Former McAfee Chief Financial Officer Prabhat Goyal was found guilty by a San Francisco jury of fudging accounting to hide losses and pump up the company's revenue figures from 1998 through Jan 2001.
As a result of Goyal's actions, federal prosecutors argued that McAfee Inc., then known as Network Associates, improperly recorded more than $470 million in revenue and understated its losses by more than $330 million, according to LAW.com
The government alleged that Goyal based company revenue on the number of software licenses sold to distributors, rather than on the number of licenses sold by distributors to actual customers.
Prosecutors also said Goyal gave millions of dollars in payments disguised as discounts and rebates to convince distributors to not return unsold products, and to purchase more products than they could sell to customers, the legal publication reported.
These actions and others ended up inflating the company's stock price, which in turn allowed