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Worldcom: Ldds Communications

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WorldCom was founded in 1983 under the name LDDS Communications, and was considered the second largest long distance company in the nation. According to the Reference for Business website, “formed in 1983 in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, when the breakup of AT&T enabled thousands of competitors to start reselling long distance telephone service to individual and business customers.” The website also goes on to say that WorldCom was also considered a “full-service telecommunications powerhouse in the mid-1990s.” In 1985, a man by the name of Bernard Ebbers became the company’s CEO, after the previous owner Bill Fields, was losing twenty-five thousand dollars a month. Bernard Ebbers came in to WorldCom as the president and CEO, when the company …show more content…

WorldCom is one company that is known for their major ethical issue that took place in 2002. WorldCom had manipulated their earnings from 1999 to 2002, which presented the company as a growing company. The fraudulent papers allowed the business’s stock prices to rise, when they should have been falling. According to the textbook, “two techniques were used to cook the books. The first was underreporting ‘line costs’ by recording them as assets…the second was overstating revenues through recording fraudulent transactions” (p.177). In 2002, a group of auditors began to secretly investigating the company, and ultimately found $3.8 billion in fraud. According to an article written in the New York Times in 2002 by Simon Romero, “WorldCom, plagued by the rapid erosion of its profits and an accounting scandal that created billions in illusory earnings, last night submitted the largest bankruptcy filing in United States history.” The article goes on to say that the bankruptcy was expected to shake the telecommunications industry, and it would have an immediate impact on customers. The bankruptcy was also going to affect the shareholders that invest in a hundred-billion-dollar company. According to the textbook, “in, 2005, Bernie Ebbers was found guilty of fraud and conspiracy and for filing false documents with regulators. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison. The company did not portray Christian values in their decisions, because they were content with lying. If they had not been caught, they were planning to continue falsifying records, hoping they eventually would be able to repay the

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