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  • Sanjay Kumar (ex-CEO of Computer Associates) to plead guilty to fraud

    04/24/2006 10:30:21 AM PDT · by Blue Jays · 23 replies · 1,220+ views
    Wall Street Journal Interactive ^ | April 24, 2006 | William Bulkeley and Paul Davies
    Former CA Chief To Plead Guilty By William M. Bulkeley & Paul Davies April 24, 2006 12:59 p.m. Sanjay Kumar, former chief executive officer of Computer Associates International Inc., is expected to plead guilty to financial fraud charges later today. People familiar with the situation said Mr. Kumar and his co-defendant Stephen Richards, a former top sales executive, will appear in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn today at 2 p.m. Details of the expected guilty pleas weren't immediately available. Lawyers for Messrs. Kumar and Richards couldn't be reached for comment. Once the protégé of CA founder Charles Wang, Mr. Kumar...
  • Wall Street Bonuses Hit $21.5 Billion

    01/11/2006 5:58:18 PM PST · by ARealMothersSonForever · 186 replies · 1,698+ views
    AP via Yahoooooo ^ | January 11, 2006
    NEW YORK - Bonuses at Wall Street firms climbed to a projected record of $21.5 billion last year as revenue grew, according to the New York state comptroller's office. Comptroller Alan Hevesi said Wednesday that 2005's bonus tally was $2 billion more than the old record, which was set in 2000. In 2004, Wall Street bonuses came to an estimated $18.6 billion. Last year's average bonus was pegged at $125,500, also a record, Hevesi said. Revenue at Wall Street firms rose 44.5 percent through the first three quarters of 2005, climbing to the highest level since 2000, the year when...
  • Ebbers sentenced to 25 years in prison

    07/13/2005 9:00:37 AM PDT · by Imani · 67 replies · 2,075+ views
    MSNBC ^ | 07/13/2005 | Staff
    Former Worldcom Chief Executive Bernard Ebbers was handed a 25-year prison term for directing the biggest accounting fraud in corporate history, leaving thousands of investors empty-handed. Ebbers, who built a small Mississippi-based long distance company into a telecommunications powerhouse, was found guilty on March 15 on all charges — one count of conspiracy, one count of securities fraud and seven counts of false regulatory filings. But he could also be a charming and folksy CEO, who preferred cowboy boots to suits, opened shareholder meetings with a prayer, ate lunch in the cafeteria and ran a company that had become a...