Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Convicted in WorldCom scandal

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Bernard Ebbers, the former chief of WorldCom who was convicted in one of the largest corporate accounting scandals in U.S. history, died just over a month after his early release from prison. He was 78.

The Canadian-born former telecommun­ications executive died Sunday in Brookhaven, Miss., surrounded by his family, according to a family statement.

WorldCom Inc. collapsed and went into bankruptcy in 2002, following revelation­s of an $11 billion accounting fraud that included pressure by top executives on subordinat­es to inflate numbers to make the company seem more profitable. The collapse caused losses to stockholde­rs, including those who had invested through retirement plans.

Ebbers was convicted in New York in 2005 on securities fraud and other charges and received a 25-year sentence. A federal appeals court judge who upheld Ebbers’ conviction in 2006 wrote that WorldCom’s fraudulent accounting practices were “specifical­ly intended to create a false picture of profitabil­ity even for profession­al analysts that, in Ebbers’ case, was motivated by his personal financial circumstan­ces.”

Before establishi­ng himself in telecommun­ications, Ebbers had a diverse career that started in sports. He received a basketball scholarshi­p at Mississipp­i College, where he majored in physical education. After graduating, he coached high school teams for a year before investing in a hotel; he eventually amassed a chain of Best Westerns in Mississipp­i and Texas, as well as a car dealership in Columbia,

Miss.

Following the advice of friends and knowing little about the phone business, he invested in a small longdistan­ce company, LDDS, in 1983. He eventually took over the day-to-day operations and bought up competitor­s, transformi­ng LDDS — which was later renamed WorldCom, based in Clinton, Miss. — into the fourthlarg­est long-distance company by 1996.

He was considered to be a “no-nonsense” man with a brash attitude who preferred jeans to a suit.

By the time of its collapse over its accounting fraud scandal in 2002, WorldCom was the nation’s secondlarg­est long-distance business. Ebbers left that year and following his conviction, was imprisoned from September 2006 until Dec. 21, when he was released from the custody of the Bureau of Prisons.

In the meantime, WorldCom re-emerged as MCI, taken over by Verizon, and relocated to Ashburn, Va.

U.S. District Judge Valerie E. Caproni said late last year that it fell within her discretion to order the early release of Ebbers after a lawyer cited severe medical problems and said that Ebbers had experience­d severe weight loss. At over 6 feet tall, he had dropped in weight from above 200 pounds to 147 pounds. Attorney Graham Carner told the judge it was possible his client might not live another 18 months.

Among other ailments, Ebbers had heart disease, Mr. Carner said. Ebbers was not in court when Judge Caproni announced her ruling on Dec. 18; his lawyers said he was hospitaliz­ed.

“While Mr. Ebbers is physically alive ... his quality of life is gone,” Mr. Carner said in December.

In court papers in September, his lawyers said Ebbers unintentio­nally bumped into another prisoner while walking in the facility in September of 2017, only to have the prisoner go to Ebbers’ open cell later in the day and physically attack him.

The papers said the attack fractured the bones around Ebbers’ eyes and caused blunt head trauma and other injuries. They also said Ebbers was put into solitary confinemen­t because his “severely limited eyesight” made him unable to identify the attacker.

In July 2019, one of Ebbers’ daughters submitted a request that her father receive compassion­ate release from a federal prison medical facility in Fort Worth, Texas. Court papers say a Bureau of Prisons official denied that request in August. The family statement said that the Bureau of Prisons “had no diagnosis or treatment plan in place” and Ebbers experience­d a “rapid decline” in October, followed by multiple hospitaliz­ations in November and December.

 ??  ?? Bernard Ebbers in 2006
Bernard Ebbers in 2006

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