Trucking Company Admits Executives Hid Losses in Aging
Trucking Fleet and Lied to Auditors Investigating Allegations
Celadon Group,
Inc. (Celadon) has agreed to pay total restitution of $42.2 million for filing
materially false and misleading statements to investors and falsifying books,
records and accounts.
Assistant
Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal
Division, U.S. Attorney Josh Minkler of the Southern District of Indiana,
Special Agent in Charge Grant Mendenhall of the FBI’s Indianapolis Field Office
and Inspector in Charge Delany De Leon-Colon of the U.S. Postal Inspection
Service (USPIS) made the announcement.
Celadon, a
transportation company headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana, that was listed
on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), entered into a deferred prosecution
agreement (DPA) in connection with a criminal information filed today in the
Southern District of Indiana charging the company with securities fraud. The case was primarily focused on the fact
that Celadon knowingly filed materially false and misleading statements to
investors and falsified books, records and accounts with regard to the values
of assets involved in four trade transactions that were recorded at inflated
values and not fair market value.
“Celadon
executives misled the investing public for a simple reason: profit,” said
Assistant Attorney General Benczkowski.
“Securities fraud harms all investors — from the most sophisticated to
those everyday Americans saving for retirement, and the Criminal Division
remains committed to investigating and prosecuting these complex crimes.”
“The fabric of
American industry is woven together through innovation, work ethic and
integrity,” said U.S. Attorney Josh J. Minkler.
“The government is charged with ferreting out misdeeds in corporate
America, particularly when these violations of public trust result in financial
harm to our citizens as is set forth in this matter. I would like to personally thank and
recognize the Justice Department’s Fraud Section, SEC, FBI and USPIS partners
whose collaborative work unearthed this criminal activity.”
“The message here
is clear, those who commit financial fraud will be held accountable. Investors
should expect nothing less than complete candor and truth from companies and
their executives,” said Special Agent in Charge Grant Mendenhall. “The FBI and our agency partners will
continue to identify, investigate and pursue violations such as this.”
“The Postal
Inspection Service has been protecting investors and defending the integrity of
the marketplace for many years,” said Inspector in Charge Delany
DeLeon-Colon. “Anyone who engages in
these deceptive securities practices should know they will not go undetected
and they will be held accountable.”
According to
court documents filed as part of the DPA, Celadon provided trucking and
transportation services in the United States, Mexico and Canada. Quality Companies, LLC (Quality) was a wholly
owned subsidiary of Celadon that leased tractors and trailers to owner-operator
truck drivers. Between 2013 and 2016,
Quality’s inventory grew rapidly, from approximately 750 tractors and trucks to
more than 11,000.
Quality’s
financial performance began to struggle in 2016 due in part to a slowdown in
the trucking market. In addition,
Quality owned a significant number of a truck models with mechanical issues,
which many drivers did not want to lease.
By 2016, many of Quality’s trucks were idle, unleased and overvalued on
Quality’s books by tens of millions of dollars.
Instead of
properly reporting Quality’s financial difficulties to investors, members of
Celadon’s and Quality’s senior management team, all acting within the scope of
their employment, participated in a scheme that resulted in Celadon falsely
reporting inflated profits and inflated assets to the investing public through
Celadon’s financial statements. Between
approximately June 2016 and October 2016, Quality engaged in a series of trades
as a means to dispose of its aging and unused trucks. In order to avoid disclosing the losses
connected to these trucks, executives executed the trades using invoices
purposely inflated well above market value.
Celadon ultimately used these invoices and inflated truck values to hide
millions of dollars of losses from investors.
In December 2016,
after allegations of misconduct had arisen publicly, Celadon’s management approved
a memorandum that falsely stated the trucks involved in the above-described
transactions were purchased and sold at fair market value, and were accounted
for properly on Celadon’s books.
Further, beginning in approximately January 2017, Celadon’s independent
auditors conducted an investigation into the allegations of misconduct. In response, multiple members of Celadon’s
and Quality’s management falsely represented to independent auditors that the
transactions were done at fair market value and that they were not trades. Celadon’s auditor ultimately withdrew its
audit opinion for certain Celadon financial statements. The resulting disclosure by Celadon of the
auditor’s withdrawal caused a significant drop in the price of Celadon’s stock,
which resulted in investors losing tens of millions of dollars.
Under the terms
of the DPA, Celadon is required to pay full restitution of $42.2 million to
shareholder victims directly and proximately harmed as a result of the
commission of the offense. Celadon also agreed to implement rigorous internal
controls and cooperate fully with the Department’s ongoing investigation,
including its investigation of individuals.
Under the DPA, prosecution of the company for securities fraud will be
deferred for an initial period of approximately five years, subject to approval
by the court, to allow Celadon to demonstrate good conduct.
The Department
reached this resolution based on a number of factors, including Celadon’s
ongoing cooperation with the United States and the company’s extensive efforts
at remediation. Among other remedial
efforts, the company no longer employs the executives involved in wrongdoing,
and the company replaced its executive management team with experienced
executives who display a commitment to building an ethical corporate
culture. Furthermore, Celadon created
the new position of Chief Accounting Officer and hired an experienced Internal
Audit staff member reporting directly to the Company’s Internal Audit Manager.
In addition, the
United States filed an Information and plea agreement against Danny Williams,
the former President of Quality, who was charged with one count of conspiracy
to commit securities fraud, to make false statements to a public company’s
accountants, and to falsify books, records and accounts of a public company in
connection with Celadon’s crimes.
Trial Attorneys
Kyle W. Maurer and L. Rush Atkinson of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section,
Deputy Chief Steven D. DeBrota and Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Linder
of the Southern District of Indiana prosecuted the case with assistance from
the FBI’s Indianapolis Field Office and the USPIS.
This
investigation is ongoing.
If you believe
you are a victim of this offense, please visit https://www.justice.gov/criminal-vns/case/celadon
or call (888) 549-3945.
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