of Mr. Lee on charges of violating the country’s laws limiting the use of foreign currency in connection with the payments. It reduced his sentence to two-and-a-half years and suspended it, leading to his release.

Mr. Lee, wearing a dark suit and no tie, emerged from the court with a slight smile, then was taken to the prison in Seoul, the capital, where he had been held since his arrest. He emerged shortly after as a free man.

“I want to say once again how sorry I am that I have failed to present a good image of myself,” Mr. Lee told reporters after he walked out of prison. “The past one year has been a valuable time for me to reflect upon myself. I will be more careful in the future.”

He said he was going to visit his father in the hospital.

Samsung is the largest and most powerful of South Korea’s chaebol, as the country’s giant family-run companies are known. Its businesses include smartphones, microchips, insurance and shipbuilding.

The chaebol have dominated the country’s economy for decades. Early South Korean governments gave them tax benefits, cheap electricity and protection from overseas competition. In return, the chaebol were expected to contribute to government projects. Over the years, executives at a number of chaebol have been accused of funneling money to the coffers of officials and their relatives and associates.

South Korea has often responded with light punishments for business leaders caught in corruption scandals. Many chaebol bosses convicted of crimes have been pardoned or given suspended sentences. Some have even continued to run their empires from behind bars. Mr. Lee’s father has been convicted of white-collar crimes twice — and twice he has been spared prison time.

The accusations against the younger Mr. Lee were part of one of the largest influence-peddling scandals in the country’s history, one that has already toppled Ms. Park.

Ms. Park had met with him and other chaebol leaders to ask for contributions to foundations controlled by Ms. Choi, Ms. Park’s confidante. Within months, Samsung had donated millions of dollars to the foundations and put millions more toward the training of South Korean equestrians, including Ms. Choi’s daughter.

Mr. Lee’s lawyers acknowledged the payments but argued that Ms. Park had coerced Mr. Lee into making them. The defense also argued that Samsung did not receive any favors or special treatment in return.

Mr. Lee’s year in detention does not appear to have dented Samsung Electronics’ ability to earn gangbusters profit selling smartphones, televisions, refrigerators and memory chips. With demand worldwide for powerful servers and data centers continuing to rise, investors think that Samsung’s semiconductor business, where it earns the bulk of its profit, will continue to throw off money.

Still, given Samsung’s size and long history, the scandal has divided South Korean society. Many young people are weary of the hold that the chaebol exert on public life. The sympathies of older South Koreans, who credit the chaebol for transforming their war-ravaged, agrarian nation into a global export powerhouse, tend to lie with Mr. Lee.

“The chaebol are a big part of the Korean economy,” said Kim Min-jung, a 25-year-old financial planner in Seoul. “Still, if he did something wrong that he is culpable for, he has to serve his time.”

Raymond Zhong reported from Hong Kong, and Choe Sang-Hun from Seoul, South Korea. Park Jeong-eun contributed reporting from Seoul.

Follow Raymond Zhong on Twitter: @zhonggg.

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