Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,582,672 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Satellite king lands in court.


DID JEFFREY SUDIKOFF USE CREATIVE ACCOUNTING, OR COMMIT SECURITIES FRAUD?

Jeffrey Sudikoff had what it takes - insatiable drive, an ability to see business possibilities where others saw none, and smarts to spare.

He used those entrepreneurial strengths to parlay a $15,000 car loan into one of Southern California's fastest growing public companies, IDB (ITS Data Bus) An interface between devices in an automobile endorsed by the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE). Designed to fulfill the goal of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS), the ITS Data Bus enables engine diagnostic equipment, GPS navigation systems,  Communications Group Inc. - not to mention partial ownership of the Los Angeles Kings The Los Angeles Kings are a professional ice hockey team based in Los Angeles, California, USA. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL).  and a personal fortune estimated to be north of $200 million.

But the same drive that fueled Sudikoff's meteoric me·te·or·ic  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or formed by a meteoroid.

2. Of or relating to the earth's atmosphere.

3.
 rise may now land him in federal prison for a decade or more.

Sudikoff, 43, is set to stand trial in U.S. District Court next week on charges of securities fraud and insider trading at Culver City-based IDB, which he built into the nation's fourth-largest long distance phone company.

He is accused of forging documents in 1994 so IDB could meet analysts' expectations for quarterly earnings. While an extreme case, similar scenarios are being played out at fast-growing publicly held firms that get closely watched on Wall Street - and where quarter-by-quarter financial results often determine whether the stock will soar or tank.

Companies increasingly are employing accounting gimmicks to meet these quarterly expectations, which has made fuzzy the line between creative accounting and outright fraud - the type Sudikoff is accused of committing.

Sudikoff is charged with succumbing to Wall Street pressure by doctoring letters from a customer to indicate that a pending deal had closed, then filing fraudulent quarterly earnings reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission. He is also charged with illegally selling his IDB stock while having inside information about his company's problems, and failing to inform the SEC about the stock sales.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the indictment, he and IDB President Edward Cheramy carried out the illegal activity in the first half of 1994 when IDB was at its height.

Since being indicted INDICTED, practice. When a man is accused by a bill of indictment preferred by a grand jury, he is said to be indicted.  in December 1997, Sudikoff, who denies all charges, has maintained a low profile. He declined to comment for this article, but sources close to him said he is involved in various telecommunications and aviation businesses, including an airplane leasing company, and that his base of operations Noun 1. base of operations - installation from which a military force initiates operations; "the attack wiped out our forward bases"
base

air base, air station - a base for military aircraft

army base - a large base of operations for an army
 is in Santa Monica Santa Monica (săn`tə mŏn`ĭkə), city (1990 pop. 86,905), Los Angeles co., S Calif., on Santa Monica Bay; inc. 1886. Tourism and retailing are important, and the city has motion-picture, biotechnology, and software industries. .

He lives with his wife and two daughters, ages 7 and 9, in a Brentwood mansion that he had built in the first half of 1994.

Cheramy, 55, is retired and lives in Jackson Hole Jackson Hole, fertile Rocky Mt. valley, c.50 mi (80 km) long and 6 to 8 mi (9.6–12.8 km) wide, NW Wyo., partly in Grand Teton National Park. Jackson Lake, 39 sq mi (101 sq km), a natural lake through which the Snake River flows, was dammed in 1916 to control , Wyo. with his wife. Through his lawyer, Cheramy declined to be interviewed for this story.

The attorneys representing both Sudikoff and Cheramy declined to speak in-depth about the case, but say they will fight the charges against their clients.

"Mr. Sudikoff denies each of the charges and intends to vigorously contest them in trial," said Sudikoff's attorney Brad D. Brian of Munger Toiles & Olson.

Similarly, Cheramy's attorney, Gordon Greenberg of Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton, said, "We'll do all of our talking in court. We're disputing all of it."

According to the indictment, IDB finished out the first quarter of 1994 with just $3.2 million in pretax income pretax income

Reported income before the deduction of income taxes. Pretax income is sometimes considered a better measure of a firm's performance than aftertax income because taxes in one period may be influenced by activities in earlier periods.
, far short of the $14 million-plus that analysts were projecting.

But just days later, around April 15, IDB' utilized "various accounting 'adjustments' to fill the gap," the indictment states, boosting that quarterly figure to about $15.1 million.

Then, Sudikoff and Cheramy allegedly told a Merrill Lynch Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (NYSE: MER TYO: 8675 ), through its subsidiaries and affiliates, provides capital markets services, investment banking and advisory services, wealth management, asset management, insurance, banking and related products and services on a global basis.  analyst that IDB would meet first-quarter expectations. The analyst issued a "buy" recommendation on IDB stock.

In late April, an auditor at Deloitte & Touche, IDB's outside accounting firm, said she could not stand behind the quarterly results, according to the indictment. Over her objections, IDB issued a press release proclaiming it had "record revenue and earnings" for the quarter.

In trying to explain IDB's first-quarter earnings to Deloitte, the indictment states that Cheramy told Deloitte that it had leased satellite transponder A receiver/transmitter on a communications satellite. It receives a microwave signal from earth (uplink), amplifies it and retransmits it back to earth at a different frequency (downlink). A satellite has several transponders.  space to British Telecom The telephone and communications carrier that provides services in Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It used to be a division of the British Post Office, but was privatized in 1984 under Margaret Thatcher's administration. . "In fact, as of May 18, 1994, no such sale had taken place," the indictment states.

To back up the purported sale, prosecutors charge that Sudikoff doctored a British Telecom letter to make it seem like $5 million worth of transponder space had been leased to the company. He then directed an employee to prepare three more fraudulent letters backing up the purported deal, and then faxed them to Deloitte.

"As defendant Sudikoff then knew, these three letters were false and fraudulent in that, among other things, there was no agreement for the sale of the satellite transponder leases, and the letters were not prepared or signed by the purported author of the letters, nor were they on genuine British Telecom letterhead," the indictment states.

IDB then filed its quarterly earnings report with the SEC, and Deloitte quit as IDB's independent auditor Independent Auditor

An external auditor with a certified public accounting designation that qualifies him or her to provide an auditor's report.

Notes:
These auditors aren't affiliated with the company being audited.
 the same day.

On the first trading day after Deloitte's resignation was disclosed, IDB stock fell from $14.50 to $7.13, meaning the company lost more than half its value.

According to the indictment, Sudikoff and his parents bailed out of much of his own IDB stock before the selloff sell·off  
n.
The sale or disposal of a relatively large number of stocks, bonds, or commodities that often causes a sharp decline in prices.

Noun 1.
. Sudikoff "knowingly and willfully willfully adv. referring to doing something intentionally, purposefully and stubbornly. Examples: "He drove the car willfully into the crowd on the sidewalk." "She willfully left the dangerous substances on the property." (See: willful)  concealed and caused concealment of his sale of 88,000 shares of IDB stock from investors, stock market analysts and the Securities and Exchange Commission in order to avoid affecting adversely the price of IDB stock," court records state.

Sudikoff allegedly sold off millions of dollars in IDB stock by creating offshore companies and bank accounts, and transferring funds between them. Sudikoff is charged with failing to notify the SEC of his sale, as required by law. He also is said to have tipped off his parents, who sold thousands of IDB shares prior to the downturn.

After Deloitte's resignation, the SEC began to investigate.

Sudikoff ended up selling IDB in August 1994 to long-distance phone company LDDS See WorldCom.  Communications in a stock swap worth $700 million - a price institutional investors complained at the time was too low. The company is now part of MCI (1) (Media Control Interface) A high-level programming interface from Microsoft and IBM for controlling multimedia devices. It provides commands and functions to open, play and close the device.

(2) (Microwave Communications Inc.
 Worldcom Inc., in which Sudikoff remains a stockholder.

Sudikoff's career started out on a slow trajectory. After a short stint as a radio reporter in Jerusalem, he returned to the U.S. in 1978 and got a job doing administrative work for music tours.

In 1983, he was asked if he knew how to broadcast a three-day rock concert live to radio stations around the country. He didn't, but he saw his opportunity to crack into broadcasting, and told the concert's organizers he could do the job.

Sudikoff took out a $15,000 loan and bought a mobile transmissions track to beam the concert to a satellite. Word spread around about his capabilities, and he was hired to broadcast other events. Within a year, his company had grown from one man with a track to a 15-employee company with three tracks.

In May 1986, Sudikoff hired Edward Chefamy, then head of Price Waterhouse's entrepreneurial consulting business, and the two took the company public later that year. International financier George Soros George Soros

Born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1930, George Soros is considered by many to be one of the world's greatest investors. A famous hedge fund manager, Soros managed the Quantum Fund, a fund that achieved an average annual return of 30% from 1970-2000.
 at one point held a 7-percent stake in IDB.

IDB quickly parlayed its success in the field of satellite radio transmissions into television transmissions. Such historical events as the 1984 Summer Olympics in L.A., a 1988 summit between President Reagan and the USSR's Mikhail Gorbachev, and the war in the Persian Gulf all were transmitted by IDB.

In 1990, Sudikoff told Forbes magazine, "This is the most fun I've ever had."

By the middle of 1990, however, business started dropping off as the United States slipped into a recession and television networks scaled back their coverage of live events. IDB's long-term debt Long-Term Debt

Loans and financial obligations lasting over one year.

Notes:
For example debts obligations such as bonds and notes which have maturities greater than one year would be considered long-term debt.
 had also grown to more than $90 million by mid-year.

Sudikoff and Cheramy saw the need to break into more profitable markets, which led them to the international long-distance telephone business. IDB started establishing ties with governments in Israel, Russia, China and other countries. After scooping up smaller competitors, IDB in 1993 became the fourth-largest international long-distance company in the nation, behind AT&T Corp., MCI and Sprint Corp.

Also that year, Sudikoff was selected as "Entrepreneur of the Year" by Merrill Lynch & Co. and Ernst & Young LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol . And in March 1994, Fortune magazine called him one of "America's Smart Young Entrepreneurs."

Sudikoff's trial is set to begin Feb. 23, Cheramy's trial starts on June 22.

Key Dates in Sudikoff Case

1983: Sudikoff forms IDB.

1986: IDB goes public.

March 1994: Sudikoff allegedly begins fraudulent stock transfers.

May 16, 1994: Sudikoff and IDB Director Joseph Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
 buy 72 percent of Kings hockey team.

May 18, 1994: Sudikoff allegedly creates fraudulent British Telecom letter.

May 23, 1994: Sudikoff and IDB President Edward Cheramy allegedly file fraudulent earnings report with SEC. Deloitte & Touche resigns as IDB's independent auditor.

October 1995: Sudikoff and Cohen sell Kings to Philip Anschutz and Edward P. Roski Edward P. Roski, Jr. (born in 1938) is a millionaire in Los Angeles, California.

He is a graduate of Loyola High School, the University of Southern California Marshall School of Business and a Vietnam veteran as a member of the Marines.
 Jr.

Aug. 2, 1994: IDB Communications agrees to be acquired by LDDS Communications.

Dec. 3, 1997: Sudikoff and Cheramy indicted on charges of securities fraud and insider trading.

Feb. 23, 1999: Sudikoff trial to begin.

June 22, 1999: Cheramy trial to begin.
COPYRIGHT 1999 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:IDB Communications Group Inc.'s CEO Jeffrey Sudikoff
Author:Taub, Daniel
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Feb 15, 1999
Words:1493
Previous Article:L.A. County takes lead in venture capital.
Next Article:Slow-growth policy looms for Glendale.
Topics:



Related Articles
Satellites revolutionize airborne communications. (Special Report)
Analysts like long-term outlook at satellite transmission company after profits triple. (IDB Communications Group)
IDB income plunges despite soaring sales. (IDB Communications Group Inc.)
IDB makes stock/debt offerings to land $80 million. (IDB Communications Group Inc.) (Brief Article)
IDB signs in Midtown. (IDB Communications Group Inc. leases commercial space at 380 Madison Avenue in New York, New York)
This guy is really connected; IDB Communications' Jeffrey Sudikoff links farflung sites via satellites, fiber-optic cables. (IDB Communications Group...
McNall sells piece of Kings, seeks new home for team. (Los Angeles Kings owner Bruce McNall)
SEC begins inquiry into IDB dispute with accountant; company officials say media reports helped prompt move. (IDB Communications Group Inc.)
Sudikoff Gets One-Year Sentence.(Brief Article)
BRIEFLY: FORMER KINGS OWNER SUDIKOFF SENTENCED TO JAIL.(Sports)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles