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Technology Stocks : LHSP: Lernout En Hauspie -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (2449)5/28/2001 2:15:03 AM
From: hueyone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2467
 
U.S. Seizes Ex-CEO of Belgian Firm on Fraud
Charges

nytimes.com

REUTERS INDEX: TOP STORIES | INTERNATIONAL | BUSINESS | TECHNOLOGY

By REUTERS

Filed at 5:28 p.m. ET, May 27

BOSTON (Reuters) - A former chief
executive of Belgium's troubled Lernout &
Hauspie Speech Products NV
(LHSP.ED)was in a Boston-area jail on
Sunday after being arrested on a Belgian
warrant accusing him of fraud and other
charges, a U.S. Marshal spokesman said.

Authorities arrested Gaston Bastiaens, 54, on Saturday while he was sunbathing in
the back yard of his home in the Boston suburb of Winchester, Massachusetts,
Chief Deputy U.S. Marshal Timothy Bane told Reuters.

Accounting and fraud allegations last year sent L&H stock into a tailspin, erasing
nearly $10 billion in shareholder value.

Bastiaens is expected to appear in U.S. District Court in Boston on Tuesday to face
charges of financial fraud, insider dealing, stock market manipulation, violating
bookkeeping laws and swindling, Bane said, reading from the warrant.

A U.S. judge in Boston issued the warrant at the request of Belgium, which is
expected to seek the extradition of Bastiaens.

L&H has U.S. headquarters in Burlington, Massachusetts. Before fraud allegations
surfaced, the firm was Europe's largest maker of speech recognition and translation
software. It also attracted millions of dollars in investment from software giant
Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O).

Bastiaens was president and chief executive of the company when the Wall Street
Journal and others reported accounting irregularities at its South Korean subsidiary.

An investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission followed and the
company's accountant, KPMG, said its auditor's report for L&H's 1998 and 1999
financial statements should no longer be relied upon.

After an internal company audit, L&H said it would have to restate its revenue from
1998 to the first half of 2000. The company also said a cash shortfall of about $100
million was discovered at its South Korean subsidiary. Most of the unit's sales were
fictitious, according to an audit commissioned by the company.

The company's board forced Bastiaens to resign last November. The Nasdaq stock
market has since delisted the company's stock and the EASDAQ, the
pan-European stock market, suspended the company's shares indefinitely.

Several L&H directors and executives, including founders Jo Lernout and Pol
Hauspie, have resigned from the company amid the scandal.

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