Yahoo – AFP,
Vivek Nemana, 9 April 2015
![]() |
Then
chairman of India's Satyam Computer Services Limited Ramalinga Raju,
pictured
in 2008 (AFP Photo/Noah Seelam)
|
An Indian
court on Thursday sentenced the former chief of outsourcing giant Satyam to
seven years in jail over a $2.25 billion accounting fraud scandal dubbed
"India's Enron".
Byrraju
Ramalinga Raju, his brother and eight others were found guilty of manipulating
Satyam's books in a 2009 case that shook the industry and raised questions
about the country's regulators.
"All
the accused have been convicted of almost all charges," prosecutor K.
Surender told reporters outside the court in Hyderabad, capital of southern
Andhra Pradesh state.
![]() |
Byrraju
Ramalinga Raju (C), the former
chairman of outsourcing giant Satyam,
leaves the
Metropolitan Criminal Courts
in Hyderabad, on March 9, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Noah
Seelam)
|
Raju and
the others refused to comment to reporters and television crews as he was led
by a throng of officers into a police van after sentencing.
"It
goes without saying that we will appeal the judgement," one of his
lawyers, E. Uma Maheshwarao, said before his client was taken to Hyderabad's
Cherlapally Jail.
The court
imposed seven-year jail sentences and fines of 50 million rupees on Raju and
his brother following a trial in which prosecutors produced thousands of pages
of financial documents and 200-odd witnesses.
The eight
other defendants were sentenced to seven years in jail and given fines of 2.5
million rupees, according to V. Chandrasekhar, deputy inspector general of the
Central Bureau of Investigation.
"India
very rarely prosecutes corporate fraud. And this is the biggest corporate fraud
case in South Asian history. So for us, getting a conviction is a big
victory," one of the investigating officers told AFP on condition of
anonymity.
The Satyam
scandal erupted in 2009 after Raju admitted in a letter to shareholders to
overstating profits for years and inflating the company's balance sheet, a
confession that saw the company's share price plummet.
Tech
Mahindra, a unit of Indian vehicle and farm equipment manufacturer Mahindra and
Mahindra, bought Hyderabad-based Satyam in April 2009, saving it from collapse.
![]() |
File photo
of Satyam Info-City office
building in Hyderabad, taken in 2009
(AFP Photo/Noah
Seelam)
|
"The
concern was that poor performance would result in a takeover," he said in
his letter to shareholders.
"It
was like riding a tiger, not knowing how to get off without being eaten."
'Messiah
of IT'
The
confession sent shockwaves through the industry, which had put Raju's success
down to dedication and hard work in Hyderabad, an IT hub that acts as the
Indian headquarters of Google and Microsoft.
"Raju
was like the messiah of IT for Andhra Pradesh back then," said KV
Kurumanath, an editor at the Hindu BusinessLine newspaper.
"He
was looked upon as a god, and a big achiever," said Kurumanath, who has
been closely following the case.
Raju has
been out on bail since November 2011 after spending nearly three years behind
bars during the trial.
![]() |
Founder and
former Chairman of fraud-hit
Satyam Computers, B. Ramalinga Raju is
escorted
from Chenchalguda Jail in
Hyderabad, in April 2009, enroute to a
court
appearance (AFP Photo/Noah Seelam)
|
PwC said it
was "disappointed" by the verdict, and its former staff were considering
an appeal.
"As we
have said many times, there has never been any evidence presented that either
of our former partners S Gopalakrishnan or Srinivas Talluri were involved in or
were aware of the management-led fraud at Satyam," said PwC in a statement.
Raju's
lawyers had told the court that he was not responsible for the losses and that
documents filed during the trial were fabricated.
India's
equity market regulator last year slapped multi-million-dollar fines on Raju
for manipulating the firm's shares during the scandal.
But the
case raised concerns about why regulators, who were only prompted to act after
Raju confessed, failed to spot the scam earlier, along with corporate
governance issues and accounting standards.
"The
biggest thing this reveals is the failure of India's regulatory system,"
said S. Nagesh Kumar, a news analyst and former editor based in Hyderabad.
US energy
giant Enron collapsed in 2001 in the wake of massive false accounting
revelations.




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