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Samsung Electronics vice chairman Jay Y Lee, in jail after convictions for bribery, embezzlement and other charges, has qualified for parole and is expected to leave prison this Friday, South Korea's justice ministry said.
"The decision to grant Samsung Electronics vice chairman Jay Y Lee parole was the result of a comprehensive review of various factors such as public sentiment and good behaviour during detention," the ministry said in a statement on Monday.
Convicted of bribing a friend of former President Park Geun-hye, Lee, 53, has served 18 months of a revised 30-month sentence. He initially served one year of a five-year sentence from August 2017, which was later suspended. That court decision was then overturned and, while the sentence was shortened, he was sent back to jail in January this year.
Support for his parole, both political and public and from the wider business community, had grown amid anxiety that key strategic decisions are not being made at the South Korean tech giant.
Although the day-to-day running of the world's biggest memory chip maker and smartphone manufacturer has not been affected by his absence, company sources say decisions on major investment and M&A projects should only be made by Lee.
In particular, a decision on the location of a $17 billion US plant to produce advanced logic chips awaits his return at a time when there is a global chip shortage and rivals like TSMC and Intel Corp are making large investments.
The Federation of Korean Industries, a big business lobby, said in a statement that it welcomed the decision to grant Lee parole.
"If the investment clock, currently at standstill, is not wound up quickly, we could lag behind global companies such as Intel and TSMC and lose the Korean economy's bread and butter at a moment's notice."
Lee still needs the Justice Minister to approve his return to work as the law bars persons with certain convictions from working for companies related to those convictions for five years.
He is likely to get that, legal experts say, due to circumstances such as the amount deemed embezzled having been repaid.
Samsung Electronics declined to comment.
High support
South Korea's biggest conglomerates are still owned and controlled by their founding families and there is little precedence for handing over the reins to outsiders even when a senior family member has been jailed.
While polls showed high public support of around 70 per cent for Lee's parole, many civic groups have been opposed, accusing the administration of President Moon Jae-In of hypocrisy after it came to power on a wave of anger at corruption among South Korea's political and business elite.
"If the administration that benefited grants preferential parole for a chaebol owner, we must reconsider the very existence of the Moon Jae-in administration," said Kim Ju-ho, official at activist group People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy, using the local term for large family-owned businesses.
Lee's legal woes have not been confined to the bribery conviction. He is also on trial accused of accounting fraud and stock price manipulation connected to a 2015 merger of two Samsung companies.
A South Korean court also decided in June that he should be tried in separate case in which he has been accused of unlawfully using a sedative.
Lee has denied the accusations in both cases.
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