Fomer Monster COO Convicted of Stock Accounting Fraud
By wchung | 12 May, 2009
The former president and chief operating officer of Monster Worldwide has been convicted in New York of wrongfully backdating millions of dollars’ worth of employee stock option grants.
A jury on Tuesday found James Treacy of Glen Rock, N.J., guilty of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, filing false reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission, making false statements to auditors and falsifying books and records.
Prosecutors say the backdated option grants caused the company to understate expenses by $339 million from 1997 to 2005.
They say Treacy, 51, received more than a million options himself, some of which were improperly set to dates when the company’s stock traded at a lower price. He was alleged to have gained more than $24 million.
Stock option backdating isn’t necessarily illegal as long as the stock options are properly recorded on the company’s books. But if the accounting of the perks is bungled, it can exaggerate corporate profits and improperly lower taxes.
Tracy faces up to 25 years in prison when he is sentenced Aug. 25.
Monster, which operates job Web site Monster.com, provides online recruitment services to businesses, government agencies, educational institutions and consumers.
5/12/2009 11:28 PM NEW YORK (AP)
Recent Articles
- NASA Moon Astronauts to Wear Prada Underwear
- China Dominates Low-Carbon Industrial Projects with US Lagging Badly
- The 10 Most Spectacularly Credible UFO Sightings of the Past 12 Months
- OpenAI Plans ChatGPT 'Superapp' Overhaul Ahead of IPO
- Your Answers to These 7 Questions Will Reveal Whether You're Sane or a Closet Lunatic
- US Oil Companies Profit from Strait of Hormuz Closure Says Russian Oil CEO
- Trump Faces New Republican Resistance in Congress as Midterms Approach
- What Japan Gets Right About Everyday Life
- SpaceX IPO Already Two Times Oversubscribed
- SpaceX Signs Google As AI Compute Client After Landing Anthropic
