Main Body

Fraud at Waste Management

A Brief History, Before the Fraud

Wayne Huizenga
Wayne Huizenga

Waste Management was created in 1968 by the merger of two companies, owned by cousins Wayne Huizenga and Dean Buntrock.  Revenues in the first year of business were a modest $5.5 million, but the company would grow rapidly in the following years by acquiring other local waste companies across the country.  Just three years later, in 1971, Waste Management went public.  The company used the proceeds from the public offering to acquire 75 other local waste operators in the following 18 months.  From 1971 to 1980, the company revenues grew at a phenomenal rate, increasing sales at an average of 48% per year.  By 1979 sales had grown to $382 million.  Just three years later, in 1982, sales had grown to almost $1 billion.   Sales more than doubled in the following three years and by 1985 sales exceeded $2 billion.   For many companies, rapid growth results in temporary inefficiencies and thin profit margins.  Despite the rapid growth rate, Waste Management was very profitable.

Co-founder Wayne Huizenga left Waste Management in 1984 and went on to found Blockbuster and AutoNation.  Huizenga was named “CEO of The Year” five times by Financial World magazine.  Huizenga’s prosperous and noteworthy career continued long after leaving Waste Management.  Unfortunately, co-founder Dean Buntrock would choose another path after Huizenga’s departure…the path of financial statement fraud.

Waste Management continued to grow through acquisitions.  By 1990, the company was the largest waste management company in the United States and had operations in several other countries.  While revenues increased by expanding the types of services provided, much of the company’s growth had been fueled by acquiring other garbage collection and disposal companies.  However, with each acquisition there were fewer remaining companies in the industry and acquisitions could no longer be used for growth. 

 

As Growth Stalls, Fraud Begins

By the early 1990’s, Waste Management had passed beyond the rapid growth stage and was now moving into the mature, slow-growth stage of the company lifecycle.  Stock analysts and investors continued to expect strong growth from the company, and if management could not continue the growth pattern the stock price would fall.  Waste Management had been using company stock as currency to make acquisitions of other companies, and a falling stock price would make those acquisitions more difficult.  Also, a falling stock price would greatly affect the wealth of company executives.

Unable to continue growth through ethical methods, management turned to financial statement fraud to create the illusion of continued growth.  The company began the fraud during 1992, and continued through 1996.  In June 1996, Dean Buntrock retired and appointed Waste Management president and Chief Operating Officer Phillip B. Rooney to be his successor as CEO.  Rooney resigned under pressure from the board just eight months later, in February, 1997.  Buntrock returned as caretaker for five months until July, 1997, when the board hired Ronald L. Lemay from Sprint to be the new Waste Management CEO.  Lemay began an investigation into accounting irregularities, and then resigned abruptly after only three months.  Such a rapid succession of executives typically causes investors and analysts great concern.  In the case of Waste Management, those concerns were well-founded.

After Lemay’s abrupt resignation, the Waste Management board hired turnaround expert Robert S. Miller as the new CEO.  The investigation launched by Lemay ultimately led to the company revising the annual financial reports for 1992 through 1996, plus the first three quarters of 1997.  The revision caught the attention of the SEC, which launched an investigation.  On March 26, 2002, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued a press release citing fraud charges against Dean Buntrock and several other defendants.

 

The Perpetrators

The Securities and Exchange Commission files suit against Waste Management on March 26, 2002.  They alleged that the company inflated profits by 1.7 billion dollars while making millions of dollars for the top executives and defrauding investors out of 6 billion dollars.

Thomas C. Newkirk, associate director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, stated in the SEC press release that the Waste Management fraud was “one of the most egregious accounting frauds we have ever seen.  For years, these defendants cooked the books, enriched themselves, preserved their jobs, and duped unsuspecting shareholders.  The defendants’ fraudulent conduct was driven by greed and a desire to retain their corporate positions and status in the business and social communities.  Our goal is to take the profit out of securities fraud and to prevent fraudsters from serving as officers or directors of public companies.”[1]

Below are the executives cited in the indictment:

Dean Buntrock

Dean Buntrock
Dean Buntrock

Dean Buntrock Waste Management’s founder, chairman of the board of directors, and chief executive officer.  While presenting himself as a successful entrepreneur, Buntrock set a culture of fraudulent accounting in Waste Management by setting high earnings targets and directed accounting changes to meet those targets to keep investor confidence up in the company.  Buntrock indulged in philanthropy by donating inflated company stock to his alma mater, St. Olaf College, which named their student center Buntrock commons after him.  This also gave Buntrock a large tax benefit.  He was the primary beneficiary of the fraud receiving more than 16.9 million dollars in bonuses due to increased company performance, retirement benefits, tax write offs for charitable donations, and the sale of company stock during the fraud.

Phillip B. Rooney

Phillip B. Rooney president and chief operating officer, director, and CEO.  Rooney was in charge of the solid waste operations and had overall control over the company’s largest subsidiary.  In this position, Rooney was able to ensure that write offs the company needed to take were not recorded.  He also dismissed accounting decisions that would have any negative impact on the company.  For this, Rooney received 9.2 million dollars in bonuses due to increased company performance, retirement benefits, and the sale of company stock during the fraud.

James E. Koenig

James E. Koenig executive vice president and chief financial officer.  Koenig was the primary executioner of the fraud and covered the fraud up by misleading the company’s audit committee and internal auditors, destroying evidence, and withholding information from outside auditors.  Keonig received over $900,000 for his part in the fraud.

Thomas C. Hau

Thomas C. Hau vice president, corporate controller, and chief accounting officer.  Was considered the “principal technician” of the fraud by the SEC.  He created many one-time accounting transactions to make sure the earnings met their targeted goals.  He also wrote the deceptive disclosures used for the auditors and investors.  He was able to profit by more than $600,000 for his role.

Bruce D. Tobecksen

Bruce D. Tobecksen vice president of finance.  While acting as Keonig’s “right hand man,” Tobecksen was tasked to handle the overflow from Hau’s fraudulent accounting transactions.  He was enriched by over $400,000 for doing so.

Herbert Getz

Herbert Getz senior vice president, general counsel, and secretary.  Getz served as Waste Management’s general counsel.  In this role he approved the company’s fraudulent disclosures created by Hau and received over $450,000 from the fraud.

 

The Fraud Itself

To meet analysts and investor expectations, the company journalized several fraudulent accounting transactions to eliminate and defer expenses for the current period.  By decreasing the expenses on the income statement, the company is able to report a higher profit.  To do this, the company used several fraudulent accounting techniques:

Avoided depreciation expenses

Waste Management had a number of garbage trucks used in operations. To depreciate these trucks, the company’s management needed to assign a salvage value to each truck and the truck’s useful life.  Assigning values to these is done by every company, but the values (estimates) must be reasonable.  In the case of Waste Management, the estimates for the salvage values were inflated and the useful lives were extended.  This lowers the depreciation expense taken for these assets each period this raising the net income.  For any assets that did not have a salvage value, an arbitrary value was assigned to lower the depreciation expense.

Failed to record landfill expenses

As Waste Management filled their landfills with waste, they needed to record the related expenses. This was not done to help keep expenses off of the income statement.  They also neglected to record the expenses necessary to write off the costs of unsuccessful and abandoned landfill development projects.

Established inflated environmental reserves (liabilities)

By inflating the reserves in connection with acquisitions on the balance sheet, Waste Management was able to successful avoid recording unrelated operating expenses. This method is similar to booking an allowance for doubtful accounts and changing the estimates each period to reduce the overall reserve instead of expensing it out keeping the expenses off of the income statement.

Fraudulent accounting reserves

the company also improperly capitalized a variety of expenses. This allowed the company to avoid expensing the amounts in full in the period they were used and deferring the amounts to the balance sheet as assets.  For example, if a company purchased small equipment that was an immaterial amount to the company, they should expense that equipment.  By capitalizing the equipment, they are able to create an asset on the balance sheet that they can expense in small amounts over time instead of all at once.  The company also failed to establish enough reserves to pay for income taxes and other expenses.

The decision to make the accounting irregularities rested with Buntrock and others and the company’s headquarters.  They would make a budget for the company’s earnings and expenses and compare them to the actual amounts.  When the actual numbers fell short of the budgeted expectations, accounting adjustments were made to make sure the actual amounts matched the projected budgets.  This created a problem as the inflated numbers for the previous year were used as the floor for the next year’s budget.  Doing this was unsustainable for the company since the fraudulent earnings for one period had to be replaced in the next period.

One method the company used to try and maintain the stability of the fraud was to use an accounting manipulation known as “netting” or “geography.”  The company allegedly used netting to reduce operating expenses and accumulated accounting misstatements from prior periods by offsetting them against unrelated gains in the sales and exchanges of assets.  The “geography” entries moved large amounts of money between different line items on the income statement to make the financials look the way the company wanted to show them.

 

The Role of the Outside Auditors

Arthur Andersen

The CPA firm of Arthur Andersen had been the auditors for Waste Management for many years.  The relationship between the two firms dated back to the early 1970’s.  In the early 1990’s, Waste Management limited the audit fees they would pay to Andersen, indicating that they would give Andersen consulting contracts to replace profit lost in the annual audit.

The SEC investigated Andersen’s role in the fraud and determined that Andersen had been involved in helping Waste Management hide the fraud from investors.  Arthur Andersen knew of the erroneous financial reports.

The appropriate alternatives for Andersen would be to either

  1. require the client to correct the financial reports before they are issued or
  2. disclose the problems to investors with a qualified or adverse opinion on the financial statements.

Instead, Andersen entered into a written agreement with Waste Management called “Summary of Action Steps.”  This agreement required that the total amount of the past fraud would be adjusted over the following ten years.  Andersen’s audit team would propose adjusting entries each year to amortize one-tenth of the fraud.  Essentially, this was a written agreement between the two firms to create fraud in the future in order to cover up the frauds of the past.  Andersen did propose the entries in later years, but Waste Management’s executives refused to make the adjustments because this would impair their ability to meet earnings expectations of analysts and investors.   In spite of Waste Management’s refusal, Andersen continued to give a “clean” unqualified opinion on the financial statements each year.  It is believed that this lasted at least six years.  A copy of the SEC’s Litigation Release is presented below:

 

 SEC’s Litigation release for Waste Management

UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

LITIGATION RELEASE NO. 17039 / June19, 2001

ACCOUNTING AND AUDITING ENFORCEMENT
RELEASE NO. 1410 / June19, 2001

ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP AND THREE PARTNERS SETTLE CIVIL INJUNCTIVE ACTION CHARGING VIOLATIONS OF ANTIFRAUD PROVISIONS, AND SETTLE RELATED ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDINGS, ARISING OUT OF ANDERSEN’S AUDITS OF WASTE MANAGEMENT, INC.’S FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

ANDERSEN PRACTICE DIRECTOR SETTLES ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDINGS FOR IMPROPER PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT ARISING OUT OF FIRM’S AUDIT OF WASTE MANAGEMENT, INC.’S 1995

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Arthur Andersen LLP, Robert E. Allgyer, Walter Cercavschi, and Edward G. MaierCivil Action No. 1:01CV01348 (J.R.) (D.D.C. June 19, 2001)

In the Matter of Arthur Andersen LLPAdministrative Proceeding File No. 3-10513

In the Matter of Robert E. Allgyer, CPAAdministrative Proceeding File No. 3-10515

In the Matter of Edward G. Maier, CPAAdministrative Proceeding File No. 3-10514

In the Matter of Walter Cercavschi, CPAAdministrative Proceeding File No. 3-10516

In the Matter of Robert G. Kutsenda, CPAAdministrative Proceeding File No. 3-10517

The Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission”) announced today that Arthur Andersen LLP and three of its current and former partners settled a civil injunctive action, charging violations of antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws, as well as related administrative proceedings brought pursuant to rule 102(e) of the Commission’s Rules of Practice (“rule 102(e)”). In a related action, a fourth Andersen partner, a regional practice director, settled administrative proceedings brought pursuant to rule 102(e) in which the Commission found that he engaged in improper professional conduct. These proceedings arise out of one or more of Andersen’s audits of Waste Management, Inc.’s (“Waste Management” or the “Company”) financial statements during the period 1992 through 1996.

Andersen and the individual defendants and respondents, without admitting or denying the allegations or findings in the Commission’s Complaint and orders, consented to the following sanctions:

  • Arthur Andersen LLP (“Andersen” or “Firm”), a national accounting firm, consented (1) to the entry of a permanent injunction enjoining it from violating section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) and rule 10b-5 thereunder; (2) to pay a civil money penalty in the amount of $7 million; and (3) in related administrative proceedings, to the entry of an order pursuant to rule 102(e) censuring it based upon the Commission’s finding that it engaged in improper professional conduct and the issuance of the permanent injunction;
  • Robert E. Allgyer (“Allgyer”), the partner responsible for the Waste Management engagement, consented (1) to the entry of a permanent injunction enjoining him from violating section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and rule 10b-5 thereunder and section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 (“Securities Act”); (2) to pay a civil money penalty in the amount $50,000; and (3) in related administrative proceedings pursuant to rule 102(e), to the entry of an order denying him the privilege of appearing or practicing before the Commission as an accountant, with the right to request his reinstatement after five (5) years;
  • Edward G. Maier (“Maier”), currently a partner and then the risk management partner for Andersen’s Chicago office and the concurring partner on the Waste Management engagement, consented (1) to the entry of a permanent injunction enjoining him from violating section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and rule 10b-5 thereunder and section 17(a) of the Securities Act; (2) to pay a civil money penalty in the amount $40,000; and (3) in related administrative proceedings pursuant to rule 102(e), to the entry of an order denying him the privilege of appearing or practicing before the Commission as an accountant, with the right to request his reinstatement after three (3) years;
  • Walter Cercavschi (“Cercavschi”), currently a partner and then a partner on the Waste Management engagement, consented (1) to the entry of a permanent injunction enjoining him from violating section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and rule 10b-5 thereunder and section 17(a) of the Securities Act; (2) to pay a civil money penalty in the amount $30,000; and (3) in related administrative proceedings pursuant to rule 102(e), to the entry of an order denying him the privilege of appearing or practicing before the Commission as an accountant, with the right to request his reinstatement after three (3) years;
  • Robert G. Kutsenda (“Kutsenda”), currently a partner and then the Central Region Audit Practice Director responsible for Andersen’s Chicago, Kansas City, Indianapolis, and Omaha offices (“Practice Director”), consented in administrative proceedings pursuant to rule 102(e), to the entry of an order, based on the Commission’s finding that he engaged in improper professional conduct, denying him the privilege of appearing or practicing before the Commission as an accountant, with the right to request reinstatement after one (1) year.

The Commission alleged in its Complaint, or found in its Orders, as follows:

Andersen

  • Andersen knowingly or recklessly issued false and misleading unqualified audit reports on Waste Management’s annual financial statements for the years 1993 through 1996. The audit reports stated that the Company’s financial statements were presented fairly, in all material respects, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) and that Andersen’s audits were conducted in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards (“GAAS”). These representations were materially false and misleading.
  • In February 1998, Waste Management announced that it was restating its financial statements for the five-year period 1992 through 1996 and the first three quarters of 1997 (the “Restatement”). To date, the Restatement is the largest in the Commission’s history. In the Restatement, the Company admitted that through 1996 it had materially overstated its reported pre-tax earnings by $1.43 billion and that it had understated certain elements of its tax expense by $178 million.
  • Andersen audited the Restatement and issued an unqualified audit report on it. The Restatement addressed misstatements that resulted from accounting practices that improperly increased reported operating income primarily by understating operating expenses. In most instances, the Company had improperly deferred recognition of current operating expenses to future periods in order to inflate its current period income. The Company admitted that it had misstated its expenses relating to, among other things, vehicle, equipment and container depreciation, capitalized interest, asset impairments, purchase accounting related to environmental remediation reserves and other liabilities.
  • In one or more audits during the period 1993 through 1996, Andersen, through Allgyer, Maier, and Cercavschi, identified and documented numerous accounting issues giving rise to the misstatements and likely misstatements that the Restatement ultimately addressed, and brought certain of the issues to the attention of Andersen’s Practice Director, the firm’s Managing Partner and the Audit Division Head for the firm’s Chicago office (“Audit Division Head”). The engagement team also consulted with and relied upon Andersen’s waste industry expert in its Accounting Principles Group (a unit within Andersen available for consultation on significant accounting issues) concerning certain of the Company’s improper accounting practices discussed herein.
  • With respect to many of the non-GAAP accounting practices, Andersen failed to quantify and estimate all known and likely misstatements resulting from the accounting issues that the engagement team identified. During the years in question, Andersen quantified only certain of the misstatements. For example, in its 1993 audit, the engagement team quantified current and prior period misstatements of $128 million, which, if recorded, would have reduced net income before special items by 12%. The engagement team also identified, but did not quantify and estimate, accounting practices that gave rise to other known and likely misstatements. Allgyer and Maier consulted with the Practice Director and the Audit Division Head and informed them of the quantified misstatements and “continuing audit issues,” and Allgyer consulted with the Firm’s Managing Partner and informed him of the quantified misstatements and “continuing audit issues.” The partners determined that the misstatements were not material and that Andersen could issue an unqualified audit report on the Company’s 1993 financial statements.
  • In connection with the 1993 audit, following the consultations noted above, and prior to the Company’s announcement of its 1993 earnings, Allgyer presented a “plan” – known as the “Summary of Action Steps” (“Action Steps”) – to the Company’s Chief Executive Officer (later signed and initialed by the Company’s Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer) to reduce, going forward, the cumulative amount of the quantified misstatements and to change, among other things, the accounting practices that gave rise to the quantified misstatements and to the other known and likely misstatements. According to an internal memorandum that Allgyer distributed, the Action Steps were the “minimum changes we have concluded are necessary for WMX to implement immediately” and concluded that the Company’s compliance with the “must do” items [in the Action Steps] “brings the Company to a minimum acceptable level of accounting . . . .” The Action Steps also evidenced the fact that Andersen had identified the non-GAAP accounting practices that gave rise to numerous misstatements in the Company’s 1993 through 1996 financial statements.
  • In 1994, the Company continued to engage in the accounting practices that gave rise to the quantified misstatements and the other known and likely misstatements. As in 1993, the Practice Director, the Firm’s Managing Partner and the Audit Division Head were consulted, and they again concurred in the issuance of an unqualified audit report on the Company’s 1994 financial statements.
  • In 1995, in many instances, the Company did not implement the Action Steps and continued to utilize accounting practices that did not conform with GAAP. Andersen monitored the Company’s compliance or lack of compliance with the Action Steps. In its 1995 financial statements, the Company used a $160 million gain that it realized on the exchange of its interest in an entity known as ServiceMaster to offset $160 million in unrelated operating expenses and misstatements that, in most instances, had been identified as misstatements in 1994 and earlier. The Company offset the misstatements and expenses against the gain in Sundry Income, Net. The amount netted represented 10% of 1995 pre-tax income before special charges. The Company made no disclosure of the netting.
  • After reaching a preliminary determination that the amounts being netted were not material to the financial statements taken as a whole, two of the partners on the engagement consulted with the Practice Director for Andersen’s Central Region about the netting and whether Andersen would be required to qualify or withhold its audit report if the Company netted the ServiceMaster gain and did not disclose the netting. The Practice Director understood that only prior period adjustments would be netted. He concluded that, although the netting did not conform with GAAP and the netted items would not be disclosed, Andersen did not need to qualify or withhold its audit report. He reasoned that the netting and the non-disclosure of the misstatements and the unrelated gain did not prevent the issuance of the unqualified audit report because he concluded, for various reasons, that they were not material to the Company’s 1995 financial statements taken as a whole. In fact, these items were material. Andersen’s 1995 unqualified audit report was materially false and misleading.
  • Several months after the completion of the 1995 audit and the Company’s filing of its 1995 Form 10-K with the Commission, Andersen prepared a memorandum articulating its disagreement with the Company’s use of netting and the lack of disclosure. The memorandum discussed the ServiceMaster transaction of 1995 and gains from other transactions in 1996 that were netted without disclosure. According to the memorandum, Andersen recognized that

    [t]he Company has been sensitive to not use special charges [to eliminate balance sheet errors and misstatements that had accumulated in prior years] and instead has used `other gains’ to bury charges for balance sheet clean ups. [Emphasis in original]

    . . . .

    We disagree with management’s netting of the gains and charges and the lack of disclosures. We have communicated strongly to WMX management that this is an area of SEC exposure. We will continue to monitor this trend, and assess in all cases the impact of non-disclosure in terms of materiality to the overall financial statement presentation and effect on current year earnings.

  • Despite its concerns about the Company’s use of netting, Andersen did not withdraw its 1995 audit report or take steps to prevent the Company from continuing to use netting in 1996 to eliminate current period expenses and prior period misstatements from its financial statements.
  • During the 1996 audit, Andersen quantified misstatements in the Company’s financial statements, which equaled 7.2% of pre-tax income from continuing operations before special charges. The Company also netted and misclassified gains and profits of approximately $85.1 million on the sales of two subsidiaries, which Andersen also identified as improper, and which, if corrected in 1996, would have further reduced pre-tax income from continuing operations before special charges by 5.9%.
  • As noted in its Order as to Andersen, this conduct took place against the following background:
    • Andersen has served as Waste Management’s auditors since before Waste Management became a public company in 1971.
    • Andersen regarded Waste Management as a “crown jewel” client.
    • Until 1997, every chief financial officer (“CFO”) and chief accounting officer (“CAO”) in Waste Management’s history as a public company had previously worked as an auditor at Andersen.
    • During the 1990s, approximately 14 former Andersen employees worked for Waste Management, most often in key financial and accounting positions.
    • Andersen regarded Allgyer as one of its top “client service” partners. Andersen selected Allgyer to become the Waste Management engagement partner because, among other things, Allgyer had “extensive experience in Europe” and demonstrated a “devotion to client service” and had a “personal style that . . . fit well with the Waste Management officers.” During this time (and continuing throughout his tenure as engagement partner for Waste Management), Allgyer held the title of “Partner in Charge of Client Service” for Andersen’s Chicago office and served as “marketing director.” In this position, Allgyer coordinated the marketing efforts of Andersen’s entire Chicago office including, among other things, cross-selling non-attest services to audit clients.
    • Shortly after Allgyer’s appointment as engagement partner, Waste Management capped Andersen’s corporate audit fees at the prior year’s level but allowed the Firm to earn additional fees for “special work.”
    • As reported to the audit committee, between 1991 and 1997, Andersen billed Waste Management corporate headquarters approximately $7.5 million in audit fees. Over this seven-year period, while Andersen’s corporate audit fees remained capped, Andersen also billed Waste Management corporate headquarters $11.8 million in other fees, much of which related to tax, attest work unrelated to financial statement audits or reviews, regulatory issues, and consulting services.
    • A related entity, Andersen Consulting, also billed Waste Management corporate headquarters approximately $6 million in additional non-audit fees. Of the $6 million in Andersen Consulting fees, $3.7 million related to a Strategic Review that analyzed the overall business structure of the Company and ultimately made recommendations on implementing a new operating model designed to “increase shareholder value.” Allgyer was a member of the Steering Committee that oversaw the Strategic Review, and Andersen Consulting billed his time for these services to the Company. In setting Allgyer’s compensation, Andersen took into account, among other things, the Firm’s billings to the Company for audit and non-audit services.
  • As the Commission stated in its Order as to Andersen,

    [u]nless the auditor stands up to management as soon as it knows that management is unwilling to correct material misstatements, the auditor ultimately will find itself in an untenable position: it either must continue issuing unqualified audit reports on materially misstated financial statements and hope that its conduct will not be discovered or it must force a restatement or qualify its report and thereby subject itself to the liability that likely will result from the exposure of its role in the prior issuance of the materially misstated financial statements.

  • The Commission in this case found that

    Andersen failed to stand up to management to prevent the issuance of materially misstated financial statements. Instead, Andersen allowed the Company to establish – and then continue for many years – a series of improper accounting practices. As a result, Andersen found itself in 1998 in the position of auditing the Restatement and issuing an unqualified audit report in which it acknowledged that the prior financial statements on which it had issued unqualified audit reports were materially misstated.

  • The Commission ultimately found in its Order as to Andersen that

    the circumstances of this case, including the positions within the Firm of the partners who were consulted by the engagement team, the gravity and duration of the misconduct, and the nature and magnitude of the misstatements mandate that the Firm be held responsible for the acts of its partners in causing the Firm to issue false and misleading audit reports in the Firm’s name.

  • The Commission’s Complaint alleges and the Commission’s Order found that Andersen knew or was reckless in not knowing that the unqualified audit reports that it issued for the years 1993 through 1996 were materially false and misleading because the audits were not conducted in accordance with GAAS and the financial statements did not conform to GAAP. The Complaint further alleges that Andersen violated section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and rule 10b-5 thereunder. The Commission’s Order as to Andersen finds that Andersen engaged in improper professional conduct within the meaning of rule 102(e)(1)(ii) of the Commission’s Rules of Practice.

Allgyer

  • Allgyer is the only Defendant charged in connection with Andersen’s audit of Waste Management’s 1992 financial statements. The Complaint alleges that Allgyer knew or was reckless in not knowing that the Andersen’s audit report on the Company’s 1992 financial statements was materially false and misleading because in addition to quantified misstatements totaling $93.5 million that, if corrected, would have reduced pre-tax income before accounting changes by 7.4%, he knew or was reckless in not knowing of additional known and likely misstatements that had not been quantified and estimated that related to, among other things, land carrying values in excess of net realizable value, improper charges of operating expenses to the environmental remediation reserves (liabilities) and purchase accounting related to remediation reserves (liabilities). Allgyer further knew that the Company had netted, without disclosure, $111 million of current period expenses and prior period misstatements against a portion of a one-time gain from an unrelated initial public offering of securities, which had the effect of understating Waste Management’s 1992 operating expenses and overstating the Company’s income from operations.
  • The Commission’s Complaint further alleges that Allgyer engaged in similar conduct in connection with the 1993 through 1996 audits. Allgyer thus knew or was reckless in not knowing that Andersen’s unqualified audit report for each of the years 1993 through 1996 was materially false and misleading.
  • The Complaint further alleges that Allgyer knew that during the years 1992 through 1996 every unqualified audit report would be incorporated into one or more registration statements filed with the Commission. As a result of his conduct, Allgyer violated section 10(b) of the Exchange Act, rule 10b-5 thereunder and section 17(a) of the Securities Act.

Maier

  • The Commission’s Complaint alleges that, for each of the years 1993 through 1996, Maier knew of the quantified misstatements and of accounting practices that gave rise to additional known and likely misstatements that were not quantified and estimated and approved the issuance of an unqualified audit report. He knew or was reckless in not knowing that Andersen’s unqualified audit report for each of the years 1993 through 1996 was materially false and misleading. He further knew that, during this period, every unqualified audit report would be incorporated into one or more registration statements filed with the Commission. As a result of his conduct, Maier violated section 10(b) of the Exchange Act, rule 10b-5 thereunder, and section 17(a) of the Securities Act.

Cercavschi

  • The Commission’s Complaint alleges that, for each of the years 1994 through 1996, Cercavschi knew of the quantified misstatements and of accounting practices that gave rise to additional known and likely misstatements that were not quantified and estimated and approved the issuance of an unqualified audit report. He knew or was reckless in not knowing that Andersen’s unqualified audit report for each of the years 1994 through 1996 was materially false and misleading. He further knew that, during this period, every unqualified audit report would be incorporated into one or more registration statements filed with the Commission. As a result of his conduct, Cercavschi violated section 10(b) of the Exchange Act, rule 10b-5 thereunder, and section 17(a) of the Securities Act.

Kutsenda

  • The Commission’s Order as to Kutsenda finds that, during the 1995 audit, when Kutsenda was informed of the non-GAAP netting of the $160 million one-time gain against unrelated prior-period misstatements and that the amount represented 10% of the Company’s 1995 pre-tax income, he knew or should have known that the Company’s use of netting warranted heightened scrutiny. The Commission found that although not part of the engagement team, when he was consulted by two of the engagement partners, Kutsenda was required under GAAS to exercise due professional care so that an unqualified audit report was not issued on financial statements that were materially misstated. The Order further finds that Kutsenda wrongly concluded that Andersen was not required to withhold or qualify its audit report and that in reaching this result, he engaged in highly unreasonable conduct that resulted in a violation of applicable professional standards. Based on these findings, the Commission found that Kutsenda engaged in improper professional conduct within the meaning of rule 102(e)(1)(ii).[2]

 

The Effect of the Fraud

The fraud at Waste Management was intended to cause rising stock prices.  The stock rose from $17.11 at the beginning of 1992 to a peak of over $55 in August, 1998.  The stock then waivered for about a year before collapsing in July, 1999.  Table 1 depicts the rapid rise and collapse of the stock from 1992 through 1999.[3]

Table 1

Waste Management Stock Prices – 1992 through 1999

 

While these executives profited from the stock price increase, investors lost $6 billion.The rapid increase in the stock price created great wealth for the corporate executives, who owned substantial amounts of stock and stock options.  The SEC determined that Buntrock was the mastermind behind the fraud and reaped the most in ill-gotten gains.  He was assisted by a number of Waste Management executives who benefited significantly from the fraud but to a lesser degree compared to Buntrock.  Table 2 shows the estimated profits that each of the perpetrators gained from the fraud in descending order of magnitude.[4]

 

Table 2 – Fraudulent Executive Profits

Executive Estimated Gains from the Fraud
Dean L. Buntrock Over $16.9 million
Phillip B. Rooney Over $9.2 million
James E. Koenig Over $900,000
Thomas C. Hau Over $600,000
Herbert Getz Over $450,000
Bruce D. Tobecksen Over $400,000

 

Waste Management Recovers

After the fraud at Waste Management became public, the company struggled for several years as it dealt with the legal ramifications of the fraud.  Although the fraud overstated profits, the company was profitable and able to survive.  The company spent considerable effort to rehabilitate its reputation.  Efforts included re-branding itself as a “green” company with environmental concerns, sponsoring an exhibit at Disney’s Epcot Center, and being the focus of first episode of the CBS series “Undercover Boss.”

Waste Management Exhibit at “Innoventions” in Disney’s Epcot Center
Waste Management Exhibit at “Innoventions” in Disney’s Epcot Center
CEO Larry O’Donnell in “Undercover Boss”
CEO Larry O’Donnell in “Undercover Boss”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The stock price slowly recovered in the following decade, but has never reached the peak prices of 1998-1999.[5]

Table 3 – Waste Management Stock Prices

1999 through 2009

 

 

Questions for Research and Discussion

1. What were the incentives and pressures that led to the fraud?

2. Buntrock benefited the most from the Waste Management fraud.  Research and summarize what happened to Buntrock and evaluate if he may have felt the risk worth the reward.  Include any articles you used in your evaluation.

3. Research what happened to at least three of the Waste Management executives (other than Buntrock) named in the chapter (Rooney, Koenig, Hau, Tobecksen, Getz)?

  • Summarize what happened to each executive (include links to your articles).
  • Do you think the punishments was appropriate?

4. What happened to the auditing firm of Arthur Andersen as a result of their Waste Management audits?

  • Do you think these consequences were appropriate?

5. Choose at least two of the four Arthur Andersen audit partners named in the chapter (Allgyer, Maier, Cercavschi, Kutsenda) and research what happened to them as a result of the Waste Management audit?

    • Summarize what happened to each partner (include links to your articles).
    • Do you think these consequences were appropriate?

6. What policies or procedures (internal controls) could Waste Management have used to avoid the fraud?

7. What policies or audit procedures could Arthur Andersen have used to avoid the problems in the Waste Management audit?

8. How did this case affect your views and opinions about Waste Management?

  • Did you know about the company before this chapter?
  • Would you do business with them?

  1. https://www.sec.gov/news/headlines/wastemgmt6.htm
  2. http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr17039.htm
  3. https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/WM/waste-management/stock-price-history
  4. https://www.sec.gov/news/headlines/wastemgmt6.htm
  5. https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/WM/waste-management/stock-price-history

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Professional Ethics for Accountants Copyright © 2019 by Anne and Rob Diamond is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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