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Non-Tech : Auric Goldfinger's Short List -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/12/2002 8:03:58 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
Global Crossing Chairman Subpoenaed

By MARCY GORDON
.c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - A House panel issued a subpoena Thursday for testimony by the chairman of bankrupt Global Crossing and expanded its investigation to include Western phone company Qwest Communications and other companies.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee served the subpoena on Global Crossing Chairman Gary Winnick to appear at a hearing on Sept. 24, committee spokesman Ken Johnson said. They have refused to be interviewed by committee investigators, he said.

Also subpoenaed were Jim Gorton, former general counsel of Global Crossing, and Greg Casey, a former executive vice president of Qwest, according to Johnson.

In addition, he said, the panel's inquiry has been expanded to include Qwest and its deals with Global Crossing to swap network capacity.

The Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating Global Crossing's accounting. Quest also has acknowledged major accounting errors and is under investigation by the SEC.

The committee also is looking into similar deals Global Crossing had with other telecom companies, Johnson said.

``We're concerned that these capacity swaps were merely sham transactions meant to artificially increase revenue and mislead investors,'' said Rep. Jim Greenwood, R-Pa., chairman of the panel's investigative subcommittee.

Winnick's attorney, Gary Naftalis, said his client ``will respond in an appropriate manner'' to the subpoena.

Winnick ``continues to cooperate with this and other inquiries by making available all relevant documents,'' Naftalis said in a statement. ``There is absolutely not a shred of evidence that Gary Winnick has done anything improper. All records and reports demonstrate that Gary acted at all times legally, ethically and honorably.''

Johnson said ``we would not be surprised'' if Winnick invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege and refused to answer lawmakers' questions.

Based on interviews with other company officials, Winnick ``appears to have been a lot more involved in the day-to-day operations of the company than he has admitted,'' Johnson said.

Among other things, the committee has been investigating whether Winnick, who founded Global Crossing, acted to inflate the fiber optic giant's balance sheet before selling large chunks of its stock.

Winnick sold $734 million in stock before the company filed for bankruptcy protection in January. Two Asian companies bought Global Crossing out of bankruptcy earlier this month for $250 million, a fraction of the $22 billion in assets the company listed in its bankruptcy court filing.

Attorneys for Gorton and Casey could not immediately be located.

Global Crossing is a U.S. company, but based in Bermuda.


09/12/02 19:03 EDT



To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/12/2002 9:05:15 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
Brazil arrests Americans for selling Amazon land

BELEM, Brazil, Sept 12 (Reuters) - A Brazilian court on Thursday ordered three U.S. citizens to be held in custody on suspicion of selling land in the Amazon over the Internet under the name of an environmental fund founded by the British rock star Sting.

U.S. couple Donald and Mary Davis and Brazilian-born Joao da Cruz Veloso, a naturalized American, allegedly sold bonds worth $25 to $100 through a Web site called Rainforest Foundation, the name of Sting's nongovernmental organization.

Donors were told their money would buy parcels of protected land in the world's largest rainforest, where huge areas are being cleared by illegal loggers.

Tipped to the suspected scam by a U.S. businessman who said he donated $1 million, police arrested the three on Wednesday in the northern state of Para. Police chief Geraldo Araujo said they are accused of fraud and may be deported.

Araujo said the land being "sold" was public.

Donald Davis, who described himself as a missionary, denied the allegations.

Police also seized a stack of apparently forged land documents, receipts of bank deposits and propaganda for the Rainforest Foundation. The Web site was not registered and had no links with Sting's foundation, police said.

09/12/02 20:58 ET



To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/13/2002 1:34:44 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
Tyco Execs Face 3-Front Offensive

By SAMUEL MAULL
.c The Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) - Prosecutors, federal regulators and Tyco International are launching a three-front offensive against three former Tyco executives accused of bilking the company of hundreds of millions of dollars and turning it into their ``personal piggy banks.''

Former CEO L. Dennis Kozlowski and former chief financial officer Mark H. Swartz were charged by the Manhattan district attorney's office with enterprise corruption and grand larceny, each punishable by up to 25 years in prison. They pleaded innocent on Thursday.

Former general counsel Mark A. Belnick was charged with falsifying business records to hide more than $14 million in loans he received from Tyco. He faces up to four years in prison if convicted. He also pleaded innocent.

The criminal charges were announced less than an hour after the Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil complaint against the three for allegedly hiding tens of millions of dollars in low- or no-interest loans from the company.

And also on Thursday, Tyco sued Kozlowski for at least $230 million, seeking repayment of outstanding loans, unauthorized compensation he paid to other employees and all income and benefits he received from 1997 through this year.

Kozlowski, 55, Swartz, 42, and Belnick, 55, were jailed early Thursday before their arraignments in Manhattan state Supreme Court, where they appeared with their hands cuffed behind their backs.

Justice Michael Obus set a personal recognizance bond of $100 million, to be secured by $10 million in personal funds, for Kozlowski. Swartz had to provide a personal recognizance bond of $100 million, to be secured by $10 million in personal funds.

Belnick was released on an unsecured personal recognizance bond of $1 million.

The defendants had to relinquish their passports and must return to court Sept. 19.

District Attorney Robert Morgenthau said Kozlowski and Swartz directly stole more than $170 million from the company and obtained $430 million through fraud and the sale of securities.

``Dennis Kozlowski was a recognized business leader and believes that the charges against him are unfounded and unfair,'' Kozlowski's lawyer, Stephen Kaufman, said after the former CEO's arraignment.

Charles Stillman, Swartz' lawyer, called his client, ``totally innocent of these charges and we believe these charges should not have been brought against him.''

Belnick's lawyer, Reid Weingarten, said of his client that ``his entire professional life has been dedicated to the law and he has complete faith in the legal system.''

According to prosecutors, Kozlowski authorized millions of dollars in company money for personal expenses and covered his tracks by limiting and concealing audits.

The SEC charged that Kozlowski improperly used $242 million in Tyco funds to pay for yachts, fine art, jewelry, luxury apartments and houses in New York, Boca Raton, Fla., and Nantucket.

Kozlowski is also accused of using $7 million of Tyco's money to buy a luxury Park Avenue apartment for his former wife as part of their divorce settlement.

Steven Cutler, the SEC's director of enforcement, said the defendants ``recast Tyco as their personal piggy banks.''

In its lawsuit, Tyco alleged Kozlowski sold his home in Exeter, N.H., to the company for $3 million above market value; donated about $43 million of company money to charities, in his name; and charged the company more than $1 million for a birthday party for his wife in Italy featuring singer Jimmy Buffet. Buffett was paid $250,000 and the 75 guests were flown to and from the party and received free lodging.

Tyco, a conglomerate based in Bermuda but headquartered in Exeter, had $34 billion in sales last year. The company makes everything from security systems to medical devices. Its stock has dropped sharply this year.


09/13/02 01:05 EDT



To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/13/2002 10:43:38 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
Former State Street Executive Charged with Securities Fraud, Reports U.S. Attorney

BOSTON, Sept. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- A Boston man was charged Tuesday, September 10, 2002, in federal court with securities fraud and the fraudulent use of a false social security number.

United States Attorney Michael J. Sullivan and Charles S. Prouty, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in New England, announced that EDWARD VOCCOLA, age 48, of 1 Huntington Avenue, Boston, was charged in an indictment with eighteen counts of securities fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, and the use of a false social security number.

The indictment alleges that between February and August 2000, VOCCOLA engaged in "free-riding", a criminal practice in which an investor does not pay for the stocks he purchases, thereby forcing the brokerage house to shoulder all of the risk of the investment. If the stock price goes up, the purchase price can be redeemed out of the gains. If the stock price declines, the investor has a "free ride" and walks away, leaving the broker to absorb the loss. Specifically, the indictment alleges that VOCCOLA wrote a series of bad checks in purported payment for the stocks. According to the indictment, VOCCOLA traded in thirteen accounts at eleven different brokerage houses. VOCCOLA is alleged to have written over $4.9 million worth of bad checks as part of the scheme, leaving the brokerage houses with over $190,000 in losses.

If convicted on these charges, VOCCOLA faces up to 5 years' imprisonment, to be followed by 3 years of supervised release, and a $ 250,000 fine on each count.

The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen G. Huggard, Chief of Sullivan's Public Corruption & Special Prosecutions Unit and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Lauren Albrecht from the Securities & Exchange Commission.

SOURCE U.S. Attorney

CO: U.S. Attorney

ST: Massachusetts

SU: LAW

prnewswire.com

09/13/2002 09:12 EDT



To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/13/2002 10:58:20 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
Sears added to spammers list. I never signed up with bigmailboxes.com which is yet another fraud by this Sears spammer

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To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/13/2002 11:01:20 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
Lucent 4th-Qtr Sales to Fall, Plans More Job Cuts (Update2)
By Alex Armitage and Justin Baer

Murray Hill, New Jersey, Sept. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Lucent Technologies Inc., the biggest U.S. maker of telephone equipment, forecast its sixth-straight decline in quarterly sales and will pare more jobs because customer spending hasn't rebounded.

Sales in the fourth quarter ending Sept. 30 will drop as much as 25 percent from the third-quarter's $2.95 billion, Lucent said in a statement. Lucent's per-share loss before certain expenses will be almost three times as wide as analysts predicted because of the sales decline and costs related to a customer default.

Chief Executive Patricia Russo is trying to compensate for tumbling demand by cutting deeper into Lucent's workforce, which had been slated to fall to 45,000 by year's end from 123,000 about two years ago. Spokeswoman Mary Lou Ambrus declined to elaborate on Russo's plan, saying details would be released Oct. 23.

Lucent, which has posted nine straight quarters of net losses, has ``more than significant liquidity to fund our operations and business plans,'' Ambrus said.

Shares of the Murray Hill, New Jersey-based company fell as much as 13 percent. Rivals such as Alcatel SA and Nortel Networks Corp. also declined.

Missing Estimates

Ambrus wouldn't elaborate on the customer-financing default and said Russo, Chairman Henry Schacht and Chief Financial Officer Frank D'Amelio weren't available to comment.

Lucent forecast a fourth-quarter loss of 45 cents, excluding expenses related to restructuring, amortization of goodwill and a gain from the sale of its optical-fiber business. On that basis, Lucent had been expected to post a loss of 16 cents, the average estimate of analysts polled by Thomson First Call.

Lucent shares slid 20 cents to $1.45 at 9:36 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. They had dropped 66 percent in the past year and traded as high as $64.69 in December 1999.

The company's 7.25 percent coupon notes maturing in 2006 fell 4 cents to 64.5 cents on the dollar as of 9:10 a.m., according to Trace, the bond price reporting system of the National Association of Securities Dealers. That pushed up the yield on the debt to 21.3 percent from 19.2 percent.

Shares of Alcatel, Europe's biggest maker of phone gear, dropped as much as 11 percent to 3.65 euros in Paris trading. Nortel Networks fell 7 cents, or 6.6 percent, to 99 cents on the New York Stock Exchange.



To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/17/2002 3:31:46 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
"The event's planners called for gladiators and an ice sculpture of Michelangelo's David with vodka streaming from his penis into crystal glasses, according to Tyco's filing."

Tyco report details extravagance, fraud

By Tim McLaughlin

BOSTON, Sept 17 (Reuters) - Tyco International Ltd. on Tuesday said it uncovered nearly $100 million in fraudulent employee bonuses and conceded it picked up the tab for personal expenses including a $6,000 shower curtain and a $2,200 wastebasket for indicted former Chairman L. Dennis Kozlowski's New York City apartment.

Despite the allegations of massive fraud and largesse that extended from Kozlowski's corporate suite and beyond, the company said it would not have to restate its financial results.

Tyco accused Kozlowski of recklessly tapping company funds, including using more than $1 million in company funds for his wife's birthday party in Sardinia last year. The event's planners called for gladiators and an ice sculpture of Michelangelo's David with vodka streaming from his penis into crystal glasses, according to Tyco's filing.

"I'm just dumbfounded that these guys had the audacity to do what they've done and then tell the investor community everything is above board," said John Boland, an analyst at NL Capital Management, which holds about 100,000 Tyco shares.

New Tyco Chairman Edward Breen is working to restore Tyco's tarnished image, which along with accounting worries and strategic flip-flops have erased more than $80 billion in market capitalization this year.

Tyco shares shed 9 cents, or less than 1 percent, to $16.45 in Tuesday afternoon trade on the New York Stock Exchange.

"We get more news about what's going on at Tyco and what Dennis did, but the fact is the stock has stopped going down," Peter Zuger, a portfolio manager at State Street Research & Management, said at a mutual fund forum in New York.

DEVIL IN THE DETAILS

Details from the company's internal investigation, authored by a committee headed by attorney David Boies, were contained in a company filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The filing was massive, exceeding 100 pages.

The findings largely mirror what New York prosecutors and the SEC alleged last week in a massive corruption case against Kozlowski and two of his top lieutenants.

Kozlowski, former chief financial officer Mark Swartz, and former general counsel Mark Belnick are accused of carrying out a theft and fraud scheme that fleeced Tyco and shareholders out of more than $600 million.

"Mark Swartz never received a penny from Tyco that was not fully authorized," said his attorney, Charles Stillman. "Today's report does not change that fact."

In 2000, Kozlowski had Tyco authorize nearly $96 million in unapproved bonuses for 51 employees to offset relocation loans for employees moving to Florida.

Kozlowski and Swartz allegedly received about $50 million as part of the program, which was purportedly paid out for the successful initial public offering of TyCom, the company's undersea fiber-optic cable network, documents show.

Only a few weeks after the Florida loans were improperly forgiven, Kozlowski introduced another unauthorized bonus program that cost Tyco more than $55 million, Tyco alleges. Sixteen executives, including Kozlowski and Swartz, participated, Tyco said.

DIRECTORS ALSO MENTIONED

The Boies investigation also reviewed transactions that benefited Tyco board members, who have been criticized for being too lax under Kozlowski. Most of them will resign by early next year.

Many of the deals involving executives and directors were not apparent to investors until recently. Tyco director Lord Michael Ashcroft, for example, sold his Boca Raton home to Kozlowski for $2.5 million after Tyco bought Ashcroft's company, ADT, for several billion dollars in 1997.

Ashcroft has told the company that he didn't learn until two years later that a Tyco subsidiary, not Kozlowski, bought his home at market prices, Tyco said. He brought the matter to the attention of former Tyco CFO Swartz, but the transaction was never reported to shareholders, Tyco said.

Former Tyco board member Frank Walsh, who also was a close friend of Kozlowski's, leased aircraft to Tyco for several years and was paid for invoices totaling nearly $2.5 million, Tyco said. The company said Walsh won a competitive bid process.

Walsh is a major reason why Tyco received heightened scrutiny from Wall Street and the rest of the company's board. He received a $20 million payment for brokering Tyco's $9.5 billion acquisition of CIT Group Inc., which was sold this year for half that amount.

When the payment was disclosed early this year, Tyco's stock plummeted. Tyco's board in January confronted Kozlowski, who admitted he "screwed up" by arranging to pay Walsh secretly. Walsh refused to give the money back, Tyco said.

Kozlowski convinced some board members the payment was an isolated incident. Despite growing suspicion over their chairman, Tyco's board allowed him to proceed with a sweeping restructuring plan only to abandon it a few months later.

Kozlowski frequently portrayed Tyco as a lean corporate operation, but the Boies investigation accuses him of using the company's funds for a number of unjustified extravagances, including a $1,650 notebook, a $17,100 traveling toilette box, a $445 pin cushion, and $5,960 for sheets.

(Additional reporting by Philip Klein, Martha Graybow, and Mary Kelleher in New York)


09/17/02 15:23 ET



To: mmmary who wrote (10401)9/18/2002 10:28:38 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 19428
 
"INTL Risks

There are several risks for Inter-Tel.

Size Matters - Inter-Tel is a small company relative to its major competitors.
If Avaya and Nortel were to get their issues under control, they may find more
resources to allocate into Inter-Tel's focus area. As shown above, both
companies have an R&D budget a multiple of the size of Inter-Tel's. However,
both Avaya and in particular, Nortel, are in multiple businesses.

Macro-Economic - If the consumer rolls over and the economy double dips in the
second half / beginning of 2003, then basically every enterprise equipment
player will be hurt. This issue is pertinent to Inter-Tel. If the economy
rolls over, less people will be hired and less need to buy additional lines.
Also, budgets would be cut and companies expected to do some kind of an upgrade
may push out the purchases.

Convergence is another risk. Just as there was an upgrade from analog to
digital there will be an upgrade from the current circuit switched architecture
to IP. The question is will some of the data networking companies such as
Cisco have a large advantage as networks truly converge. With an IP network,
both data and voice could all go through one central network. An IP PBX phone
channel could be just an incremental blade on a router. We believe the market
is moving in that direction but it will take a very long time for something
such as this to occur. The first reason is that voice is a critical
application and most routers and IP networks can not guarantee the high level
of service needed. Secondly, there are several technical issues. For
instance, it would be difficult to incorporate such capabilities such as
conferencing and music on hold. Therefore, separate boxes would be needed to
provide such features.

Off Balance Sheet Financing - Inter-Tel typically generates approximately 25%
of its revenues from leases. The company holds some of these leases on the
balance but also sells some with recourse. On and off balance sheet, the
portfolio was approximately $252 million at the end of last quarter. We do
not believe this is a major issue as the company is adequately provisioned
(typically 4%-6%) of the portfolio. However, in any slowdown scenario, the
company could be adversely affected. Inter-Tel attempts to mitigate the
portfolio risk in several ways. The first is that the portfolio is spread over
12,000 plus customers (making the average size of the loan approximately
$20,000). Secondly, the customer base is widely spread by both geography and
end markets. Lastly, the company is conservative when estimating residual
value. Typically, under a four to five year lease agreements, the company
assumes only 10% of the initial price for residual value. If a customer ends
up defaulting, Inter-Tel can repossess the system, upgrade with new
software/some features and then resell the product to make up for at least part
of the deficit. Many of the leases are renewed after the first period, usually
resulting in a profitable revenue stream over the remaining life of the
equipment.
"