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Ex-CFO Testifies Scrushy Urged ‘Fix’

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From Associated Press

Fired HealthSouth Corp. Chief Executive Richard Scrushy told his staff to “fix the numbers” to conceal a potential earnings shortfall in mid-1996 when a massive accounting scandal was just beginning, the company’s first chief financial officer testified Wednesday.

Aaron Beam, one of 15 former HealthSouth executives who reached plea deals and are expected to testify for the government in Scrushy’s corporate fraud trial, described Scrushy as being at the heart of the fraud for which he is on trial.

Beam said he participated in the fraud for a year because Scrushy intimidated him.

“He said, ‘If we are ever caught I am going to deny everything and you guys are on your own,’ ” said Beam, adding later: “Richard is just not the kind of person you cross.”

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Beam came under sharp questioning from defense attorney Jim Parkman, who got him to admit to repeatedly lying to investors, auditors, analysts and directors amid the scheme while being unable to remember dates and other basic facts on the stand.

“Did it just get to be so much lying you can’t separate the lies from the truth?” Parkman asked.

“No,” Beam answered quietly.

While prosecutors and the defense agree there was a massive scheme to overstate earnings, Scrushy contends that Beam was part of a group of overly ambitious, greedy subordinates who hid it from him through years of lies.

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But Beam -- who helped Scrushy start HealthSouth in 1984 -- said Scrushy was in on the conspiracy from its beginning.

With HealthSouth’s financial results from the second quarter of 1996 inadequate to meet Wall Street earnings forecasts, Beam said he and another finance executive who pleaded guilty, Bill Owens, went to Scrushy to discuss a problem that began on a smaller scale as early as 1991.

“We said, ‘Richard, we’re short. We’re not going to meet Wall Street expectations.... We’ve done everything we can’ ” using aggressive accounting, Beam testified as Scrushy sat a few feet away at the defense table.

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“He said, ‘It’s not an option to miss our numbers. You guys need to fix the numbers,’ ” Beam testified.

Beam testified that Owens stayed at work that night with two other executives, and the next day Owens and Beam told Scrushy they had inflated revenue to make it appear the rehabilitation giant would match expectations.

“We told him we had fixed the numbers,” said Beam, who retired in 1997. “He said very little, just, ‘Fine, let’s prepare the earnings release.’ ”

The bogus numbers were included in reports the company issued to the media and the Securities and Exchange Commission, he said.

Defense attorney Art Leach peppered Beam’s testimony with repeated objections. And in initial questioning, Leach got Beam to admit he didn’t recall the size of the discrepancy between HealthSouth’s results and numbers that were released to the public.

Scrushy is charged with conspiracy, fraud, obstruction of justice, perjury, money laundering and false corporate reporting in the first test of the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, passed after scandals at Enron Corp. and other corporate giants.

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