Former Nortel Execs Await Corporate Fraud Ruling
An anonymous reader writes "Three former Nortel executives accused of orchestrating a widespread multimillion-dollar fraud will learn their fate in Toronto on Monday, nearly a year after one of the largest criminal trials in Canada's corporate history began. Ontario Superior Court Justice Frank Marrocco is set to rule on whether ex-CEO Frank Dunn, ex-CFO Douglas Beatty and ex-controller Michael Gollogly manipulated financial statements at Nortel Networks Corp., between 2002-2003. The men, who each face two counts of fraud, are accused of participating in a book-cooking scheme designed to trigger $12.8 million in bonuses and stocks for themselves at the once powerful Canadian technology giant."
One of the execs got rid of ALL of their stock two days before it tanked.
Now, if your daughter is going to start at an Ivy League school and you need a few hundred grand, that may just be co-incidence.
But I don't think that happened.
If they'd sold 20% of their stock, then it would not be more than mildly suspicious.
But when the market is rising, who sells ALL their stock?
Nobody.
And if that is two days before the stock tanks?
It's rather like complaining "they could have died of a heart attack at the same time, so you can't label the 'shooting a gun at them' as anything more than suspicious".
They would not pay the staff bonuses, that would be bad for shareholders, but the bosses get their bonus, and jail time, I hope.
There was an unknown error in the submission.
They should go to jail... but...
I used to know some people in this sort of situation. They business wasn't nearly as big, but they'd run into some financial trouble and if earnings were bellow some arbitrary number, it would trigger a wave of financial ruin on the company. In the case that I was parifrialy aware of (I had a family member working there) They were getting free water, sewer, etc from the city as long as their revenue was X amount. They were short by less than a tenth of a percent. There were also loans who's interest rates would go up. The end result was, if they published the numbers they had, the company was going down. I knew a lot of the people involved and they were very torn up about the whole thing. There were around 1000 people that would lose their jobs, the entire thing would be a mess. So they lied. The company went on to make it out of their financial troubles.
I don't agree with what happened. But there's a lot more to these stories than stock options and greed. Not a single person I knew in that situation was talking about any of that. They were talking about a single earnings number destroying their business and the welfare of the people that worked for them. The moral of my story isn't that you should do this sort of thing... it's that the motives of the people behind this stuff aren't always sharks trying to score money. Some of them really care about their business and the people working there. I don't know if that's the case here, but food for thought or something.