Fraud at Interspeed Corporation:Interspeed Corporation had
just gone public, and Senior Vice-President for Sales Arthur
Goodwin was keen to meet annual revenue targets. The fourth quarter
target, for example, was $3 million, but the books showed only $1.9
in revenue. Goodwin decided he had to do something. He persuaded
Solunet Inc. to take delivery for $1.2 million in inventory and
hold it until another Interspeed customer bought it shortly after
the New Year began. Solunet was allowed to return the goods to
InterSpeed if it couldn’t sell them to the third party. Goodwin
counted the $1.2 million as revenue and so pushed fourth-quarter
revenue to $3.1 million, slightly above the target. Goodwin’s
conduct was a clear violation of GAAP. Solunet didn’t actually buy
the goods, because it didn’t commit itself to paying for them. So
there was no revenue report.
As it turned out, the customer Goodwin counted on wouldn’t
buy the inventory. So Goodwin arranged for another company, I-Way,
to buy or lease the equipment. When I-Way could not come up with
the money, Goodwin transferred funds to I-Way, which leased the
goods from a leasing agent. The leasing agent bought the goods from
Solunet, which used the money to pay Interspeed, completing the
circle.
Goodwin kept digging himself into a hole. In another
incident, he forged a signature on an altered contract to create
the impression that Interspeed had made a $6.4 million sale. Before
it was all over, he had overstated the company’s revenues by 60% or
9 million. In a June 2006 Federal jury trial, Goodwin was convicted
of securities fraud for this activities at Interspeed. He was
sentenced 30 months in jail, followed by a three-year supervised
release. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) also brought
a civil action against Goodwin for the same offenses. In May 2007,
he settled with the SEC by agreeing never to serve as an officer or
director of a public corporation and by turning over $100, 521 in
earnings that resulted from his fraud. The payment was waived on
grounds of financial hardship.
It doesn’t take rocket science to show that Goodwin’s conduct
was unethical. In fact, the business scandals we hear so much about
may give the false impression that it is normally easy to recognize
the right decision. We hear about these scandals precisely because
they make a sensational story of egregious wrongdoing. Many
real-life decisions are murky and difficult to sort out even when
one has the best of intentions. In the Interspeed case, for
example, there are several hypothetical scenarios in which the
right decisions would not be so clear:
a.Interspeed would be forced into bankruptcy if it
didn’t show additional revenue in the current period, but it has
very good prospects for the future.
b.In addition to the previous scenario, Interspeed
makes products that save lives.
c.There is a signed contract in which the third
party agrees to buy the goods at the beginning of the new year.
d.Interspeed offers Solunet a percentage of the
final sales for buying the product before the end of the year and
passing it on to the other customer at the beginning of the New
Year.
Your task is to analyze the case under each of these
scenarios.
Hint for Scenario
(a),look at the conditions under which income
smoothing can be ethical in the analysis of case 6.1. Scenario
(b)asks in effect whether the end justifies the
means, an issue discussed in Chapter
2.You must test the generalizability of fudging
numbers when saving lives is part of the rationale (i.e., part of
the scope). Note that saving lives is part of the scope only if
Interspeed would avoid fudging numbers if its existence as a
company were at stake, but liver were not. You may assume that the
scheme in Scenario
(d)is consistent with GAAP.












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