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TIME - Man of the Year
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CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
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120792
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12079921.000
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1993-04-08
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THE WEEK, Page 28BUSINESSA "Landmark" Fine
A Big Six accounting firm pays $400 million for being too easy
on S&Ls
Blame for the savings and loan fiasco falls not just on
executives of the thrift institutions but also on accountants
and lawyers who closed their eyes to clients' shenanigans. So
says the U.S. government, which claims a "landmark" victory in
making that case. Ernst & Young, one of the Big Six accounting
firms, agreed to pay a near record fine of $400 million to
settle a slew of cases charging it with failing to blow a
whistle on S&Ls it audited. For example, say the feds, the firm
failed to challenge fictitious sales of real estate made by the
now defunct Lincoln Savings & Loan in order to inflate its
reported profits. Ernst & Young might have been socked $1
billion if it had lost all the individual cases the government
had pursued; now its 2,000 partners will pay only $100 million,
insurers the other $300 million. But the prosecutors
short-circuited as much as 10 years of potential litigation and
think they have established an important precedent tightening
standards of professional responsibility.