Bernard Ebbers, the former chief executive of WorldCom, was sentenced Wednesday to 25 years in prison for his role in the US$11 billion fraud that drove the once high-flying US company into the largest bankruptcy in corporate history.
Ebbers, 63, wept audibly as the sentence was read out, according to reporters in the courtroom, dabbing his eyes with a white handkerchief. He cut a figure far removed from the swaggering chief executive of the firm's heyday.
He had been found guilty in March on nine counts of fraud, conspiracy and making false filings with regulators, following a trial that lasted six weeks. Judge Barbara Jones, who handed down the sentence in a Manhattan courtroom, said: "A sentence of anything less would not reflect the seriousness of the crime."
PHOTO: EPA
The strain of the past few months clearly told on Ebbers as he grabbed a photographer's camera with both hands and forced him aside on his way into the court. He remained silent during the sentencing and left without making a statement to the media outside. He has been ordered to report to a prison in Yazoo City, Mississippi, on October 12 to begin his sentence.
The sentencing caps a remarkable saga of greed and ambition turning to desperation that has come to symbolize for many the boom and bust of the late 1990s.
Ebbers, a former milkman and basketball coach, started WorldCom as a telephone reselling service in 1983, building it into one of the leading players of the technology boom as he went on an acquisition spree with Wall Street acting as cheerleader. At its peak in 1999, WorldCom was valued at US$180 billion and Ebbers was one of a new breed of celebrity chief executives.
Things quickly started to go wrong. As the market began to disappear in 2000, WorldCom began fudging its books, wrongly classifying expenses and inflating revenues, to ensure it met Wall Street targets.
Ebbers resigned in March 2002 amid an accounting investigation. In July of that year WorldCom made the largest ever bankruptcy filing, wiping out billions of dollars of investors' cash and costing thousands of jobs.
Ebbers, a Sunday school teacher at his local Baptist church, had protested his innocence during the trial, blaming the fraud on his chief financial officer, Scott Sullivan. Sullivan had already pleaded guilty and was the government's star witness. He is to be sentenced next month.
Ebbers' lawyer, Reid Weingarten, told reporters outside the courtroom yesterday that "an innocent man got sentenced today." He said: "The problem with this case from day one was that Bernard Ebbers was transformed into a symbol, a distorted picture of corporate corruption."
He had appealed for leniency owing to Ebbers' heart condition and charitable work. He produced 169 letters in support of his client, whom he described as a "modest man" and an angel to charitable causes.
Federal prosecutors had sought a sentence of 85 years. Judge Jones said she believed that guidelines called for between 30 years and life, but reduced the sentence by five years after hearing Weingarten's arguments.
Weingarten hopes to keep Ebbers out of prison on bail pending appeal. The judge said she would accept written arguments from both sides.
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