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December
11, 2002
Sacramento, CA - Qwest Communications and several of the nation's top
banking and financial service companies were named as defendants Tuesday
in a lawsuit filed by the California State Teachers' Retirement System
in the financial collapse of Qwest.
The complaint alleges Qwest and the companies engaged in fraudulent schemes
that cost the California teachers fund millions of dollars when the truth
about Qwest's faltering financial condition was first disclosed.
The complaint, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, also named Salomon
Smith Barney Inc., Citigroup Inc., Lehman Brothers Inc., Bank of America
Corporation, Banc of America Securities LLC, JP Morgan Chase & Co.,
JP Morgan Chase Securities and Merrill Lynch & Co.
The case was filed on behalf of CalSTRS by the law firms of Cotchett,
Pitre, Simon & McCarthy of Burlingame, California and Girard, Gibbs
& DeBartolomeo LLP of San Francisco.
The complaint states that the teachers' pension fund lost about $150
million it had invested in Qwest securities offered by the banking and
financial firms, which sold the debt and equity securities while at the
same time "creating and financing many of the transactions"
that were used to create the illusion that Qwest was a successful company.
"CalSTRS is actively pursuing this court action and others to call
attention to fraudulent financial practices that seem to have infected
what we hope is only a small part of Wall Street," said Jack Ehnes,
CalSTRS Chief Executive Officer. "We took this action to protect
our member teachers and at the same time attempt to establish higher levels
of corporate responsibility in the nation's financial markets."
The complaint also named several Qwest officers and directors, including
founder Philip F. Anschutz and former CEO Joseph Nacchio. They and other
officers were accused of falsely representing that Qwest was one of the
highest revenue producing telecommunication companies in the world to
ensure that it met its quarterly Wall Street projections.
The complaint alleges that during its inflated financial run, Anschutz
took more than $1.9 billion out of the Denver, Colorado-based company
in insider trading, and Nacchio $228 million.
The Qwest house of cards folded on July 28, 2002 when the company disclosed
that for the years 1999-2001, it had improperly accounted for about 220
transactions worth about $1.6 billion. On October 28, 2002, Qwest also
disclosed it would defer $531 million of previously recognized revenue
because of improper accounting.
The complaint states that the named financial companies, based on their
due diligence, knew that their statements in registering the Qwest notes
"were not true, that they omitted material facts, and were materially
misleading. They knew that investors would be misled when they purchased
Qwest notes and stock, but nevertheless made the misrepresentations to
sell the notes and stock."
The firms took this action because "they knew that the only way
that they would be repaid the loans (they made earlier to Qwest) and continue
to receive millions in investment and advisory fees was if Qwest continued
to be perceived as a successful company."
CalSTRS is the third largest public pension fund in the U.S., with a
$94 billion investment portfolio. The pension system serves approximately
715,000 members and benefit recipients by providing retirement, disability
and survivor benefits to California's public school educators in grades
kindergarten through community college. Those benefits are guaranteed
by law and are not affected by changes in the investment portfolio.
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View the
lawsuit
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