
Two others charged as Time Warner boss escapes the dock
By Jo Best
Published: 12 August 2004 11:30 BST
Former AOL chairman Steve Case has been ordered to appear in court over accusations he was deliberately dishonest about the ISP's ad revenues before its merger with entertainment giant Time Warner.
Other AOL execs as well as Case are facing charges: Joesph Ripp, ex-CFO, and Gerald Levin, ex-CEO of AOL Time Warner. The three were originally brought to court in May over the issue, along with the current chairman of Time Warner, Richard Parson. Parson has not been charged this time.
The accusations concern the monies AOL was to bring in from online ad spending. Case is accused of knowing that the market in internet ads would tumble sharply while publicly maintaining there was nothing to worry about in order to boost the company's shares.
According to court filings, Case denies the charges.
Case recently sold some of his stock in Time Warner, for the first time since he stepped down as AOL chairman last year. He netted around $1.7m from the sale.
The merger of AOL and Time Warner has gone down as one of the most lavish - and unsuccessful - in the short history of the internet. The two companies announced their union in 2000 at a cost of $350bn to create AOL Time Warner.
AOL's fortunes floundered with the dot-com crash, with the ISP haemorrhaging cash and subscribers. The two parted names last year when Time Warner shed AOL from its official title and stock ticker.
Im currently working with an investment bank in the City to recruit a support analyst into their Stock Lending business. The role will involve ...
An exciting opportunity for a Systems Support Analyst skilled in Windows, VMWare, Citrix and AD to provide 2nd line support for a highly reputable ...
Systems Administrator Team Leader MCSE, AD, Exchange, London 45k My client is recognised globally as a market leader is currently recruiting for a ...
CIO Agenda 2008
The exclusive silicon.com CIO Agenda 2008 survey looks at the CIO's tech shopping list for the year, examines whether IT budgets are rising or falling and reveals what the pain points are for tech chiefs this year. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Natasha Lomas RIM co-CEO: Qwerty is the next big thing Q&A: Mike Lazaridis, on why smart phones - and keyboards - are the future...
Howard Greenfield Tech Futures: The talkification of the web A software switch gives browsers a voice...