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Judge finds Oracle's Ellison withheld evidence

By | September 5, 2008, 7:25pm PDT

Summary: According to Bloomberg, in a ruling that has important implications for Larry Ellison, Oracle’s CEO and the company itself, district judge Susan Illston found that Ellison: …deliberately destroyed or withheld e-mails and failed to preserve tape recordings that should have been turned over to lawyers for shareholders suing him… Ellison and Oracle knew the material was potentially [...]

According to Bloomberg, in a ruling that has important implications for Larry Ellison, Oracle’s CEO and the company itself, district judge Susan Illston found that Ellison:

…deliberately destroyed or withheld e-mails and failed to preserve tape recordings that should have been turned over to lawyers for shareholders suing him…

Ellison and Oracle knew the material was potentially relevant to claims that they made false statements about the company’s 2001 second-quarter financial results and problems with a software product, Illston said.

As a penalty, Illston said the jury in the case will be instructed to assume that Ellison knew about the problems. The judge also said she would take that assumption into account when deciding whether to rule in favor of investors on their claims for damages and Oracle’s requests to throw the case out.

The case is a class action brought by Nursing Home Pension Fund. It claims Ellison improperly used his insider knowledge to cash in $900 million of stock before the company issued statements that discussed the problems. The software in question is the 11i Suite. The judgment, via the Wall Street Journal is here.

This is not the first time Ellison has been in trouble over insider dealings. In September 2005, he agreed to fork over $100 million to charities and cough up $22.5 million in legal fees on behalf of Oracle in order to settle another class action. The earlier case focused on Oracle’s Q3 earnings, announced March, 2001.

Ellison is well known for taking an aggressive stance in his ongoing battle for a larger share of the enterprise pie. Part of those ongoing tactics include taking potshots at SAP during earnings calls. In the past, Oracle has made all manner of claims about customer wins that my Irregular colleagues could not make stack up. Let’s not forget the Microsoft dustbin saga which surfaced back in 2000. At the time, Ellison was quoted as saying: “I’m prepared to ship our garbage to Redmond, and they can go through it.”

Oracle may be no saint but it’s not the only company that employs dirty tricks. Most recently, we have Oracle’s case against SAP over TomorrowNow. Assuming this doesn’t get settled prior to trial, it promises to yield all sorts of fascinating details about how the now defunct TomorrowNow plied its trade. Assuming Oracle is successful in claiming its $1 billion in damages, that could just as easily fly out the window if the Nursing Home Pension Fund is successful. However, given Judge Illston’s ruling, a dark shadow has been cast across Oracle’s credibility and that of its flamboyant leader.

Not that Ellison will be over worried. He recently managed to persuade the company to award him a 38% pay hike bringing his total package to something around $72 million. As one wag suggested in a direct Tweet message to me, “I guess an increasing part of his package will now go to his lawyers.” Explain that at the open microphone session at the upcoming Oracle OpenWorld Mr. Ellison. -:)

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Dennis Howlett has been providing comment and analysis on enterprise software since 1991.

Disclosure

Dennis Howlett

Dennis Howlett is committed to maintaining the independent and opinionated stance that his writings are well known for and does not enter into contracts that would limit his freedom of expression in any way. However it is important in the interests of full disclosure to inform readers of those relationships so they can form their own judgment. This page therefore lists all Dennis Howlett’s current business relationships.

Dennis’s consulting arrangements occasionally bring him into direct or indirect business relationships with some of the companies about which he writes, and/or their competitors. Where such a relationship exists, it is disclosed at the end of any article that references the company concerned.

Dennis owns AccMan, an independently produced blog covering the professional services market, primarily focused on Europe. It is currently sponsored by selected TextLink Ads and named sponsors in the ‘Sponsored Content’ block.

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He is an SAP Mentor and participates in SAP Mentor webinars. He has recently produced a guide for SAP resellers wishing to record customer videos. Other than as disclosed here, Dennis maintains no business relationship with SAP and is not financially rewarded for his role as a Mentor.

Dennis maintains relationships with a range of end user organizations and in all cases is subject to non-disclosure agreement. He has no current ‘paid for’ relationships with ITC vendors except as disclosed above although certain vendors comp travel and expenses claims. For the benefit of doubt, T&E reimbursement is a common practice among European based writers. It is often the only way we can attend important events. Even so it doesn’t impact our analysis of what vendors have to say. If you believe otherwise then feel free to ignore what is written here.

Except as mentioned above, Dennis has no other investments in any tech industry participants. This page last updated 23rd February, 2010.

Biography

Dennis Howlett

Dennis Howlett has been providing comment and analysis on enterprise software since 1991 in a variety of European trade and professional journals including CFO Magazine, The Economist and Information Week. Today, apart from being a full time blogger on innovation for professional services organisations, he is a founding member of Enterprise Irregulars and an investor in a European start-up. Prior to, Dennis was technology and tax partner in a British firm of Chartered Accountants for 10 years. Prior to that held various senior finance roles across a broad range of industries.

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They may fear ethinic backlash ...
joemartn 15th Sep 2008
They could have jail Bill. Not for Larry and Steve in fear of ethnic backlash!
0 Votes
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felony crimes ...
joemartn 5th Sep 2008
... go to jail.
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Re: felony crimes
l_g_johnson@... 8th Sep 2008
... my take on it exactly.

My guess is that Ellison will find a way to avoid jail, however. Makes you wonder how many of the top people in American companies are doing and have done things that, if they weren't so darn rich, they would see prison time for.
0 Votes
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Some have gone to jail!
I am Gorby 8th Sep 2008
The previous CEO of Computer Associates (CA) and his Senior VP of Sales are both in jail (or maybe are now just out - I don't remember) for fiddling the books.

It does happen. It just should happen more often!
0 Votes
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Anyone else would go to jail...
David Gale 9th Sep 2008
I wonder how much of a political donation has to be made nowadays to avoid incarceration?
0 Votes
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Ellison is a dirty SOB . . .
pikeman666 9th Sep 2008
When this guy croaks they will find a piece of coal where his heart should be. He is the corporate equivalent of Joe Stalin.

Anyone else that has played as fast and loose would have been locked up long ago.
0 Votes
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the comment that "Ellison is a dirty SOB"
anti-oracle 10th Sep 2008
Not only is it time the judge give his senior arrogance a little jail time of his own, but that customers stop fueling this tyranical dictators quest for world domination. Think its tough to deal with oracle now? If he ever gets there, what leverage will companies have; NONE. So start diversifying your DB, middleware and applications now or you could end up as one of Larry's subjects...........
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He should go to jail
GeiselS@... 9th Sep 2008
Amazing how someone like Martha Stewart is jailed for a couple hundred thousand and yet this guy can take hundreds of millions (like the cashing in of 900 million) and get nothing more than a tongue lashing.

Its disgusting.
0 Votes
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but...
David Gale 12th Sep 2008
It IS disgusting but when you recognize that 'justice', no, sorry, the 'Law', is metered out differently to those whose empires operate as an annex of US Foreign Policy, then you also come to understand that, so far as organizations like Oracle and Microsoft are concerned, the public interest and the CIA can take a back seat...
0 Votes
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They may fear ethinic backlash ...
joemartn 15th Sep 2008
They could have jail Bill. Not for Larry and Steve in fear of ethnic backlash!

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