Hot topics close

Tech Tycoon Lynch Called ‘Massive Fraud’ Mastermind by US | Mint

Tech Tycoon Lynch Called Massive Fraud Mastermind by US  Mint
UK tech tycoon Mike Lynch masterminded a “massive fraud” to dupe Hewlett Packard Co. into buying his software startup for $11 billion, a US prosecutor told a jury.

(Bloomberg) -- UK tech tycoon Mike Lynch masterminded a “massive fraud" to dupe Hewlett Packard Co. into buying his software startup for $11 billion, a US prosecutor told a jury.

Lynch’s Autonomy Corp. used a number of accounting tricks to make its revenue growth appear better than it was, such as back-dating contracts, pretending to ship goods and overpaying for unnecessary services so vendors would then buy Autonomy products, Assistant US Attorney Adam Reeves said in his opening argument Monday at a trial in San Francisco federal court.

It would cap a remarkable downfall for Lynch if he’s convicted in the criminal trial that’s scheduled to go for three months. He was the darling of the UK’s tech industry before his 2011 sale of Autonomy, which was then the nation’s second-largest software company.

The trial will feature much of the same evidence and witness testimony that helped Hewlett Packard persuade a London judge to conclude in 2022 in a civil trial that Lynch and Autonomy’s former finance chief Sushovan Hussain inflated the startup’s revenue to pull off the sale. Hussain was convicted of accounting fraud in 2018 by a San Francisco jury and sentenced to five years in prison.

“You will learn that these deals made no sense unless you were trying to falsely inflate your revenue," Reeves said. He also argued that Lynch’s co-defendant Stephen Chamberlain was in charge of lying to auditors to cover up the fraud.

Lynch’s lawyer, Reid Weingarten, countered in his opening that the government’s narrative paints a black-and-white picture and “that ain’t the way the world works." 

The alleged backdating of contracts, for example, was “benign" and other examples of the alleged fraud were “nothing other than normal business done by Mike Lynch," Weingarten told the jury.

Read More: Fallen Tech Star Lynch in Fight to Avoid US Prison for Fraud 

Lynch, who was extradited to the US last year, is charged with 14 counts of wire fraud, one count of securities fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The most serious charge carries a maximum 25-year prison term if he’s convicted. 

The entrepreneur has argued that he was scapegoated for the $8.8 billion write-down Hewlett Packard took the year after the acquisition — which he claims was really the Silicon Valley giant’s own fault.

“When HP bought Autonomy, Autonomy was rated as a $6 billion business by the market," Weingarten said Monday. “HP, because they were in such desperate shape — they so needed to do something — paid over $11 billion."

While the government sought to portray Autonomy as a flailing business, Weingarten said the company’s profits, cash and stock price were all on the rise before the sale and the company always had about $1 billion in cash in the bank. Its software sold like “hot cakes," he said.

The defense lawyer also told jurors Lynch was “not an accountant, not interested in accounting" and that it’s not true he was “omnipotent" at Autonomy. Hussain made “virtually all the accounting decisions the government challenges," Weingarten said. Lynch will testify in his own defense, the attorney said. 

The case will likely hinge on showing what Lynch knew and when he knew it, Michael Cusumano, a professor and deputy dean at Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management, said ahead of the trial. He said he expects that Lynch will pin the blame on his CFO and accounting team.

“In my experience, though, CEOs are quite aware of these things," Cusumano said.

The case is US v. Lynch, 18-cr-00577, US District Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco).

(Updates with defense lawyer’s arguments.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Unlock a world of Benefits! From insightful newsletters to real-time stock tracking, breaking news and a personalized newsfeed – it's all here, just a click away! Login Now!

Related Premium Stories

Catch all the Business News, Market News, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint. Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates.
More Less

Published: 19 Mar 2024, 01:38 AM IST

Topics You May Be Interested In
Similar news
News Archive
  • This Is Going to Hurt
    This Is Going to Hurt
    This Is Going to Hurt review: Ben Whishaw shines as spiky but golden-hearted doctor Adam Kay
    8 Feb 2022
    8
  • November
    November
    Residents encouraged to chat more for mental health this November
    1 Nov 2023
    6
  • Stout
    Stout
    IN YOUR PRIME: What is stout?
    5 Mar 2022
    3
  • Haemophilia
    Haemophilia
    ‘My mum gave the injections that killed my brothers’: how UK’s infected blood scandal has torn lives apart
    28 Apr 2024
    9
  • ON1
    ON1
    You don't get much in life for free as a photographer so take advantage of this ON1 Effects limited offer
    21 Jan 2024
    1
  • Vitamin K
    Vitamin K
    Low vitamin K may reduce mobility in older adults
    14 Jun 2019
    2