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Ex-Autonomy CFO: HP Trying To Hide Truth

jfruh (300774) writes The fallout from HP's Autonomy acquisition keeps getting more dramatic. Autonomy's ex-CFO is trying to block the settlement of lawsuits that arsoe the botched deal, claiming that HP is trying to hide its "own destruction of Autonomy's success after the acquisition." HP hit back, saying the ex-CFO "was one of the chief architects of the massive fraud on HP that precipitated this litigation."

11 of 59 comments (clear)

  1. Two things I'm certain of... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are two things I'm certain of in no particular order:

    1. HP are wildly incompetent.
    2. Autonomy management (especially Lynch) are a bunch of crooks.

    I do actually know people who have had dealings with Lynch.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
    1. Re:Two things I'm certain of... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Informative

      Don't you have to remain in the 'More Magic' quadrant if you don't want the system to crash?

  2. I miss groklaw by charlieo88 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Too bad there isn't a website like groklaw that would track these things and provide some pretty nifty analysis too.

  3. Is the CEO really trying to argue.. by timrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's a line in the IT World article that really stands out at me, which is:

    "Autonomy founder and CEO Mike Lynch, who was ousted from HP in 2012, has denied any wrongdoing, saying publicly that HP was aware of Autonomy's accounting practices..."

    So in this case, Autonomy is making the case that they were cooking their books, but committing accounting fraud is perfectly okay because HP should've known about it... or am I missing something here?

    1. Re:Is the CEO really trying to argue.. by BenJeremy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...and he's also apparently arguing that, knowing Autonomy is cooking the books, and about to implode, HP thought it would be a great idea to buy them.

      Whatever one can say about the competence of HP's board, nobody could seriously claim they'd buy a company if they knew that was going on.

  4. probably not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a line in the IT World article that really stands out at me, which is:

    "Autonomy founder and CEO Mike Lynch, who was ousted from HP in 2012, has denied any wrongdoing, saying publicly that HP was aware of Autonomy's accounting practices..."

    So in this case, Autonomy is making the case that they were cooking their books, but committing accounting fraud is perfectly okay because HP should've known about it... or am I missing something here?

    Probably not.

    I did my MBA in Entrepreneurship (yeah, I KNOW! Spare me!) and we spent quite a bit of time on financial due diligence. Some of the case studies - things that happened in real life - were just pathetic.

    Remember kids, all the bullshit that businesses pull on us consumers, they do to each other ten fold and justify by saying "you should have known better".

    Then if it's worth it, sue.

  5. This is really egg on HP's face by putaro · · Score: 4, Insightful

    HP is a multi-billion dollar corporation. In other words, they get to wear the big boy pants. Due diligence is part of the acquisition process and it's a breach of the HP board's fiduciary responsibility to the shareholders to have gotten rooked so badly. I know people who worked at Autonomy prior to the acquisition and there were plenty of rumors going around about Autonomy's accounting shenanigans.

    Lynch and Hussain may very well have committed fraud on HP. However, getting taken for $8B brings to mind the old saying about a fool and his money.

    1. Re:This is really egg on HP's face by Solandri · · Score: 5, Informative

      Autonomy was audited by Deloitte. HP hired KPMG (who subcontracted Ernst & Young) to double-check Deloitte's audit. Those are three of the four biggest accounting firms in the world. All gave the green flag.

    2. Re:This is really egg on HP's face by smooth+wombat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And these (some of them at least) are the same folks who signed off on the mark-to-market figures and related matters for Goldman Sachs, BofA and the rest of the folks who caused our financial system to collapse in 2007-2008.

      See a pattern?

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    3. Re:This is really egg on HP's face by rahvin112 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If your accounting is violating all the rules it's possible to hide the real accounting information from everyone. Look at what Enron did with layers of fake companies that weren't on the books holding all the bad debt. When you go to that level of fraud the only people that are going to be able to unravel it are forensic accountants and months of fine toothed combs. The system is gameable because it operates on a system of trust, when these CEO's and accountants are willing to go to the level of full on accounting fraud the system we have doesn't work because it always assumed we had rational players that aren't two bit scammers. The degrading of ethics in business school has apparently turned that on it ear.

      Maybe the answer is for these accounting firms to hire real forensic accountants to analyze companies. But if we've reached that point it's even scarier than you can imagine. What I think we need to do is be putting these CEO's and CFO's in jail, for 15-30 years and assigning high enough criminal penalties and restitution to ensure they are broke when they get out. Sarbanes-Oxley gave them the teeth to make that happen, the problem is right now Crime pays. The justice department should be investigating everyone involved.

  6. HP, wildly incompetent by Alioth · · Score: 4, Interesting

    HP is wildly incompetent. They ruin every business they buy. Look at their "we're dropping VMS" and a while later "Oh no, we're going to port it to amd64" flagellations as they continue to ruin what's left of DEC and Compaq.

    We used to use software produced by Autonomy (actually, a company that Autonomy had earlier bought). As soon as HP took over, the customer service went to shit and we've since dropped the product because they had basically no flexibility when it came to changing demand and licensing. Previously, Autonomy would have been willing to work with us and allow us to change our licensing levels as demand for the service we were using this software for changed.