Global Crossing: What Did Winnick Know?
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House investigators believe Global used legally questionable methods to inflate its revenue"capacity swaps," in which Global and other firms sold each other access to their networks and booked the sales as revenue. These deals added $375 million to Global's bottom line in the first quarter of 2001, sources say, and Winnick approved one just hours before the quarter ended. These deals are now under scrutiny by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Winnick's lawyer, Gary Naftalis, says Global did not mislead investors but believed it would make its first-quarter target legitimately. He says Winnick's stock sale was proper and approved by Global's counsel. The committee has yet to be convinced. "Is Winnick a choirboy," asks spokesman Ken Johnson, "or did he steal from the church's collection plate?"
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