효성그룹의 탈세 의혹 등을 수사 중인 검찰이 지난 금요일 확보한 압수물을 분석하며 증거물 확보에 주력하고 있다.
사건 담당인 서울중앙지검 특수2부(윤대진 부장검사)는 12일 오후 수사팀 전원이 출근하였으면 다음주 월요일부터 회사 관계자를 불러 조사 할 것이라고 전했다.
한편, 검찰은 국세청 조사 당시 출국금지됐던 조석래 회장과 이상운(61) 부회장, 조 회장의 개인재산 관리인 고모(54) 상무를 비롯해 조 회장의 세 아들 현준(45)•현문(44)•현상(42)씨와 비리 연루 임원 수명을 함께 출국금지 한 것으로 알려졌다.
<관련 영문기사>
Prosecution likely to summon Hyosung executives on Monday
The prosecution is likely begin summoning Hyosung Group executives on Monday in a widening probe into the country’s 26th largest conglomerate and its owner family suspected of evading taxes and embezzlement.
Investigators on Saturday analyzed documents they seized in a raid to the group’s head office and its chairman’s residence a day earlier, according to sources.
They have confiscated computer hard drives and documents, including accounting records, from the group’s head office in Seoul, to secure evidence of their wrongdoing, they said.
Hyosung chairman Cho Suck-rai and the group’s senior executives are suspected of fabricating accounting records to dodge tax and amass slush funds overseas.
Residences of the chairman’s three sons have also been raided, according to prosecutors at Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office.
The prosecution has imposed an oversea travel ban on Cho as well as all his three sons a while ago during the tax’s agency’s separate inspection into the group and the family. The chairman’s key aides, including the group’s vice chairman Lee Sang-woon, have als o been banned from leaving the country.
On Friday afternoon, Hyosung denied accounting fraud, saying the group had simply been making up financial losses suffered during 1997 financial crisis.
The raid came days after the National Tax Service had filed charges against chairman Cho and other senior executives with the prosecution for allegedly evading tens of billions won worth of tax through illegal business activities.
Since May, the tax office has been conducting an inspection into the country’s 26th-largest conglomerate and accused the group of dodging corporate tax worth 1 trillion won since 1997 by manipulating accounting records.
The 79-year-old chairman is also suspected of keeping shares under borrowed names to evade taxes worth more than 100 billion, the agency said.
The group is also suspected of gaining illegal profit by trading shares in the local stock market with a secret fund raised by the offshore paper companies.
The family-owned conglomerate operates businesses centering on energy and heavy industry and has more than 11 trillion won in assets. The Cho family is connected with former President Lee Myung-bak through a marriage between the chairman’s nephew and Lee’s daughter.
Cho’s eldest and youngest sons are reportedly locking horns to take a control over the group. They have been competing with each other to secure stakes in the group’s flagship Hyosung Corp., a textile and heavy machinery maker, according to sources.
By Cho Chung-un
(christory@heraldcorp.com)