MCI says Oklahoma criminal charges punish customers
Telecommunications giant MCI has responded to 15 felony counts filed against it and six former officers Wednesday by the Oklahoma attorney general, saying the action would punish the company and its customers as it tries to finish bankruptcy proceedings and put its past fraud behind it.
The Oklahoma charges, 15 counts of violating the state Securities Act filed in Oklahoma County District Court, shouldn't have an effect on the MCI bankruptcy process, Stasia Kelly, MCI's general counsel, said in a statement. MCI, still officially known by its prebankruptcy name WorldCom Inc., has a confirmation hearing scheduled to start Sept. 8 in federal Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.
MCI intends to cooperate fully with the Oklahoma attorney general, Kelly said. "Today's action against the company would only punish our 20 million customers and 55,000 employees -- 2,000 of which work in Oklahoma," Kelly added in the statement. "MCI has made tremendous progress over the past year and we are working hard to put our house in order. MCI has, and continues to, cooperate with all investigations while implementing sweeping internal reforms."
MCI is working with a corporate monitor, former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Richard Breeden, to ensure the company does not again create a corporate fraud scandal, Kelly said. Breeden filed a report Tuesday calling on MCI to make 78 changes in its corporate governance.
"Our new management team and board of directors ... are committed to doing all the right things to ensure what happened in the past can never happen again," Kelly said in the statement.
Oklahoma Attorney General Drew Edmondson said in a statement that he believes the Oklahoma charges are the first criminal action against MCI in the U.S. MCI filed for bankruptcy in July 2002 after revelations of a multibillion-dollar accounting fraud scandal, and the Oklahoma charges allege the crimes happened between October 2000 and March 2001. In addition to charging the company with securities fraud, Edmondson named six former MCI executives, including former chief executive officer Bernard Ebbers.
Ebbers' lawyer, Reid Weingarten of Steptoe and Johnson LLP in Washington, D.C., said he expects that his client will be "fully exonerated" because federal authorities have investigated Ebbers and brought no charges. "This is not because of any lack of prosecutorial zeal; rather, it is because of a total lack of any evidence that Mr. Ebbers committed crimes," Weingarten said in a statement. "It is not apparent from the charging document, which contains no specific allegations of wrongdoing by Bernard Ebbers, what the local Oklahoma authorities think they have uncovered that the federal authorities have overlooked."
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