Play 23 different addictive eWoss Games. It's FREE! Win money!
eWoss News
Home  News  Sports  Games
   
Welcome Guest
   Sign Up | Sign In
Business News
Latest Business News
Economic Figures
Dollar & Gold News
Board of Trade News
Personal Finance

eWoss News
Breaking News Headlines
Top News Stories
U.S. National News
World News
Sports News
Business News
Entertainment News
Tech Industry News
Political News
Science News
Health News
Weird News

eWoss NewsBar
Free News Headlines Embedded in Your Browser

eWoss Sports
eWoss Sports Home
NFL
NBA
NCAA Football
College Hoops
NHL
MLB

Latest Business News

Ex-Qwest CEO Insider Trade Trial to Open

Saturday, March 17, 2007 5:15:17 PM
By SANDY SHORE

Joe Nacchio, center, talks to reporters outside the federal courthouse in downtown Denver in this photograph taken after a hearing on Dec. 20, 2005 . The insider-trading case opening Monday, March 19, 2007 against the former head of one the nation's largest telecoms could hinge on the interpretation of secret government deals and what a CEO should be expected to know about his company. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)DENVER (AP) - The insider-trading case opening Monday against the former head of one the nation's largest telecoms could hinge on the interpretation of secret government deals and what a CEO should be expected to know about his company.

Joseph Nacchio, former CEO of Denver-based Qwest Communications, is charged with improperly selling $101 million of stock months before the telephone service provider for 14 mostly Western states became mired in a multibillion dollar accounting scandal. Prosecutors claim Nacchio, a Brooklyn-born former AT&T executive, sold his stock while knowing the company was at financial risk. Shares of Qwest Communications International Inc. plummeted from more than $60 a share in 2000 to just $2 a share in 2002 and its near-collapse left thousands of pensioners in financial straits.

Nacchio has an unusual defense: The sale wasn't improper, he maintains, because he believed Qwest stood at the time to get millions in secret contracts from clandestine government agencies. Within Qwest, he alone was privy to the contracts, he says.


Would you like to read the rest of this article?

Register with us. It's free!

Registered users have complete access to all articles.

The registration process takes less than one minute to complete. Remember, there is absolutely no charge for this service.

So please sign up or sign in to enjoy unrestricted access to eWoss News.

Other Latest Business News

Gloom returns to world markets after US plunge 4:14AM CT
Malaysia cuts fuel prices amid economic slump 4:07AM CT
Vietnam lowers gasoline prices 4:00AM CT
Canada hauls US to WTO over beef, pork rules 4:00AM CT
Tesco 3Q sales up 11.7 percent 3:50AM CT
HK index tumbles 5 percent on US losses 3:31AM CT
Jobless claims jump to almost 3 million in Spain 3:29AM CT
China shares mixed amid global losses 3:13AM CT
Euro falls against dollar to $1.2593 3:06AM CT
Japan revises fiscal 2007 growth higher to 1.9 pct 2:52AM CT

   

© 2008 eWoss.com. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.