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U.S. Securities and Exchange CommissionLitigation Release No. 20724 / September 17, 2008Securities and Exchange Commission v. Igal Kohavi, Yair Shamir, and Giora Yaron, Case No. 08-4348 (RS) (N.D. Cal., filed September 17, 2008)OUTSIDE DIRECTORS OF MERCURY INTERACTIVE SETTLE SEC CHARGES OF STOCK OPTION BACKDATINGThe Securities and Exchange Commission today filed settled charges against Igal Kohavi, Yair Shamir, and Giora Yaron, three former outside directors of California-based software maker Mercury Interactive, LLC. The SEC’s complaint alleges that the outside directors recklessly approved backdated stock option grants and reviewed and signed public filings that contained materially false and misleading disclosures about the company’s stock option grants and company expenses. Without admitting or denying the allegations in the SEC’s complaint, Kohavi, Shamir and Yaron agreed to permanent injunctions and each will pay a $100,000 financial penalty to settle the charges. Kohavi, Shamir and Yaron served on the board of directors of the company, formerly known as Mercury Interactive Corporation, from 1997 through 2005. They served on its compensation and audit committees from at least 1997 to 2002. The SEC’s complaint, filed in federal district court for the Northern District of California, alleges that senior management at Mercury engaged in a fraudulent scheme that involved the backdating of 45 stock option grants to employees and executives that concealed hundreds of millions of dollars of compensation expenses on Mercury’s financial statements. As alleged, the backdating occurred from as early as 1997 to April 2002, while the overstatements of income that resulted from the backdating continued to appear in the company’s financial statements through 2005. According to the SEC’s complaint, Kohavi, Shamir and Yaron approved 21 of those grants at the recommendation or with the direct participation of senior Mercury management. The complaint alleges that Kohavi, Shamir and Yaron were aware that under Mercury’s stock option plan, options were required to be priced at the closing price of the company’s stock on the day that they approved the grant of options. The complaint also alleges that they were aware that options with an exercise price lower than the price on the date the options were actually approved created a compensation expense. The complaint alleges, however, that Kohavi, Shamir and Yaron repeatedly executed documents approving grants of stock options while failing to observe, among other things, that the exercise price of stock options they were approving was less than the market price of the company’s stock at the time of approval. The SEC’s complaint alleges that Kohavi, Shamir and Yaron routinely signed unanimous written consents and approved board meeting minutes despite being presented with numerous facts and circumstances indicating that management was backdating option grants. For example, as alleged in the complaint:
In addition to signing unanimous written consents with “as of” dates that preceded the actual date of approval at times by months, the SEC’s complaint alleges that on a few occasions Shamir, Yaron and Kohavi signed multiple written consents presented to them by management for the same grant with different grant dates that had more favorable prices. Without admitting or denying the SEC’s allegations, Shamir, Yaron and Kohavi each consented to a court order that orders each of them to pay a $100,000 civil penalty and that permanently enjoins each of them from violating the antifraud, proxy, and falsification of books and records provisions of the federal securities laws – Sections 10(b) and 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act and Exchange Act Rules 10b-5, 13b2-1 and 14a-9 – and from aiding and abetting violations of the reporting, books and records and internal controls provisions of the federal securities laws – Exchange Act Sections 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A) and 13(b)(2)(B) and Exchange Act Rules 12b-20, 13a-1, and 13a-13. The SEC previously filed civil fraud charges in federal district court against Mercury and four of its former senior officers – former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Amnon Landan, former Chief Financial Officers Sharlene Abrams and Douglas Smith, and former General Counsel Susan Skaer – based on the officers’ stock option backdating scheme and fraudulent disclosures concerning, among other things, Mercury’s “backlog” of sales revenues to manage its reported earnings. Mercury, which was acquired by Hewlett-Packard Company on Nov. 8, 2006, after the alleged misconduct, settled the matter by agreeing to pay a $28 million penalty and to be permanently enjoined. See Litigation Release No. 20136 (May 31, 2007). The SEC’s case against the four former senior Mercury officers is being litigated.
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/2008/lr20724.htm
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