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6/20/2005
Business Week Offers the Chief Exec. Perp-Walk
Business Week has a review of recent high-level litigation involving the highly combustible mixture of company executives and corporate scandal. The most recent addendum to this list is the recent conviction of Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski, which was announced late last week.

The rundown (or lineup, if you prefer...):
TYCO INTERNATIONAL LTD. -- Former Chief Executive L. Dennis Kozlowski and Chief Financial Officer Mark H. Swartz were convicted Friday on 22 of 23 counts of grand larceny, conspiracy, securities fraud and falsifying business records. Prosecutors accused the two of conspiring to defraud Tyco of millions of dollars to fund extravagant lifestyles. The two executives each face up to 30 years in prison.

HEALTHSOUTH CORP. -- Former CEO Richard Scrushy could spend the rest of his life in prison if convicted on all 36 counts of conspiracy, false reporting, fraud and money laundering for allegedly orchestrating a $2.7 billion earnings overstatement at the rehabilitation and medical services chain for seven years beginning in 1996. A Birmingham, Ala., federal jury has been deliberating in the case since May 19.

WORLDCOM INC. -- Bernard Ebbers, former chief of the one-time telecom giant, was found guilty of fraud, conspiracy and making false regulatory filings in WorldCom's $11 billion accounting scandal. The case against him was largely based on the testimony of former CFO Scott Sullivan, who agreed to testify against his boss as part of a plea deal. Ebbers is due to be sentenced next month and faces up to 85 years in prison.

ENRON CORP. -- Enron founder Kenneth Lay, former CEO Jeffrey Skilling and former top accountant Richard Causey are scheduled to go to trial in January on federal fraud and conspiracy charges. Former CFO Andrew Fastow pleaded guilty in January 2004 to two counts of conspiracy, admitting to orchestrating schemes to hide the company's debt and inflate profits while pocketing millions of dollars. He agreed to serve the maximum 10-year sentence, which will begin in July 2006, after he testifies against his former bosses.

In addition, Fastow's wife will complete a year-long sentence next month on a misdemeanor tax charge for failing to report her husband's kickbacks. Former Enron treasurer Ben Glisan Jr. is serving a five-year sentence for his role in the scandal. And two former Merrill Lynch & Co. executives were sentenced to short prison terms for their roles in a bogus Enron sale of power barges.

ADELPHIA COMMUNICATIONS CORP. -- Founder John Rigas and his son Timothy were convicted in federal court last year of conspiracy, bank fraud and securities fraud. The two are to be sentenced Monday. Another Rigas son, Michael, was acquitted of conspiracy charges before the case ended in a mistrial with jurors deadlocked on 17 counts against him. A fourth executive, Michael Mulcahey, was found not guilty of conspiracy and securities fraud.

CREDIT SUISSE FIRST BOSTON -- The company's former investment banking star, Frank Quattrone, was convicted in May 2004 on federal charges of obstruction of justice, after his first trial ended in a hung jury. Quattrone, who made a fortune taking Internet companies public during the dot-com stock boom, was sentenced to 18 months in prison. He is free on bail and appealing the conviction.

MARTHA STEWART: The founder of the homemaking empire was released March 4 after serving five months in prison, and is serving an additional five months confined to her home. She was convicted in federal court last year of conspiracy, obstruction of justice and making false statements related to a personal sale of ImClone Systems Inc. stock. Her former broker at Merrill Lynch, Peter Bacanovic, began serving a five-month sentence in January, and still faces five months of home confinement. Stewart's conviction was not related to the company she founded, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc.
The original article appears here.

-- MDT

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