Former CEO of InfoGroup agrees to pay over $7.3 million to settle SEC charges
By APMonday, March 15, 2010
Former InfoGroup CEO paying $7.3M
WASHINGTON — The founder and former CEO of database provider InfoGroup Inc. agreed Monday to pay more than $7.3 million to settle federal regulators’ charges of siphoning off nearly $9.5 million from the company to finance a lavish lifestyle that included jet travel to Africa and Europe.
Vinod Gupta also was accused by the Securities and Exchange Commission of putting Omaha, Neb.-based InfoGroup Inc. into $9.3 million of undisclosed transactions with other companies in which he held a personal stake. He agreed to the settlement without admitting or denying the SEC’s allegations but did agree to refrain from future violations of the securities laws.
Gupta was the chief executive and chairman of the company, known as Info, from 1992 through August 2008, when he stepped down as part of a proposed settlement of a shareholder lawsuit. The lawsuit alleged that Info misspent millions of dollars, some of it on domestic and international air travel for former President Bill Clinton and his wife, then-Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Gupta has been a major donor to Democrats and gave at least $1 million to Bill Clinton’s presidential library in Arkansas. He also took part in a fundraiser for Hillary Clinton in New York in June 2007.
Bill Clinton had a six-year, $3.3 million consulting contract with the company, which sells business and consumer databases used for sales leads, mailing lists and direct marketing.
The SEC also said it reached a settlement with the former chairman of InfoGroup’s audit committee, Vasant Raval, who is paying a $50,000 civil fine. Charges against two former chief financial officers are still pending.
An attorney for one of the former CFOs, Stormy Dean, disputed the SEC’s charges and said his client would contest them in court.
“Gupta stole millions of dollars from Info shareholders by treating the company like it was his personal ATM,” SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a statement. “Other corporate officers also abused their positions of trust by looking the other way instead of standing up for investors and bringing the scheme to a halt.”
The SEC’s civil lawsuit against Gupta, filed in federal court in Omaha, alleged that from 2003 to 2007, Gupta improperly tapped company funds to pay for more than $3 million of personal jet travel for himself, family and friends to destinations such as South Africa, Italy and Mexico’s resort city of Cancun. He also, according to the SEC, used investor funds to pay: $2.8 million in expenses related to his 80-foot yacht; $1.3 million in credit card bills and other expenses stemming from 28 club memberships; and the costs of 20 automobiles, homes in Omaha, Aspen, Colo.; Washington, D.C.; Miami, California and Hawaii; and three personal life insurance policies.
Gupta, 63, is a resident of Las Vegas.
Gupta failed to inform the other members of InfoGroup’s board that he had bought shares of a company that was an acquisition target of Info for his own financial benefit, the SEC said.
He has agreed to pay $4.04 million in restitution plus about $1.1 million in interest and a $2.2 million civil fine. Gupta also consented to an order barring him from serving as an officer or director of any public company and putting restrictions on the voting of his Info stock.
Tags: Bill Clinton, Government Regulations, Hillary Clinton, Industry Regulation, Nebraska, North America, Omaha, Personnel, United States, Washington