The de-facto leader of South Korea's sprawling Samsung group Lee Jae-yong was convicted Tuesday of illegally using the anaesthetic drug propofol, the latest legal travail to beset the multi-billionaire.
Lee -- the vice-chairman of the world's biggest smartphone maker Samsung Electronics and according to Forbes the world's 238th richest person -- was fined 70 million won ($60,000) by the Seoul Central District Court, Yonhap news agency reported.
The sum is around 0.0006 per cent of his estimated $10.2 billion fortune.
He was found guilty of having repeatedly taken the anaesthetic at a plastic surgery clinic in Seoul over several years.
Propofol is normally a medical anaesthetic but is also sometimes used recreationally, and an overdose of the drug was given as the cause of pop star Michael Jackson's death in 2009.
Usage is normally seen as a minor offence in South Korea and prosecutors originally proposed fining him 50 million won under a summary indictment, a procedure where less serious cases do not go to court.
But the court overruled the prosecution and ordered a trial.
"The quantity injected is very high and the nature of crime committed is not light considering the social responsibility the defendant bears," said judge Jang Young-chae.
"But he has confessed to the injection and has never been convicted of this crime before."
He fined Lee 70 million won and ordered him to forfeit 17 million won in assets, urging him to "adopt exemplary behaviour that your children will not be embarrassed by".
Wearing a dark business suit and a facemask, Lee remained tight-lipped as he entered the courthouse, skipping questions from reporters.
When his trial opened earlier this month, he apologised to the court "for causing such trouble and concern due to my personal matter", but insisted the injection was "for medical purposes".
Though the financial penalty is insignificant for the 53-year-old, the propofol case has been something of a public relations embarrassment for Samsung and Lee, who has been mired in legal issues including a sprawling corruption scandal, for five years.
Two months ago, he was released early from a two and a half year prison term for bribery, embezzlement and other offences in connection with the graft case that brought down ex-South Korean president Park Geun-hye.
The early release was seen as the latest example of South Korea freeing on economic grounds business leaders imprisoned for corruption or tax evasion.