Government Rests, Judge Denies Acquittal Motion In National Century Fraud Trial

The prosecution rested on Monday as the healthcare finance fraud trial of five former executives of National Century Financial Enterprises entered its fifth week (earlier here and here). Former National Century CFO John Snoble and compliance director Brian Stucke, both cooperating witnesses who have pleaded guilty, were expected to testify but were not called. The twelfth and final prosecution witness was Terrence Glomski, former asset manager for Lincoln Capital, which was acquired by Lehman Brothers in late 2002 after the collapse of National Century. Glomski testified that his pension fund clients were only able to recover $2.9 million of the $49.8 million they had invested in National Century’s AAA rated bonds. US District Judge Algenon Marbley on Tuesday denied a defense motion for acquittal, and the defense called its first witness. Robert DeLuca, a healthcare accounting consultant, testified that the company’s broad definition of receivables meant that National Century’s governing documents allowed the advance of the unsecured loans to health care providers which ultimately brought down the company. Under cross examination he admitted that he had no expertise in securities law. Bizjournal here and here.

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