Los Angeles Times

Ozy CEO accused of ‘fraud at every step’

Indictment alleges a bogus $600-million buyout offer and other lies to investors.

- By Patricia Hurtado Hurtado writes for Bloomberg.

Media Chief Executive Carlos Watson lied to an investor that his company had received a $600-million takeover offer from a large tech company, federal prosecutor­s said in a wide-ranging fraud indictment against the startup and its boss.

Watson, of Mountain View, Calif., was arrested by FBI agents Thursday morning at a Midtown Manhattan hotel on charges that he conspired to defraud investors out of tens of millions of dollars, Brooklyn U.S. Atty. Breon Peace said.

Meanwhile, Ozy’s former chief operating officer, Samir Rao, and its chief of staff, Suzee Han, secretly pleaded guilty to fraud and other charges, court records show.

“Carlos Watson is a con man whose business strategy was based on outright deceit and fraud — he ran Ozy as a criminal organizati­on rather than as a reputable media company,” Peace said Thursday in announcing the charges.

Watson, who earned degrees at Harvard and later Stanford Law School, pleaded not guilty late Thursday and was released on $1 million bond.

Watson “has consistent­ly run Ozy as a fraud at every step,” prosecutor Jonathan Siegel argued at the arraignmen­t. He said Watson could commit further crimes if he was allowed to return to Ozy. “It’s not appropriat­e for him to continue to run the company.”

Watson, who was also accused of impeding federal investigat­ors, was directed by a judge not to contact employees who are witnesses in the case.

One such employee, Rao, is cooperatin­g with the U.S., Arlo Devlin-Brown, a lawyer for Watson, said in court Thursday.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also filed a related suit against Watson, Rao and Han alleging securities fraud on Thursday.

Defense lawyer Lanny Breuer said he was “deeply disappoint­ed” by Watson’s arrest.

“We were engaged in a good faith and constructi­ve dialogue with the government,” Breuer said. “Given the department’s claims of promoting such dialogue, I do not understand the dramatic decision to arrest Carlos today.”

Watson faces as many as 37 years in prison if convicted of all charges, Peace said.

Lawyers for Rao and Han couldn’t be reached for comment. The Wall Street Journal first reported Watson’s arrest and the guilty pleas by Rao and Han.

Ozy, a once-highflying media startup backed by billionair­e Marc Lasry, was sent into a tailspin after the New York Times reported that Rao impersonat­ed a YouTube executive to tout the company during a February 2021 call with Goldman Sachs.

The startup was seeking a $40-million investment from Goldman at the time.

Watson claimed in 2021 that the impersonat­ion was due to a mental health crisis on Rao’s part, but proseOzy cutors said Watson was “in fact present on the call as it occurred and was texting Rao directions of what to say.”

That was one of many lies Watson told investors and lenders in a fraud that spanned from 2018 to 2021, prosecutor­s said.

Though Watson knew Ozy was frequently drowning in debt and on the verge of insolvency, he presented Ozy to investors and lenders as a successful business with minimal debt, according to the indictment.

Among the most brazen lies alleged was a claim that an unidentifi­ed tech company had offered to acquire Ozy, prosecutor­s said.

Watson used the claim to try to convince an unnamed investor to commit $22.5 million in a Series D fundraisin­g.

Watson is accused of directing Rao to send an April 2021 presentati­on to the investor showing that the tech company would lead the round with a $30-million investment.

Watson later followed up with the investor and claimed the tech company wasn’t going to participat­e because it wanted to acquire Ozy for $600 million instead, according to the indictment.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Matthew Eisman CARLOS WATSON, shown in 2018, pleaded not guilty and was released on $1 million bond.
Getty Images Matthew Eisman CARLOS WATSON, shown in 2018, pleaded not guilty and was released on $1 million bond.

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