Three WorldCom Inc executives, including former Chief Executive Officer Bernard Ebbers, and Salomon Smith Barney analyst Jack Grubman were subpoenaed by a congressional committee after the phone company was accused of fraud for concealing losses.
The House Financial Services Committee called for Ebbers, Grubman, former WorldCom Chief Financial Officer Scott Sullivan and current Chief Executive Officer John Sidgmore to testify July 8 as Congress seeks to restore trust in public companies.
"The WorldCom news dramatically underscores the need for legislative and regulatory reform," said Michael Oxley, the Ohio Republican who chairs the committee.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is alleging that the second-largest US long-distance phone company committed fraud by misreporting US$3.8 billion in expenses.
The case adds to a congressional calendar thick with investigations into companies including ImClone Systems Inc, Global Crossing Inc and Enron Corp. Congress has been weighing legislation to tighten laws on accounting and to protect workers' pensions.
"I'm concerned about the economic impact of the fact that there are some corporate leaders who have not upheld their responsibility," President George W. Bush said.
Billy Tauzin, a Louisiana Republican and chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, asked WorldCom to surrender by July 11 the audit that led to the disclosures, minutes of audit committee and board meetings, and other documents.
The SEC said it's not in discussions with WorldCom to settle fraud charges filed against the company, refuting a CNBC-TV report. The report is "flat out not true," said SEC spokeswoman Christi Harlan.
Grubman, who is being sued for allegedly misleading investors on WorldCom, cut his rating on the company to "underperform" Monday after holding a "buy" rating on the company for four years. He couldn't be reached to comment. He told CNBC in a brief interview that he was "as shocked about this as everyone else." Mary Ellen Hillery, a spokeswoman for Salomon Smith Barney, said the company "will fully cooperate with any inquiries."
The analyst is also under investigation by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who is looking into Wall Street research on WorldCom. "It did catch many people's eye that he finally issued a downgrade," Spitzer said of Grubman. "We will take a look at it [WorldCom] as it relates to analyst commentary."
WorldCom spokeswoman Julie Moore declined to comment on the committee's plan to subpoena Sidgmore. Ebbers and Sullivan couldn't be reached to comment.
"Just like the administration is reacting with appropriate fury, Congress is reacting with appropriate fury," said Scott Cleland, chief executive of Precursor Group, an independent research firm in Washington. "This is potentially the biggest white-collar crime in American history."
SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt said that the agency would try to stop WorldCom from making "extraordinary" payments, including severance payments and bonuses, to current or former executives. The SEC asked a judge to appoint a monitor to ensure that WorldCom doesn't destroy documents, Pitt said.
The SEC also ordered WorldCom to file under oath, before the stock market opens Monday, "a detailed report of all the specifics, including the relevant circumstances that led to the restatements," Pitt said. The report will be made public.
The House Financial Services panel is the first to announce hearings and subpoenas related to WorldCom.
National Taiwan University (NTU) yesterday said it disqualified a person from an entrance examination for using AI smart glasses to cheat, along with two others for making untruthful statements in their curriculum vitae. The three applicants were given null scores, Taiwan’s highest-ranked university said, calling on prospective students to be honest in the admissions process. NTU registrar Lee Hung-sen (李宏森) said that the cheating applicant wore a hat and thick-rimmed glasses to the second written exam for medical school, claiming that they felt cold. Suspicions were aroused when the applicant stared oddly at the test for long stretches while steadily bringing the paper
A magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck off the southern coast of Mindanao in the Philippines at 7:38am today, prompting the US Tsunami Warning System to issue an alert for neighboring countries, including Taiwan. The system issued a purple alert indicating a "tsunami threat." The potential threat zone includes Taiwan, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Yap and Palau. Philippine authorities were assessing the damage from the quake, with the office of civil defense seeking to verifying initial reports that 15 people had been killed and 129 injured in the region, mostly from falling debris. Arlene Hollero, disaster chief of Maasim town in the Philippines' Sarangani Province,
‘GRAY ZONE’ PRESSURE: Beijing’s activities are intended to create the deceitful impression that China has jurisdiction over the area around Taiwan, the CGA said Taiwan’s rights over its territorial waters and exclusive economic zone must not be violated by any country, the Mainland Affairs Council said yesterday, adding that it will not accept any unprovoked actions. The council issued the remarks in response to the China Coast Guard conducting maritime enforcement drills near eastern Taiwan and claiming to fully exercise China’s maritime administrative law enforcement authority. The Coast Guard Administration (CGA) has been closely monitoring the situation and is taking concrete steps to defend the nation’s sovereignty and secure its waters, the council said. China has no sovereign rights over the waters off eastern
Heavy rain is expected to affect parts of Taiwan this week, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday as a meteorologist said the active part of the annual plum rain season has started. A stationary plum rain front and southwesterly winds would bring unstable weather and abundant moisture to Taiwan from today for about a week, with the heaviest rainfall forecast for tomorrow and Wednesday, the CWA said. The agency said western and northeastern Taiwan, and mountainous areas in the east and southeast, could expect showers or thunderstorms on those two days, with localized heavy rain possible. Other parts of