WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. regulators have decided against filing civil charges against Global Crossing Ltd. founder Gary Winnick following a probe of its accounting practices, his attorney said on Monday.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had been expected to announce a settlement with Winnick and three other former Global Crossing executives last week, capping a two-year investigation of the international telecommunications company.
Winnick's attorney, Gary Naftalis, said in a statement that the SEC "has determined that no charges should be brought against Gary Winnick. We always believed that the evidence demonstrated that Gary Winnick acted lawfully and properly in connection with Global Crossing."
Global Crossing, which built an intercontinental network of undersea fiber-optic cable in the 1990s, has been the target of an investigation since 2002. After the Internet boom fizzled, the company collapsed in 2002 amid $12.4 billion in debt and questions about its accounting practices
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