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Former Satyam Chairman, B. Ramalinga Raju, Arrested

OMER FAROOQ   01/ 9/09 02:50 PM ET   AP

Satyam

HYDERABAD, India — Indian police on Friday arrested B. Ramalinga Raju, the founder and former chairman of beleaguered outsourcing giant Satyam Computer, days after he admitted he doctored the company's accounts to the tune of $1 billion.

Satyam's balance sheets were riddled with "fictitious" assets and "non existent" cash that could no longer be concealed after a deal intended to save the struggling company was abandoned, Raju admitted Wednesday in a letter to the company's board.

Raju and his brother, former managing director B. Rama Raju were arrested in the southern city of Hyderabad, according to S.S. Yadav, the top police official of Andhra Pradesh state where the company is headquartered. Hyderabad is the capital of Andhra Pradesh.

The brothers resigned their posts in the company Wednesday.

Yadav said the men were being investigated for cheating, forgery, criminal breach of trust and falsifying documents. They may face up to 10 years in prison, he said.

Several investors in Satyam were considering suing PricewaterhouseCoopers LLC, the auditor of the company's doctored accounts, an attorney said Friday.

Satyam shares fell another 45.5 percent Friday to 21.75 rupees in Mumbai, following an 80 percent plunge Wednesday. Trading was closed Thursday because of a holiday.

"PricewaterhouseCoopers would be responsible in certain circumstances. I mean they are supposed to check on the accounts and their audit report is relied upon by various people," said Ravi Nath, a lawyer with the Rajinder Narain law firm, which has been contacted by several investors intending to sue the auditor. "On my first impression, PricewaterhouseCoopers needs to answer a few things."

The auditing firm said in the statement that they had worked "in accordance with applicable auditing standards and were supported by appropriate audit evidence."

"Given our obligations for client confidentiality, it is not possible for us to comment upon the alleged irregularities. Price Waterhouse will fully meet its obligations to cooperate with the regulators and others," the statement said.

The international accounting firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers International Ltd., is based in London.

Beginning Monday, the Bombay Stock Exchange will replace Satyam with Sun Pharmaceuticals Ltd. on India's benchmark Sensex stock index.

Top Satyam executives have struggled to reassure investors, employees and clients since news of the scandal broke.

Satyam Computer Services Ltd employs 53,000 people _ among the 2 million Indians working in the country's booming high-tech industry, which last year brought in an estimated $40 billion. Satyam's clients include a slew of Fortune 500 companies including Nestle, General Electric and Ford Motors.

Ram Mynampati, the company's interim head, said the company's top executives relied on audited accounts and were "shocked" by Raju's admissions.

The company's chief financial officer V. Srinivas resigned Thursday.

Meanwhile, Archana Uttapa, a company spokeswoman, denied Indian media reports that Satyam was considering firing 10,000 of its 53,000 employees.

"There is no such move," she said.

Employee salaries have been paid through December and cleared for the month of January as well, she told The Associated Press.

The scandal comes at a delicate time for India's information technology companies, which are struggling against a global slowdown and waning economic growth at home. India's IT firms derive 40 percent of their global revenues from financial services clients.

Andhra Pradesh's chief minister wrote Thursday to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh asking him to appoint a management team that could restore confidence in the company and help protect its employees and investors.

Holders of the company's U.S.-listed shares _ which have been halted from trading on the New York Stock Exchange while regulators investigate _ have filed two class action suits against Satyam, the law firms representing the investors said in separate statements.

The suits filed by Vianale & Vianale LLP and Izard Noble LLP allege Satyam and its top executives issued false and misleading financial statements and violated federal securities laws, the statements on their Web sites said.

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HYDERABAD, India — Indian police on Friday arrested B. Ramalinga Raju, the founder and former chairman of beleaguered outsourcing giant Satyam Computer, days after he admitted he doctored the co...
HYDERABAD, India — Indian police on Friday arrested B. Ramalinga Raju, the founder and former chairman of beleaguered outsourcing giant Satyam Computer, days after he admitted he doctored the co...
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06:36 PM on 01/10/2009
And these guys were in charge of one of the companies that holds and administra­tes vital personal data on YOU.

Sleep well tonight, American citizens. Sleep tight.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
carlgt1
05:12 PM on 01/10/2009
what a surprise, the top guy for encouragin­g US engineerin­g jobs shipped to India was a total fraud!
photo
HamletsMill
All Myth is Astronomy
02:36 PM on 01/10/2009
Pricewater­houseCoope­rs LLC.

Nooooooooo­oooooooooo­oooo!

I'm shocked I tell ya! Shocked!
02:33 PM on 01/10/2009
Yadav said the men were being investigat­ed for cheating, forgery, criminal breach of trust and falsifying documents. They may face up to 10 years in prison, he said.

hey can we get some of those laws??
make it 20 to life though....­.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
12:31 PM on 01/10/2009
Greed extends across all nations.
The whole world is one huge Ponzi shell.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:28 AM on 01/10/2009
WOW.

The NYSE stopped trading SAY 3 days ago, when it closed at $9.35 a share. It's worth about 60 cents a share now.

It'll be interestin­g to see what kind of justice the Indian Government can deliver in this case.
10:20 AM on 01/10/2009
Investigat­e any billionair­e and find a crook. It seems to be as simple as that.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
skyshoes
09:36 AM on 01/10/2009
Does this mean that when I get my cordial subcontine­ntal collection call from the credit card company that has been bailed out by tax dollars, asks, "Can you dell me why you are having drouble baying your bills"?.

I can now say, "I can't pay my bill because I haven't been successful with any frauds lately."
vs.
"Well I am in the same boat as your company is, no one is paying, people are paying late or not paying at all."

Just asking