The 10 Worst Corporate Accounting Scandals of All Time
If there is one theme to rival terrorism for defining the last
decade-and-a-half, it would have to be corporate greed and
malfeasance. Many of the biggest corporate accounting scandals in
history happened during that time. Here's a chronological look back
at some of the worst examples.
Waste Management Scandal (1998)
- Company: Houston-based publicly traded waste management
company
- What happened: Reported $1.7 billion in fake earnings.
- Main players: Founder/CEO/Chairman Dean L. Buntrock and other
top executives; Arthur Andersen Company (auditors)
- How they did it: The company allegedly falsely increased the
depreciation time length for their property, plant and equipment on
the balance sheets.
- How they got caught: A new CEO and management team went through
the books.
- Penalties: Settled a shareholder class-action suit for $457
million. SEC fined ArthurAndersen $7 million.
- Fun fact: After the scandal, new CEO A. Maurice Meyers set up
an anonymous company hotline where employees could report dishonest
or improper behavior.
Enron Scandal (2001)
- Company: Houston-based commodities, energy and service
corporation
- What happened: Shareholders lost $74 billion, thousands of
employees and investors lost their retirement accounts, and many
employees lost their jobs.
- Main players: CEO Jeff Skilling and former CEO Ken Lay.
- How they did it: Kept huge debts off balance sheets.
- How they got caught: Turned in by internal whistleblower
Sherron Watkins; high stock prices fueled external suspicions.
- Penalties: Lay died before serving time; Skilling got 24 years
in prison. The company filed for bankruptcy. Arthur Andersen was
found guilty of fudging Enron's accounts.
- Fun fact: Fortune Magazine named Enron "America's Most
Innovative Company" 6 years in a row prior to the scandal.
WorldCom Scandal (2002)
- Company: Telecommunications company; now MCI, Inc.
- What happened: Inflated assets by as much as $11 billion,
leading to 30,000 lost jobs and $180 billion in losses for
investors.
- Main player: CEO Bernie Ebbers
- How he did it: Underreported line costs by capitalizing rather
than expensing and inflated revenues with fake accounting
entries.
- How he got caught: WorldCom's internal auditing department
uncovered $3.8 billion of fraud.
- Penalties: CFO was fired, controller resigned, and the company
filed for bankruptcy. Ebbers sentenced to 25 years for fraud,
conspiracy and filing false documents with regulators.
- Fun fact: Within weeks of the scandal, Congress passed the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act, introducing the most sweeping set of new
business regulations since the 1930s.
Tyco Scandal (2002)
- Company: New Jersey-based blue-chip Swiss security
systems.
- What happened: CEO and CFO stole $150 million and inflated
company income by $500 million.
- Main players: CEO Dennis Kozlowski and former CFO Mark
Swartz.
- How they did it: Siphoned money through unapproved loans and
fraudulent stock sales. Money was smuggled out of company disguised
as executive bonuses or benefits.
- How they got caught: SEC and Manhattan D.A. investigations
uncovered questionable accounting practices, including large loans
made to Kozlowski that were then forgiven.
- Penalties: Kozlowski and Swartz were sentenced to 8-25 years in
prison. A class-action lawsuit forced Tyco to pay $2.92 billion to
investors.
- Fun fact: At the height of the scandal Kozlowski threw a $2
million birthday party for his wife on a Mediterranean island,
complete with a Jimmy Buffet performance.
HealthSouth Scandal (2003)
- Company: Largest publicly traded health care company in the
U.S.
- What happened: Earnings numbers were allegedly inflated $1.4
billion to meet stockholder expectations.
- Main player: CEO Richard Scrushy.
- How he did it: Allegedly told underlings to make up numbers and
transactions from 1996-2003.
- How he got caught: Sold $75 million in stock a day before the
company posted a huge loss, triggering SEC suspicions.
- Penalties: Scrushy was acquitted of all 36 counts of accounting
fraud, but convicted of bribing the governor of Alabama, leading to
a 7-year prison sentence.
- Fun fact: Scrushy now works as a motivational speaker and
maintains his innocence.
Freddie Mac (2003)
- Company: Federally backed mortgage-financing giant.
- What happened: $5 billion in earnings were misstated.
- Main players: President/COO David Glenn, Chairman/CEO Leland
Brendsel, ex-CFO Vaughn Clarke, former senior VPs Robert Dean and
Nazir Dossani.
- How they did it: Intentionally misstated and understated
earnings on the books.
- How they got caught: An SEC investigation.
- Penalties: $125 million in fines and the firing of Glenn,
Clarke and Brendsel.
- Fun fact: 1 year later, the other federally backed mortgage
financing company, Fannie Mae, was caught in an equally stunning
accounting scandal.
American International Group (AIG) Scandal (2005)
- Company: Multinational insurance corporation.
- What happened: Massive accounting fraud to the tune of $3.9
billion was alleged, along with bid-rigging and stock price
manipulation.
- Main player: CEO Hank Greenberg.
- How he did it: Allegedly booked loans as revenue, steered
clients to insurers with whom AIG had payoff agreements, and told
traders to inflate AIG stock price.
- How he got caught: SEC regulator investigations, possibly
tipped off by a whistleblower.
- Penalties: Settled with the SEC for $10 million in 2003 and
$1.64 billion in 2006, with a Louisiana pension fund for $115
million, and with 3 Ohio pension funds for $725 million. Greenberg
was fired, but has faced no criminal charges.
- Fun fact: After posting the largest quarterly corporate loss in
history in 2008 ($61.7 billion) and getting bailed out with
taxpayer dollars, AIG execs rewarded themselves with over $165
million in bonuses.
Lehman Brothers Scandal (2008)
- Company: Global financial services firm.
- What happened: Hid over $50 billion in loans disguised as
sales.
- Main players: Lehman executives and the company's auditors,
Ernst & Young.
- How they did it: Allegedly sold toxic assets to Cayman Island
banks with the understanding that they would be bought back
eventually. Created the impression Lehman had $50 billion more cash
and $50 billion less in toxic assets than it really did.
- How they got caught: Went bankrupt.
- Penalties: Forced into the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history.
SEC didn't prosecute due to lack of evidence.
- Fun fact: In 2007 Lehman Brothers was ranked the #1 "Most
Admired Securities Firm" by Fortune Magazine.
Bernie Madoff Scandal (2008)
- Company: Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC was a Wall
Street investment firm founded by Madoff.
- What happened: Tricked investors out of $64.8 billion through
the largest Ponzi scheme in history.
- Main players: Bernie Madoff, his accountant, David Friehling,
and Frank DiPascalli.
- How they did it: Investors were paid returns out of their own
money or that of other investors rather than from profits.
- How they got caught: Madoff told his sons about his scheme and
they reported him to the SEC. He was arrested the next day.
- Penalties: 150 years in prison for Madoff + $170 billion
restitution. Prison time for Friehling and DiPascalli.
- Fun fact: Madoff's fraud was revealed just months after the
2008 U.S. financial collapse.
Satyam Scandal (2009)
- Company: Indian IT services and back-office accounting
firm.
- What happened: Falsely boosted revenue by $1.5 billion.
- Main player: Founder/Chairman Ramalinga Raju.
- How he did it: Falsified revenues, margins and cash balances to
the tune of 50 billion rupees.
- How he got caught: Admitted the fraud in a letter to the
company's board of directors.
- Penalties: Raju and his brother charged with breach of trust,
conspiracy, cheating and falsification of records. Released after
the Central Bureau of Investigation failed to file charges on
time.
- Fun fact: In 2011 Ramalinga Raju's wife published a book of his
existentialist, free-verse poetry.