Legal News

Former Executives of Dewey & LeBoeuf Charged for $150 Million Fraudulent Bond Offering
Download PDF
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, on Thursday, charged five former executives and finance officials of failed law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf for accounting fraud and for making and facilitating a fraudulent bond offering worth $150 million.

The SEC’s complaint was filed in federal court in Manhattan and charged the law firm’s former chairman Steven Davis, executive director Stephen DiCarmine, chief financial officer Joel Sanders, finance director Frank Canellas, and controller Tom Mullikin.

  
What
Where


Andrew J. Ceresney, director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement said, “Investors were led to believe they were purchasing bonds issued by a prestigious law firm that had weathered the financial crisis and was poised for growth.”

Ceresney further added, “Dewey & LeBoeuf’s senior-most finance personnel used a grab bag of accounting gimmicks to create that illusion, and top executives green-lighted the decision to sell $150 million in bonds to investors as a desperate grasp for cash on the basis of blatantly falsified financial results.”

According to the allegations made by the SEC the executives of the law firm had engaged in accounting fraud when the firm needed to cover the steep costs of the merger that formed the law firm and also had to withstand the vagaries of the economic recession. In fear that lenders might cut off credit lines, the management and finance officials of Dewey & LeBoeuf found was to artificially inflate income and distort financial performance on its financial statements. Then, based on false financial statistics, the law firm turned to bond markets to raise cash through a private offering.

Get JD Journal in Your Mail

Subscribe to our FREE daily news alerts and get the latest updates on the most happening events in the legal, business, and celebrity world. You also get your daily dose of humor and entertainment!!




The complaint mentioned that the fraud went back to 2008, and the firm’s profitability was inflated on paper by approximately $36 million in its 2008 financial results by using tricks of accounting. According to the SEC the culture of accounting fraud was so deep rooted in the law firm that once Canellas sent Sanders an e-mail with a list of suggested cost savings to the budget, among which was a $7.5 million line item reduction titled “Accounting Tricks.”

Davis, DiCarmine and Sanders have also been charged with a 106-count indictment at Manhattan Criminal Court by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance.





 

RELEVANT JOBS

Litigation Employment Attorney (Remote) in Burbank, CA.

USA-CA-Burbank

     We are a small and highly respected Burbank based REMOTE employment litigation d...

Apply now

Litigation Attorney

USA-CA-Torrance

​Position: Associate Attorney Firm: The Legacy Lawyers, P.C. Culture: "America First Pat...

Apply now

Litigation Attorney

USA-CA-Irvine

​Position: Associate Attorney Firm: The Legacy Lawyers, P.C. Culture: "America First Pat...

Apply now

Associate Attorney - Defense Litigation Experience

USA-TX-Dallas

Galloway\'s Dallas office is seeking an Associate Attorneys with 1 - 2 years of experience...

Apply now

BCG FEATURED JOB

Locations:

Keyword:



Search Now

Education Law Attorney

USA-CA-El Segundo

El Segundo office of a BCG Attorney Search Top Ranked Law Firm seeks an education law attorney with ...

Apply Now

Education Law Attorney

USA-CA-Carlsbad

Carlsbad office of a BCG Attorney Search Top Ranked Law Firm seeks an education law attorney with 4-...

Apply Now

Education Law and Public Entity Attorney

USA-CA-El Segundo

El Segundo office of a BCG Attorney Search Top Ranked Law Firm seeks an education law and public ent...

Apply Now

Most Popular

SEARCH IN ARCHIVE

To Top