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Clarification of Need for Board Policy Assuring Respect of Investor Inquiries

(August 11-16, 2005)

Copied below is the text of an August 16, 2005 letter from the Forum manager to the chairman of Computer Associates' board addressing a new demonstration of the need for a board statement of policy requiring management's respectful responses to shareholder requests for information, as suggested in an August 4, 2005 letter.

Also copied below is the text of the referenced August 16, 2005 letter to Kenneth V. Handal, CA's secretary, executive vice president and general counsel, responding more specifically to the issues he had raised in his August 11, 2005 letter, a scanned copy of which can be downloaded from a link below.  Reference is also made to the agreement suggested in the shareholder Delegate's initial demand letter of June 27, 2005 to assure compliance with securities laws, a copy of which can be downloaded from the following link:

Mr. Handal replied to the August 16 letters with an August 22, 2005 letter repeating his previously addressed statements, to which the Forum manager responded in an August 23, 2005 letter reminding the board of its responsibility for management respect of investor inquiries in compliance with the company's Deferred Prosecution Agreement.

 

[letterhead]

LUTIN & COMPANY

575 Madison Avenue

New York, New York 10022

Telephone (212) 605-0335

Facsimile (212) 605-0325

 

August 16, 2005

 

 

 

By telecopier: 631/342-3300

 

Mr. Lewis S. Ranieri

Computer Associates International, Inc.

One Computer Associates Plaza

Islandia, New York 11749

 

 

 

Dear Mr. Ranieri:

            As indicated in the accompanying copies of an August 11 letter from Mr. Handal and my August 16 response, there is a very clear need for the board statement of policy requested in the letter I sent you on August 4.

            Management’s current practices have confused and misdirected legitimate investor information requests by failing to distinguish between the essential shareholder responsibility for monitoring management performance and the responsibilities of government authorities and private litigants to enforce compliance with laws.  You must make it clear that management should respect the needs of shareholders to obtain whatever information they reasonably request for consideration in their investment decisions.  Cooperation with prosecutors does not relieve management of its obligation to cooperate with shareholders.

            Assuming you share my concern about the issues addressed in my correspondence with Mr. Handal, I trust that the board will dutifully resolve these shareholder interests.

 

Sincerely yours,

 

 

 

 

Gary Lutin

 

 

Enclosures

 

 

[letterhead]

LUTIN & COMPANY

575 Madison Avenue

New York, New York 10022

Telephone (212) 605-0335

Facsimile (212) 605-0325

 

August 16, 2005

 

 

By telecopier: 631/342-3300

 

Mr. Kenneth V. Handal

Computer Associates International, Inc.

One Computer Associates Plaza

Islandia, New York 11749

 

 

 

Dear Mr. Handal:

            Your August 11 letter suggests a need to discourage confusion about the shareholder information requests being addressed by the CA Forum.

            First, your letter reflects a blurred view of shareholder interests.  It is important to make these distinctions:

  1. Difference between information demands of shareholders and litigation adversaries:  Shareholders have a right to be informed about anything that concerns their investment, and it is management’s duty to provide that information.  You should not be responding to shareholder requests with litigation-style tactics to limit the information provided, as if you were defending against legal claims.
  2. Difference between responsibilities of shareholders and prosecutors:  Shareholders are responsible for electing a company’s directors, based on their determination that the directors can be relied upon to perform their duties satisfactorily.  The US Attorney has a very different responsibility for investigating and prosecuting violations of law.  It is inappropriate for you to suggest that investors can rely upon the prosecutor to assume any of the shareholders’ responsibility for monitoring performance.

            In this context, it should be understood that compliance with laws, though critical, is only one of many elements in the operation of a business.  Your letter’s recitation of progress in satisfying conditions of the Deferred Prosecution Agreement concerns conduct which the US Attorney is expected to monitor, and therefore has no relevance to the current requests for information about the aspects of director performance that shareholders must monitor themselves.

            On a similar subject, your suggestion that shareholders can rely on the Special Litigation Committee (“SLC”) for information is especially troubling.  It is clearly misleading for you to quote excerpted phrases from my letter in a manner that suggests I had endorsed the SLC rather than the proposed process for cooperation with which the phrases were actually associated in my letter.[1]  And, as you know, the SLC is not in fact cooperating with the proposed process for reporting information needed by shareholders.  In any event, the responsibility of the SLC relates to civil litigation claims against directors for breaches of duties, just as the responsibility of the US Attorney relates to criminal prosecution, and that SLC responsibility is in the same way different from the shareholder’s responsibility for monitoring the broader performance of directors – including those serving on the SLC.

            Your reference to the delivery of “150 pages” of records to the Delegate’s attorneys could misleadingly suggest compliance with the shareholder demand.  (You are correct in observing that my August 4 letter mistakenly stated that “none of the records” had been delivered.  I did not learn until later that a box had been delivered on the evening of August 3.)  I understand that what was delivered was a management selection of board and audit committee minutes addressing only two subjects, the settlement of shareholder litigation claims and the investigations conducted by the US Attorney and SEC, and that even these were “redacted” for information claimed to be privileged or confidential in spite of the executed confidentiality agreement.  Providing what seems to be a duplicate of some court-ordered response to litigation discovery certainly does not satisfy the Delegate’s demand.  Someone with your experience must know that it would be necessary to review all the minutes, including those of all the committees, to determine what the directors did, or failed to do.  And, obviously, the management being monitored cannot be allowed to select the information it wants shareholders to review.

            Much of your letter is devoted to repetitions of diversions from past letters to which I have previously responded.[2]  I should not have to remind you that reports of your current efforts to avoid prosecution and your scores for recently adopted governance features, while appreciated, have no relevance to a shareholder’s review of director performance during the period of admitted misconduct from 1998 to 2004.  Similarly, the first time you expressed concern about securities laws relating to selective disclosure of confidential information, I assured you that the need to comply with these and other rules had been addressed in my initial communications about investor information requirements and in the shareholder Delegate’s initial demand letter.  Now, if you really have any genuine concern about this issue, you should discuss it with the lawyers representing CA who executed the suggested confidentiality agreement.

            Finally, you have apparently been misinformed about a request for “a special role as a shareholder representative.”  The only role I am willing to play is described in the statement of “Conditions of Participation” which has been posted on the CA Forum web site since the program began, following the same general policies as all other Forum programs.

            Noting that your letter referred to a section of the Deferred Prosecution Agreement requiring the development of procedures for responding to shareholder inquiries, and also to the Independent Examiner’s responsibility for reviewing and reporting your progress, I will of course welcome any questions Mr. Richards may have about satisfying investor needs for information.

 

Sincerely yours,

 

 

 

 

Gary Lutin

 

 

cc:        Lee S. Richards, Esquire


 

[2] See your May 13 and May 20, 2005 letters, with my May 13 and my May 23, 2005 responses:

< http://www.shareholderforum.com/CA/Process/20050513-23_letters.htm >

 

 

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The material presented on this web site is published by Gary Lutin, as chairman of the Shareholder Forum.