The Supreme Court on Oct. 29, 2018 finalized an 18-month prison term for a former head of the now-defunct Hanjin Shipping Co. for selling off her family's stake in the firm using insider information.

Choi Eun-young, 56, was convicted in December last year of unloading the stakes held by her and her two daughters after she learned that Hanjin's creditors decided against the additional liquidity support. She avoided about 1 billion won (US$875,270) of possible losses.

The photo shows Choi Eun-young, former chairwoman of the now-defunct Hanjin Shipping Co., arriving at the Seoul High Court on May 17, 2018, to attend her appeals trial for insider trading charges.

She was imprisoned following the court verdict.

The top court also upheld a 1.2 billion-won fine and a 490 million-won forfeiture order the appeals court ruled for Choi.

In April 2016, Hanjin Shipping filed for court receivership after failing to deal with its mounting debts amid a protracted global downturn in the shipping sector. The once world's seventh-largest shipper was declared bankrupt by the court in February after its creditors rejected to let the firm proceed with its salvage plan.

Choi is the wife of the late Cho Su-ho, the younger brother of Hanjin Group Chairman Cho Yang-ho, who also runs the country's top air carrier, Korean Air Lines Co. She took over the management control of Hanjin Shipping in 2006 after her husband's death and headed the company until April 2014.

저작권자 © The Korea Post 무단전재 및 재배포 금지