Ten jailed 
in wake of ‘Indian Enron’

An Indian court has sentenced the founder of an outsourcing giant and nine others to seven years in prison each after convicting them of stealing the equivalent of millions of dollars in one of the largest frauds in the country’s corporate history.

Judge BVLN Chakravarthy also found Rama Raju, his two brothers and seven other officials of Satyam Computer Services guilty of cheating, using forged documents, falsifying accounts and breach of trust in a scandal often described as “India’s Enron”.

Federal investigators said the fraud by Raju and the others cost the company’s shareholders 140 billion rupees (£1.5bn).

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Raju and other suspects were arrested in 2009 but released on bail while they awaited trial. Police in took all 10 convicts into custody after the verdict in 
Hyderabad and sent them to a local prison.

The judge also fined Raju 50 million rupees (£542,000).

The sentencing was planned for today, but Judge Chakravarthy announced it at the request of the prosecutors.

Satyam – which means “truth” in Sanskrit – was once India’s fourth-largest software services company, counting a third of 
Fortune 500 companies and the US government among its 
clients.

It plunged into turmoil after Raju confessed in 2009 that he vastly inflated the company’s assets by exaggerating cash balances, booking fake interest and 
mis-stating both debt and liabilities.

Tech Mahindra, a unit of the Mahindra Group, bought a majority stake in the company and changed its name to Mahindra Satyam in 2010.

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