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SEC Charges Sujata
Sachdeva, Former Koss Corporation VP Finance & Julie Mulvaney Former
Koss Sr Account with Fraud
September 2, 2010
The
Securities and Exchange Commission charged two former senior accounting
professionals at a Milwaukee-based headphone manufacturer with
accounting fraud, books-and-records violations, and related misconduct
arising from the embezzlement of more than $30 million from the company.
The SEC alleges that Sujata Sachdeva, who was the vice president of
finance and principal accounting officer at Koss Corporation, stole
money from company accounts to make millions of dollars in payments on
her personal credit card and for other extravagant personal purchases
from luxury retailers. With the assistance of Koss senior accountant
Julie Mulvaney, Sachdeva concealed the theft on Koss’s balance sheet and
income statement by overstating assets, expenses, and cost of sales, and
by understating liabilities and sales. Based on the fraudulent records
prepared by Sachdeva and Mulvaney, Koss prepared materially false
financial statements and filed materially false current, quarterly, and
annual reports with the SEC.
“Sachdeva brazenly stole millions from Koss Corporation with Mulvaney’s
assistance and then used crooked accounting to cover up the theft,” said
Merri Jo Gillette, Director of the SEC’s Chicago Regional Office.
“Sachdeva and Mulvaney abused their positions of trust and defrauded
Koss shareholders who rely upon corporate filings for accurate
information about the company’s financial condition.”
According to the SEC’s complaint, filed in U.S. District Court for the
Eastern District of Wisconsin, the scheme began in 2004 and lasted
through December 2009. After discovering the embezzlement, Koss amended
and restated its financial statements for fiscal years 2008 and 2009 and
the first three quarters of fiscal year 2010. Both Sachdeva and Mulvaney
have been terminated by the company.
The SEC’s complaint alleges that Sachdeva, a resident of Mequon, Wisc.,
embezzled funds from company accounts through a variety of means,
including cashier’s checks, unauthorized wire transfers, and
unauthorized payments from petty cash. Sachdeva fraudulently authorized
the issuance of more than 500 cashier’s checks totaling more than $15
million. She used them to make approximately $10 million in payments to
American Express for her personal credit card, and also used them to
make direct payments to luxury retailers. At times, Sachdeva used
acronyms in an attempt to conceal the identities of the check recipients
— such as “N.M. Inc.” for Neiman Marcus and “S.F.A. Inc.” for Saks Fifth
Avenue.
According to the SEC’s complaint, Sachdeva used the embezzled funds to
finance an extravagant lifestyle, including prolific purchases of
designer clothes, furs, purses, shoes, and jewelry as well as china,
statues, and household furnishings. She also used the stolen funds to
buy automobiles, pay for airline tickets and hotels during personal
travel, and finance home improvements and renovations. Meanwhile
Mulvaney, who lives in Milwaukee, concealed and facilitated the theft by
preparing false journal entries to disguise Sachdeva’s misappropriation
of funds.
The
SEC’s complaint charges Sachdeva with violations of the antifraud
provisions of the federal securities laws and charges both Sachdeva and
Mulvaney with violations of the reporting, books and records and
internal control provisions of the federal securities laws. The SEC
seeks a permanent injunction, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains and
financial penalties against Sachdeva and Mulvaney, and an order barring
Sachdeva from serving as an officer or director of a public company.
Sachdeva entered into a plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office
for the Eastern District of Wisconsin on July 27, 2010, in a parallel
criminal proceeding and pled guilty to six counts of wire fraud.
Sachdeva admitted her multi-million-dollar theft from company and her
scheme to falsify the company’s accounting records to hide her
embezzlement. Sachdeva is scheduled to be sentenced on Nov. 18, 2010.
The SEC’s investigation was conducted by James Davidson, Kara
Washington, Michael Cabonargi and Donald Ryba of the SEC’s Chicago
Regional Office. The investigation is continuing. The SEC acknowledges
the assistance of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of
Wisconsin in this matter. |