Jailed CA
Ex-Chief Kumar Points at Others
In an affidavit,
he says that Charles Wang, Lewis Ranieri and D'Amato knew of crimes.
Stephen Taub -
CFO.com | US
September 3, 2008
Former CA
chairman Sanjay Kumar, from the prison cell where he is serving a 12-year
term for his role in a massive accounting fraud scandal, pointed the finger
at one-time boss and friend Charles Wang.
Kumar alleged
that Wang, cofounder of the company previously known as Computer Associates
"personally directed" improper accounting there going back to 1987,
according to the Long Island newspaper Newsday. Kumar's charges came
in a 27-page affidavit filed in court Tuesday by Texas billionaire and CA
shareholder Sam Wyly. Kumar also claimed in the document that several
long-time board members "took steps to protect Wang and conceal the facts."
Kumar said that
board members Lewis Ranieri and Alfonse D'Amato, the former New York
Republican senator, "had knowledge of" the accounting misdeeds for which he
went to prison — going back "at least" to 2003, according to the paper. He
said the accusations were earlier communicated to a special board committee
through "many" interviews, but they never made it into a report the board
publicly filed in 2006, documenting the scandal, according to the Newsday
account of the court filing.
In the affidavit,
Kumar reportedly provided examples in which he alleged that Wang pushed him
to close contracts after a quarter closed. Kumar alleged that it was at
"Wang's direction" that he took a July 8, 1999, flight to Paris to close a
$32 million deal with GIE Informatique, according to the report. Kumar then
said that $19 million of the contract was improperly recognized nine days
after the quarter's close, according to Newsday.
Kumar also
alleged that Ranieri specifically directed him to keep details of the
accounting improprieties from fellow CA director Walter Schuetze, the former
SEC chief accountant, saying Schuetze would "have a heart attack" if he knew
the extent of the misdeeds.
Ranieri, chairman
and CEO of Houston-based Franklin Bank Corp., is also the founder of
Hyperion Private Equity and a former Salomon Brothers mortgage-bond trader.
Representatives of Ranieri and D'Amato did not immediately return queries
from CFO.com seeking comment. A spokesman for Wang, however, called the
allegations false and claimed that "Mr. Kumar continues to be a stranger to
the truth."
The Wang
spokesman noted that in a 2007 statement, Wang denied involvement and said
that he was "appalled" by the charges. "I intend to vigorously defend my
good name and fight any and all efforts to place the crimes of Kumar and his
management team at my feet," the spokesman said, quoting the statement.
In April 2006
Kumar pleaded guilty to eight charges, including conspiracy, fraud, and
obstruction of justice. He began serving his sentence last August, after
being sentenced to 12 years and a fine of $8 million for his role in the
software company's $2.2 billion accounting fraud.
Kumar and other
CA executives were accused of backdating contracts to inflate revenue. He
and other executives were charged with instructing salespeople to complete
deals after the quarter had closed, which came to be known inside the
company as the "35-day month."
In the case,
former CFO Ira Zar received a relatively light sentence of seven months in
prison and seven months home detention for what a federal judge called Zar's
key role in the software company's accounting fraud. No fine was imposed,
and restitution was to have been determined at a later date.
In September
2004, Computer Associates agreed to pay $225 million to settle
investigations by the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange
Commission. The software company had been charged with inflating company
revenues by $2.2 billion. In the settlement, the U.S. Attorney's Office
agreed to recommend that the U.S. District Court defer prosecution of the
company for 18 months following the appointment of an independent examiner.
Newsday
said that the latest affidavit was filed as part of a lawsuit against former
and current CA executives and directors by shareholder Wyly, who is hoping
to recover hundreds of millions in losses from his investments in CA.
According to the paper, William A. Brewer III, lead counsel for Wyly, said
that the material from Kuman "confirms a conspiracy and subsequent cover-up
of epic proportions."
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