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Ebbers of WorldCom sentenced to 25 years

BB73

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Now here's a sentence I approve of. It's about time that the 'white-collar' criminals get serious jail time. This guy cheated people out of a shitload of millions of dollars. I don't care that it's non-violent crime, when it's worth so much money the sentencing has to be a serious deterrent to the next bastard considering a similar type of swindling.

msnbc

Ebbers sentenced to 25 years in prison
Ex-WorldCom CEO guilty of directing biggest accounting fraud

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</TD><TD vAlign=bottom width="99%">Former CEO of WorldCom Bernard Ebbers, center, leaves Manhattan federal court with his wife Kristie after being sentenced for his role in the collapse of WorldCom in an epic accounting fraud.
</TD></TR><TR><TD>Mary Altaffer / AP
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NEW YORK - Weeping in court as he learned his fate, former WorldCom boss Bernard Ebbers was sentenced to 25 years in prison Wednesday for leading the largest corporate fraud in U.S. history.

It was the toughest sentence imposed on an executive since the fall of Enron in 2001 touched off a record-breaking wave of business scandals.

Even with possible time off for good behavior, Ebbers, 63 and with what his lawyers describe as serious heart problems, would remain locked up until 2027, when he would be 85.

The sentence came four months after Ebbers was convicted of overseeing the $11 billion WorldCom fraud — much of it a pattern of chalking up expenses as long-term capital expenditures, which are classified as assets.

CNBC and other news organizations originally reported the sentence as between 30 years and life in prison. However, Ebbers’ attorneys were allowed to speak before the final sentence was handed down and the judge ultimately decided to render a final, 25-year verdict.

Ebbers, an imposingly tall man with buzzed white hair, leaned forward in his chair and cried, sniffling audibly, after Judge Barbara Jones of U.S. District Court in Manhattan read his penalty.

“I find that a sentence of anything less would not reflect the seriousness of this crime,” the judge said.

As a packed courtroom emptied after the hearing, Ebbers’ wife, Kristie, who had cried quietly during the hearing, walked up to the defense table and embraced her husband tightly. Ebbers did not speak to reporters.

It was just more than three years ago that the fraud at WorldCom began to come to light, reducing shares of stock once worth more than $60 to mere pennies. Billions of dollars in market value vanished.
Mississippi-based WorldCom filed for bankruptcy — also the largest in U.S. history — in the summer of 2002. It has since re-emerged under the name MCI Inc., with headquarters in Ashburn, Va.

Gino Cavallo, an MCI service consultant who also worked for years at WorldCom, lost tens of thousands of dollars in retirement money in the fraud. He attended the sentencing and said he was pleased.

“The man’s 63,” Cavallo told reporters. “He’s going to die in jail. How much sterner could you get?”

The sentence completed a staggering fall for Ebbers, whose homespun Mississippi manner and hard-charging business style earned him status as an admired chief executive — and the nickname Telecom Cowboy.

The former basketball coach helped start a small long distance reselling business in the early 1980s, then gradually built it into a business titan by swallowing ever-larger companies, eventually even MCI.

Jones ordered Ebbers to report to prison Oct. 12, and said she would recommend that federal prisons officials assign him to Yazoo City, Miss., so his family could see him easily.

But the judge said she would take written arguments over the next six weeks on whether she should allow Ebbers to remain out of prison while he appeals his conviction, a process likely to take at least a year.
 
BuckinMichigan said:
Agree with the sentence. The only thing that bothers me is he may spend quite a bit of time contesting the sentence before he actually does any prison time.
Yep, his ass needs to be in jail during the appeal. Talk about a flight risk.
 
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BB73 said:
Yep, his ass needs to be in jail during the appeal. Talk about a flight risk.
I agree with the sentencing and he will surely rot in jail.

Something like this had to happen - people needed to learn NOT to put all their eggs in one basket. Hopefully blue-collar folks learned something from this too.
 
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