Daily Corruption News 17 February 2017
Today's Top Story
South Korea: Samsung’s leader has been arrested on corruption charges
Quartz
Seoul Central District Court approved the arrest warrant for Jay Y. Lee, de facto leader of the Samsung empire. Lee was subsequently taken into custody and placed in a city detention center. Prosecutors are charging Lee with bribery and embezzlement tied to a corruption scandal involving president Park Geun-hye.
Quartz
Seoul Central District Court approved the arrest warrant for Jay Y. Lee, de facto leader of the Samsung empire. Lee was subsequently taken into custody and placed in a city detention center. Prosecutors are charging Lee with bribery and embezzlement tied to a corruption scandal involving president Park Geun-hye.
More News
Global: Can cricket be saved from itself? How the ICC is flirting with essential reform
The Guardian (TI mention)
The Guardian (TI mention)
USA: Ex-Palm Springs mayor and 2 developers charged with corruption involving $375,000 in bribes
LA Times
LA Times
Opinion
Daily Corruption News 16 February 2017
Today's Top Story
USA: Deutsche Bank examined Donald Trump's account for Russia links
The Guardian
Deutsche Bank is Trump’s largest lender. While the troubled bank has settled several of the charges against it, it’s still undergoing scrutiny by the Justice Department and other federal regulators, and is being overseen by six independent monitors, making conflicts of interest inescapable.
The Guardian
Deutsche Bank is Trump’s largest lender. While the troubled bank has settled several of the charges against it, it’s still undergoing scrutiny by the Justice Department and other federal regulators, and is being overseen by six independent monitors, making conflicts of interest inescapable.
More News
Austria: Austria's defence ministry to sue Airbus over alleged corruption and bribery
The Independent
The Independent
USA: Donald Trump faces more conflict of interest questions after China trademark win
The Independent
The Independent
Daily Corruption News 15 February 2017
Today's Top Story
USA: Trump signs bill killing SEC rule on foreign payments
Politico
President Donald Trump signed the first in a series of congressional regulatory rollback bills, revoking an Obama-era regulation that required oil and mining companies to disclose their payments to foreign governments.
Politico
President Donald Trump signed the first in a series of congressional regulatory rollback bills, revoking an Obama-era regulation that required oil and mining companies to disclose their payments to foreign governments.
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