blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 

SKorea prosecutors indict Daewoo founder again
Posted: 09 July 2008 1809 hrs

  Former chairman of South Korea's now-defunct Daewoo Group Kim Woo-Choong
 
Photos  of

   
 


SEOUL: The founder of South Korea's now-defunct Daewoo group was charged on Wednesday with hiding assets, six months after being pardoned over his role in one of the world's largest corporate failures.

The Supreme Prosecutors' Office said Kim Woo-Choong would stand trial for hiding assets worth 115 billion won (US$114 million) to avoid their forfeiture under a court order. He has not been detained.

Senior prosecutor Chae Jae-Kyong told reporters that Kim was accused of using borrowed names to conceal shares in local firms.

Daewoo had debts of US$82 billion when it went under in 1999 in the wake of the Asian financial crisis. The government was forced to spend some 30 trillion won to rescue its subsidiaries.

Kim fled the country but returned after six years.

In November 2006 he was given an eight-and-a-half year jail sentence for embezzlement and accounting fraud. He was also ordered to forfeit 17.9 trillion won (now US$17.8 billion) and pay 10 million won in fines.

Kim was found guilty of masterminding an accounting fraud involving 20 trillion won and obtaining 9.8 trillion won in illegal loans from banks, as well as smuggling funds overseas.

In December 2006 the jail sentence was suspended on grounds of ill health and Kim, 71, was pardoned last December in a presidential amnesty.

Before the financial crisis exposed its weaknesses, Daewoo was exporting goods worth US$17.6 billion a year - 13.3 per cent of South Korea's total exports -and employed 250,000 people worldwide.

Chae said prosecutors were still investigating whether the former tycoon had used his assets for illegal lobbying.

Jo Pung-Eon, a US-based lobbyist, was arrested last month for using US$24.3 million in company funds embezzled by Kim to acquire a major stake in one of the group's former subsidiaries.

Prosecutors said the lobbyist had been questioned over allegations that he tried to bribe government officials back in the 1990s in an attempt to rescue the group from bankruptcy.

- AFP/os

 


Other business News
Eurozone sets conditions for Greek bailout
Banks agree US$25b deal for US homeowners
Flights back to normal Friday after strike: Air France
US stocks gain on Greece, bank mortgage deal
Euro edges up as Greece inks reform deal
Oil prices rise on Greek deal
Eurozone stalls Greek cash aid pending new conditions
China says January exports expected to have dropped
Greece says agreement reached on austerity measures: ECB
ECB holds key interest rate steady at 1.0%
OPEC cuts 2012 oil demand forecast
China's January inflation hits 3-month high
Spain's economy to worsen in Q1
Indonesia cuts interest rate to record low
Malaysia sees record trade in 2011
Rio Tinto earnings down 59% on aluminium write-down
Asia stocks mixed on Greek fears, China inflation
China's Alibaba raising US$3b for Yahoo! stake
S. Korea freezes key rate for 8th straight month
China inflation rises to 4.5% in January
Greek coalition talks end without full agreement

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions