Dissident CA Inc. shareholder
Sam Wyly this month scored a victory in his years-long
effort to retrieve ill-gotten gains from former Computer
Associates directors and executives, gaining access to reams
of evidence in a civil class action settlement his lawyers
say should never have been agreed to.
A State Supreme Court justice on
Feb. 8 granted Wyly's motion ordering three class action law
firms to turn over years' worth of evidence they collected
as part of their lawsuits alleging accounting fraud by
former CA executives.
CA and the law firms, after
years of contentious court actions, agreed to a settlement
in 2003 - weeks before the company first acknowledged
accounting misdeeds. CA agreed to issue shares ultimately
valued at around $140 million to settle the shareholder
claims. Wyly's lawyers argue the settlement should have been
much higher.
"By any measure this settlement was a joke," said William
Brewer, an attorney for Wyly who said he believes the
ill-gotten gains amounted to more than $1 billion.
Representatives for the class action law firms didn't
respond to phone calls yesterday.
Wyly sought the documents, which include interviews with
former CA officials and clients, sales contracts, memos and
reams of related documents, to determine why the settlement
was reached before some of the more serious findings in the
case were publicly reported. Justice Joan Madden ordered the
documents, with the exception of certain privileged
material, turned over within 45 days.
In petitioning the court for the documents, lawyers for Wyly
argued he had a right to them because the firms, including
noted class action firms Milberg Weiss Bershad & Shulman and
Stull, Stull & Brody, were effectively representing him at
the time they reached the settlement with CA.
The settlement, which Wyly has argued was reached
fraudulently because the CA lawyer who helped negotiate it
later pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice, is critical
to Wyly's case because it prevented future litigants from
suing executives and directors named in the settlements.
Wyly wants those settlement releases voided so he can pursue
funds from former CA executives, including former chief
executive Charles Wang and current executive vice president
Russell Artzt, among more than a dozen others. Neither Wang
nor Artzt has ever been charged with wrongdoing, but former
chairman Sanjay Kumar and six others pleaded guilty to
charges including obstruction of justice and securities
fraud. Kumar was sentenced to 12 years in prison.
Wyly in 1999 sold his former company, Sterling Software, to
CA; in 2001 he waged an unsuccessful proxy fight to take
control of CA's board.
Brewer noted that the law firms split roughly $40 million as
a result of the settlement. In addition to understanding why
they agreed to the settlement, Brewer said he also hopes to
understand why the law firms resisted providing the
documents, which he said he has requested for two years.
"Even if you assume they had a good legal position, 'Why did
they fight this so hard?' is a good question," he said. "I
was frankly dismayed when they [the law firms] didn't run to
our side to assist us, but instead fought us all the way in
turning over this information."
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