CA's Boxing Match
His Hands Finally on 23 Cartons of Files, Millionaire Gadfly Presses Fight to Nullify Shareholder
Pact
Newsday
December 2, 2005
Once, even federal investigators could not get their hands on the elusive 23 boxes of contracts that
ultimately formed a cornerstone of the government's towering accounting fraud and obstruction-ofjustice
case against former CA executives.
Today, in a twist of fate, they are in the hands of longtime CA gadfly, Sam Wyly, one of the first to
publicly accuse the company of corporate misdeeds in 2001.
After months of legal wrangling, lawyers for Wyly at the firm Bickel & Brewer gained access and
have been poring over the once long-lost documents, which they say could have wide legal implications
beyond the misdeeds detailed in the government's case.
“This is outrageous stuff, these 23 boxes,” said William Brewer, the firm's co-founder and the attorney
overseeing the case for Wyly. Though his aim is to pursue the bonuses given to top former CA
officials, Brewer suggested legal options beyond the case that could include re-examining Wyly's
2000 sale of Sterling Software to CA, and a review of what CA clients may have known about the
wrongdoing.
Wyly's lawyers have analyzed the timing of backdated contracts and compared it to the hundreds of
millions in bonuses awarded to former executives including former chairman Charles Wang, former
chief executive Sanjay Kumar and current executive vice president Russell Artzt. Only Kumar has
been formally charged with securities fraud and obstruction of justice in the case, and he has denied
wrongdoing.
“It's knockout proof there are billions of dollars of damage to this class,” Brewer said. (CA issued 5.7
million shares and created a $225-million restitution fund to settle shareholder claims and receive a
deferred prosecution agreement.)
In a statement yesterday, Islandia-based CA accused Wyly's lawyers of misusing “the media to rehash
old charges” and called the suggestion that it had “improperly resisted” turning over documents
simply ridiculous.
CA's attorneys had opposed turning over the boxes, arguing Wyly's court actions have led to unnecessary
expense and that the federal government was best equipped to pursue so-called ill-gotten
gains from wrongdoers.
A judge ordered CA to release the boxes in June and Brewer was finally granted access to the documents
in July.
“What was funny was, they didn't want to give it to us in 23 boxes,” Brewer said of outside lawyers
for CA. “I said, ‘No, no, no, no. I want to see the 23 boxes. I want to see the originals, copied in exactly
that form.’ I wanted there to be no mistaking the board and the lawyers had access to a sea of
improperly timed contracts. This was no mere mistake.”
CA called the claim “absolutely false” and said it “followed correct procedures” in making the documents
available.
Wyly has been waging an expensive legal battle to invalidate part of the 2003 shareholder settlement
that relieved board members and executives past and present of legal liability in the company's
acknowledged accounting fraud. Brewer has been arguing that the discovery of the 23 boxes
in September 2003 proves that board members, lawyers and executives understood far more of the
obstruction and fraud when they finalized the shareholder settlement the following December. He
said no mention was ever made to the judge overseeing the settlement or to shareholders' attorneys
about the 23 boxes.
“The judge approved the settlement based on an incomplete record,” Brewer said.
Still, an August filing by federal prosecutors disputes the boxes' significance, and Brewers' claims,
calling the notion that it constitutes a fraud upon the court “simply preposterous.”
Prosecutors, who have opposed Wyly's discovery requests pending completion of the probe, cite a
CA press release in August 2003 that acknowledged prematurely booked revenue.
CA, in its statement, said information from the boxes was “fully disclosed” in the press release, more
than two months before a December 2003 hearing clearing the settlement.
The first public mention of the discovery of the 23 boxes outside CA came in a Sept. 24, 2004, Wall
Street Journal report. In that article, a lawyer investigating the accounting fraud for the CA board's
audit committee, Robert Giuffra of the firm Sullivan & Cromwell, was quoted as saying, “Houston, we
have a problem,” to CA board member Walter Schuetze upon discovering the boxes. The revelation
was an impetus for Wyly's suit.
The boxes contain contracts with dozens of big CA clients that provided evidence of some of the
most egregious timing manipulations in the CA case, Brewer said. Among clients: Pitney Bowes, Intel
Corp., American Express, Puerto Rico Telephone Co., Paine Webber Inc., R.J. Reynolds, and Citigroup -
Salomon Smith Barney. None has been accused of any wrongdoing. The $115-million contract
with Citigroup, according to Brewer's firm, was booked in the Sept. 30, 1999, quarter, but one
document indicates it had been faxed Oct. 5.
CA declined to comment on customer contracts.
What is more, said Brewer, the company's initial resistance to his efforts to examine the 23 boxes
and pursue his case have proved baffling at a time when CA is pursing a new image to distance itself
from the past.
“There are people on this board who are still fighting the right of the [shareholders] to be reimbursed
for their losses, and who would prefer to see the wrongdoers get away scot-free,” Brewer
said.
CA, in its statement, said the board has “consistently represented the interests of shareholders.”
It pointed to the independent probe that uncovered the wrongdoing, the $225-million restitution
fund and its efforts in “actively aiding the government in its attempts to recoup ill-gotten gains from
those responsible.”
But Brewer suggested that the company needs to go farther. “I believe you don't clean house until
you get rid of [chairman Lewis] Ranieri, [board member Alfonse] D'Amato and anybody on the board
from September of 2003 to the date of the restatement,” he said.