Lee, the only son of Samsung's chairman, did not speak to a crowd of reporters when he arrived and left the Seoul Central District Court today. After a four-hour hearing he was taken to a detention center near Seoul to await the court's decision.
If Lee's arrest is approved, prosecutors can detain him for up to 21 days before formally charging him, court spokesman Shin Jae-hwan said. He said the judge will announce a decision on the arrest warrant early tomorrow morning, though the exact timing was unclear.
Samsung Electronics had a challenging year even before getting drawn into an influence-peddling scandal that led to the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye. In 2016, Samsung Electronics had several product recalls, including the discontinuation of Galaxy Note 7 smartphones that tended to overheat or catch fire.
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Lee, 48, faces allegations of giving bribes worth 43 billion won (USD 36 million) to Choi and the president in hopes of winning government backing for a contentious Samsung merger in 2015.
Prosecutors also suspect Lee of embezzling Samsung corporate funds and of lying under oath during a parliamentary hearing last month.
Lee has been serving as the de facto head of Samsung since his father suffered a heart attack in 2014. Educated in South Korea, Japan and the United States, he is the crown prince of the country's richest family, one South Koreans often liken to royalty.