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http://www.itworldcanada.com/news/...inancials-says-prosecutor/144661
Nortel executives lied about financials, says prosecutor
By: Howard Solomon On: 12 Jan 2012 For: Network World Canada
In a pre-trial outline of his case, the prosecution reduces the charges against three officials, but says “the books were cooked” as part of a bonus scheme
On the eve of the criminal trial of three senior former Nortel Networks Corp. executives, the prosecution has dropped four of the seven charges but left the most serious allegation: That the three men fraudulently misstated the financial results of the troubled company.
In a pre-trial outline of his case, the prosecution reduces the charges against three officials, but says “the books were cooked” as part of a bonus scheme
Prosecutor Robert Hubbard told an Ontario Superior Court judge Thursday that he will proceed with two charges of fraud and one count of falsifying books and documents against former CEO Frank Dunn, chief financial officer Douglas Beatty and controller Michael Gollogly.
In doing so, he said the Crown’s case is simple: “The books were cooked” between 2000 and April 2004 as part of a scheme to entitle them to bonuses.
“In doing so the accused defrauded the public” (shareholders) and Nortel, he said.
The trial is scheduled to start Monday and is expected to last for several months.
Thursday’s pre-trial hearing was originally called to hear complaints by defence that the Crown hasn’t given enough details of the alleged offences to properly prepare for the trial.
But in replying Hubbard gave Justice Frank Marrocco an early outline of his case, and in doing so illustrated the gap between the defence and the prosecution.
Where the defence lawyers complained about the four million documents the prosecution has built its case on and vagueness of the allegations, Hubbard reduced the prosecution to seven transactions or quarterly financial statements issued between 2002 and 2003 and a later restatement of the financials.
By approving the restatement the accused admitted the books were out almost $1 billion, Hubbard said he will try to show. The public reason why the financials were wrong was that matters were not recorded properly, Hubbard said, but he will try to show that wasn’t true.
That restatement was represented to the public as a comprehensive review of Nortel’s numbers, which was a lie, Hubbard alleged.
Hubbard said he will call evidence of an internal Sept. 2002 report to executives stating that $303 million in accrued liabilities were wrongly on the company’s books. The prosecution will try to show $189 million of that was manipulated by the accused, he said, and either they knew about it or were indifferent.
“This is not about transactions,” he said. “This is a case of knowledge”
In fact, he added, within weeks of the first restatement of Nortel’s financial results there had to be a second restatement of the numbers.
The original financials were not an error, he said he will try to prove. “It’s not the transactions that are false but certifying that the financial statements are true.”
There was an indication of how tough a fight this trial will be when Hubbard alleged that “the books were cooked” and murmurs of dissent arose from defence lawyers David Porter (representing Dunn), Gregory Lafontaine (representing Beatty) and Brian Greenspan (representing Gollogly).
The trial begins one of the closing chapters of the spectacular collapse of what was once the country’s biggest IT firms. Then, after the collapse of the tech bubble in 2000, it slowly, excruciatingly, became one of the biggest failures as it had to repeatedly restate its financial results.
In the middle, Nortel said Dunn, Beatty and Gollogly were fired for cause in April, 2004. Already in the middle of examining its accounting practices for 2000, 2001 and 2002, the company said it was now including a review of 2003.
In 2007 the trio and an assistant controller were charged by Canadian and U.S. regulators.
Meanwhile, amid the restatement of financial results, Nortel’s sales were falling as customers lost faith in the company.
In January, 2009 it filed for bankruptcy protection having lost more than $7 billion since 2005.
Since then it has been selling assets, most notably last year when a consortium of IT companies bid US$4.5 billion for Nortel’s intellectual property including wireless patents. LM Ericsson paid US$1.13 billion for its CDMA carrier equipment divison, Ciena Corp. picked up Nortel Networks’ metro Ethernet and optical switching lines in 2010 for US$769 million, while Avaya Inc. paid US$915 million for Nortel’s enterprise division, which makes switches, routers, firewalls, virtual private networking (VPNs), unified communications, private branch exchanges (PBXs), phones and key systems.
live long and prosper
Viel Spaß noch beim Zocken, habe etwas 'Taschengeld' mitgenommen soeben.
Das wird laufen wie immer. Bis zur Eröffnung bei den Amis gehts hoch, danach gehts es in etwa 10 mal schneller wieder runter.