Dialysis Services Provider to Pay $25 Million in Securities Fraud Case
Total Renal Care Holdings Inc. has agreed to pay $25 million to settle a host of securities fraud lawsuits accusing the world’s second-largest dialysis services provider of inflating earnings.
The Torrance-based company said it will pay $10.8 million of the settlement, with the rest coming from insurance that covers officers and directors who were accused of misleading investors about the company’s earnings growth and expenses.
The company also will make changes in its corporate structure requiring executives to be more accountable to shareholders and will take a $10.8-million charge against second-quarter earnings to pay for the settlement, officials said in a release.
“Most of the managers who were the target of these allegations are gone from the company,” spokeswoman LeAnne Zumwalt said.
Total Renal’s shares have fallen 74% since February 1999, when the company said its fourth-quarter 1998 earnings came in below expectations. Investors quickly filed a wave of lawsuits alleging that company executives had issued misleading statements about the company’s growth potential.
Total Renal officials recorded revenue for dialysis services even before patients were billed, according to court papers. Executives also booked revenue at inflated amounts they knew would never be paid, court records show.
Total Renal officials continue to maintain that they didn’t mislead investors.
The settlement requires final approval from a federal judge in Los Angeles.
Total Renal’s shares closed off 31 cents at $6.44 on the New York Stock Exchange.
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