Former Apple CFO to repay $3.5M in options settlement with SEC
Apple Inc.'s former chief financial officer Fred Anderson has settled with the Securities and Exchange Commission on allegations that he backdated stock options during his tenure at the company, the Wall Street Journal reported on its website Monday evening.
The paper cited unnamed sources in saying Anderson agreed to a fine of about $150,000 and to repay option gains of about $3.5 million, but won't admit to any wrongdoing.
The SEC had its sights set on Anderson along with Apple's former General Counsel Nancy Heinen for their part in a January 2001 option grant approved by Apple chief executive Jobs for top Apple executives," the Mercury News reported earlier on Monday. Both Anderson and Heinen received options under that grant, the report stated.
The Journal on Monday evening reported that the SEC is expected to pursue a civil lawsuit against Heinen. She'll be accused of self-dealing on the aforementioned grant in addition to charges relating to her role in a separate grant of 7.5 million options awarded to Jobs that were backdated through falsified minutes of a board meeting that did not occur.
The former top Apple legal aid plans to contest the charges, the paper said.
The paper cited unnamed sources in saying Anderson agreed to a fine of about $150,000 and to repay option gains of about $3.5 million, but won't admit to any wrongdoing.
The SEC had its sights set on Anderson along with Apple's former General Counsel Nancy Heinen for their part in a January 2001 option grant approved by Apple chief executive Jobs for top Apple executives," the Mercury News reported earlier on Monday. Both Anderson and Heinen received options under that grant, the report stated.
The Journal on Monday evening reported that the SEC is expected to pursue a civil lawsuit against Heinen. She'll be accused of self-dealing on the aforementioned grant in addition to charges relating to her role in a separate grant of 7.5 million options awarded to Jobs that were backdated through falsified minutes of a board meeting that did not occur.
The former top Apple legal aid plans to contest the charges, the paper said.
Comments
This options debacle is becoming tiring.
You can say that again.
This options debacle is becoming tiring.
You can say that again.
Yeah, looks like the stock market is over it too. AAPL has risen to about $93.50 and I think is finally ready to march on past $100.
One scapegoat down, (Fred), another to go (Nancy Heinen). Let the government have their pound(s) of flesh, spank some asses, and let's get on with it !!
This and what should be a pretty decent earnings release on Wednesday (US Eastern 5pm) 25th, should be good...
This options debacle is becoming tiring.
You can say that again.
This options debacle is becoming tiring.
This options debacle is becoming tiring.
You're not me.
You're not me.
You're not trying to short AAPL, are you?
@ 3% interest that had made him $680k!!!!
in apple stock much much more than that...
$150k fine is not enuff... also jail time should have been in the deal.... damn those blood suckers... gets to go with no jail time and keeps the interest... not really a punishment...
what about the interests from those 3.5 million???
@ 3% interest that had made him $680k!!!!
in apple stock much much more than that...
$150k fine is not enuff... also jail time should have been in the deal.... damn those blood suckers... gets to go with no jail time and keeps the interest... not really a punishment...
Don't forget in America after you go to jail, you become more famous, then you come out and do your book tour, talk shows, etc. then you make more money ...!!
Get rich or die trying, bro. Word.
They can COMFORTABLY afford all the costs incurred. So no sweat.
That is exactly why they weren't punished harshly enough.
Like I said in the previous thread... Just a slap on the wrists.
Makes me sick.
-Clive
That is exactly why they weren't punished harshly enough.
Like I said in the previous thread... Just a slap on the wrists.
Makes me sick.
-Clive
But he wasn't found guilty. He didn't go to trial. He settled.
So feel sick. That's justice. It's called innocent until proven guilty.
That is exactly why they weren't punished harshly enough.
Like I said in the previous thread... Just a slap on the wrists.
Makes me sick.
-Clive
You do realize that if they punished all parties involved in all the options scandals to the letter of the law the technology industry in the US would collapse right? ALL tech companies did this to some extent between 1995-2005. It wasn't illegal and most people weren't aware of the accounting implications if not properly reported.
You do realize that if they punished all parties involved in all the options scandals to the letter of the law the technology industry in the US would collapse right? ALL tech companies did this to some extent between 1995-2005. It wasn't illegal and most people weren't aware of the accounting implications if not properly reported.
Collapse? The industry would still be around. Just those multi-grillionaires would have a few less dollars.
If everyone was punished to the letter of the law, the courts would be so clogged that the estates of the people involved would be the ones getting punished.
Collapse? The industry would still be around. Just those multi-grillionaires would have a few less dollars.
If everyone was punished to the letter of the law, the courts would be so clogged that the estates of the people involved would be the ones getting punished.
That and their companies would all go down with them. This is why the options scandal is slowly disappearing unlike the Enron scandals. This one is MUCH more widespread. Too widespread for the government to actually do anything about it.