A 4SquareMedia Website
SmartHouse | SmartOffice | DigitalHome     
 
 
     THE LIFESTYLE TECHNOLOGY GUIDE    
 
sections
Product Reviews
Services
Subscribe
Top 10 Articles
1. Blu-Ray Dead In 5 Years Says Samsung
2. Samsung Notebook Lighter Than MacBook Air
3. Xbox Prices Slashed By 40%
4. Apple To Unveil New iPod Next Week
5. Google To Launch Web Browser OS Being Considered
6. OZ CE Sales Booming Say GFK
7. iPhones Make 1 In 200 Web Searches
8. Toy-Like Walkman Phone Quite The Performer
9. New Clipsal C-Bus Program For Control Systems
10. Pioneer Set To Transform Itself With New Brand Campaign
 
 

HOME OFFICE / MEMORY

  Samsung Execs Jailed Over CE Price Fixing

By David Richards | Sunday | 26/03/2006

The US Government has netted over a billion dollars in fines and jailed 3 Samsung exectives following an investigation onto CE DRAM Memory price fixing.

Three Samsung Electronics executives have agreed to plead guilty and to serve jail time in the U.S. in conjunction with an alleged global conspiracy to fix DRAM prices, the US Justice Department has confirmed. They will also have to pay a fine of $352,000. The Memoy was being used in CE products such as iPods, MP3 players Phones and Digital Camera's

The three Samsung executives have each agreed to serve up to eight months in jail each and each pay the $352,000 fine.

The executives—Sun Woo Lee, senior manager of DRAM sales; Yeongho Kang, associate director of DRAM marketing for Samsung's U.S. subsidiary; and Young Woo Lee, sales director for Samsung's German subsidiary—also agreed to cooperate in the DoJ's ongoing investigation of the DRAM industry. The executives have agreed not to contest U.S. jurisdiction, meaning extradition will not be required, DOJ said. The U.S. has for two years been investigating alleged price fixing among DRAM manufacturers between 1999 and 2003. Four companies and 12 individuals have so far been charged, resulting in fines totaling more than $731 million. Samsung pled guilty to federal price-fixing charges, agreeing to pay a $300 million fine, last October.

Three other companies have also pled guilty to price-fixing charges and agreed to pay large fines. South Korea's Hynix Semiconductor Inc. pleaded guilty in April 2005 and agreed to a $220 million fine.

Germany's Infineon Technologies AG agreed in September 2004 to pay a $160 million fine. Four Infineon executives served jail terms ranging from four to six months and each paid a $250,000 fine after pleading guilty to involvement in the price-fixing conspiracy. In January, Japanese manufacturer Elpida Memory. agreed to plead guilty and pay an $84 million fine.

Earlier this month, four Hynix executives agreed to serve jail terms of five to eight months and pay $352,000 each in connection with the probe.

A Micron Technology Inc. executive pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice in connection with the probe in December 2003. That executive resigned, and Micron has said it is cooperating with the investigation.

The three Samsung executives entered guilty pleas to conspiring with unnamed employees from other memory makers to fix the prices of DRAM at various times from April 1, 1999 to June 15, 2002. According to the Justice Department, the conspiracy directly affected sales to U.S. computer makers Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Compaq Computer, IBM, Apple Computer Inc. and Gateway Inc.

"These are the first executives from Samsung to plead guilty to fixing prices in what is still an active investigation into antitrust violations in the DRAM industry," Thomas Barnett, assistant attorney general in charge of the DOJ's antitrust division, said in a statement. "We will continue our efforts to bring to justice other domestic and foreign-based executives who were involved with fixing DRAM prices."

According to the department, the $1.029 billio  in fines is the second largest amount of ever collected by the department from a single price-fixing conspiracy. In 1999, the DOJ levied fines of $900 million against two companies in connection with a vitamin industry price-fixing investigation.

 

Print this article
Email this story to a friend
Link this story:

Link this page to delicious Link this page to Digg Link this page to Furlit Link this page to News Vine Link this page to Reddit Link this page to Spurl Link this page to Yahoo My Web RSS this section

 

 
LATEST REVIEWS
MORE
Toy-Like Walkman Phone Quite The Performer
If you are the type of person who judges a book by its cover, then...
DVD Review: Control (2007)
Ian Curtis was a tortured soul, whose legacy arguably surpassed his ability, but is important...
Samsung Olympic Phone Fails To Capture Gold
The new Samsung slider phone may not look as attractive as its LG counterpart (Secret...




SMARTHOUSE NEWSLETTER

Get the latest news
Subscribe today for your daily news of consumer electronic news...




 
SMARTHOUSE 2008 | Legal | Disclaimer | Terms & Conditions

Copyright 2006 Smarthouse Magazine Online