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Today in Finance for May 23, 2006

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Seven National Century Execs Indicted

Executives at the failed health-care finance company ''bilked investors by building a financial house of cards with deception, sleight-of-hand financing, and accounting misdeeds,'' according to the prosecutor.

May 22, 2006

Seven former executives of National Century Financial Enterprises have been indicted for their role in a nearly $3 billion fraud at the failed health-care finance company.

The bankruptcy of National Century — which securitized medical accounts receivable that it had purchased from medical providers — also forced 275 health-care providers to file for bankruptcy protection, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission civil complaint filed last December against four of the executives.

The 60-count indictment, brought by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Ohio, includes charges of conspiracy, securities fraud, wire fraud, mail fraud, and money laundering. The individuals are accused of lying about how investors' funds would be used, diverting the funds, hiding the shortfall by moving money back and forth between subsidiaries' bank accounts, and falsifying reports and records to cover up the scheme.

"An exhaustive investigation by the FBI, IRS, Postal Inspectors, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents found evidence that the company executives bilked investors by building a financial house of cards with deception, sleight-of-hand financing, and accounting misdeeds," said U.S. Attorney Gregory Lockhart, in a statement.

The former executives named in the indictment are chief executive officer Lance Poulsen; vice chairman Rebecca Parrett; chief operating officer Donald Ayers; director of securitizations Roger Faulkenberry; chief financial officer Randolph Speer; vice president in charge of client development James Dierker; and vice president of securitizations Jon Beacham.

Poulsen, Parrett, Ayers, and Speer also face SEC civil charges.

Each of the money laundering and money laundering conspiracy counts carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a fine of $500,000; the fraud and other conspiracy counts each carry a maximum between 5 and 20 years and a fine of $250,000. Prosecutors are also seeking the forfeiture of about $2 billion in assets.


Reader CommentsDisplaying 3 of 3

  • Kevin O'Hagen

    May 23, 2006 9:11 AM ET

    Prior to SOx

    What else will it take? Well, since NCFE filed for bankruptcy in November 2002, and SOx was implemented after that, … more

  • David Tompos

    May 23, 2006 8:28 AM ET

    SOx?

    Another expensive, painful failure in ethics by those in control of a large company. Sarbanes-Oxley alone cannot force … more

  • Jean Marshall

    May 22, 2006 11:16 PM ET

    WHO ELSE WAS HURT?

    I am concerned to read about one of these cases where it shows how much the employees were hurt, the clients, the … more

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