House committee releases report accusing South Korea of discriminatory attacks on Coupang

A U.S. House committee on Wednesday released a 35-page report accusing South Korea of discriminatory attacks on e-commerce giant Coupang Inc. and other American companies.

The House Judiciary Committee issued the interim staff report titled "Closed for Competition: South Korea's Discriminatory Attacks on American-owned Businesses." It claims South Korea has a long history of economic discrimination against foreign companies through coercive tactics and massive fines intended to shield domestic firms.

The report cites Coupang as a consistent target, noting its market capitalization has fallen more than 40 percent following investigations. Last month South Korean authorities fined the company over $410 million, described as the largest ever imposed on a single firm.

The committee said it will continue oversight of such foreign regimes. Lobbying records show Coupang spent more than $1 million in the U.S. since the data leak scandal emerged in November, affecting over 33 million users.

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Illustration depicting Coupang's $1.09 million lobbying push targeting U.S. White House, VP, and Congress amid South Korean data leak scandal.
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Coupang discloses lobbying targeting White House, VP, Congress

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U.S. lobbying reports show Coupang spent $1.09 million in the first quarter targeting the White House, Vice President, and Congress. This follows a major data leak scandal in South Korea last November. Though headquartered in Seattle and U.S.-incorporated, the company primarily operates in Korea.

E-commerce firm Coupang Inc. denied allegations that it lobbied U.S. government officials to pressure South Korea following a November data leak controversy. The company rejected claims of security-related lobbying as unfounded.

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In the latest escalation of tensions over South Korea's probe into Coupang's massive data breach, more than 80 ruling bloc lawmakers plan to send a joint letter protesting the US government's defense of the e-commerce giant, arguing it infringes on judicial sovereignty. The letter responds to recent US complaints, including demands for the safety of Coupang's chairman and a letter from over 50 Republican lawmakers.

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