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Originally published Wednesday, November 1, 2006 at 12:00 AM

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Ex-Cendant exec found guilty in fraud case

A federal jury found former Cendant Chairman Walter Forbes guilty of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and two counts of making false...

The Associated Press

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — A federal jury found former Cendant Chairman Walter Forbes guilty of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and two counts of making false statements Tuesday in a massive fraud scheme that cost the travel and real-estate company and its investors more than $3 billion.

He was found not guilty of a fourth count, securities fraud.

The case was being tried after two previous juries deadlocked. Jurors reached the verdict after nearly three days of deliberations.

The Cendant case was among the first in a series of corporate accounting scandals that sparked outrage from investors in recent years.

The fraud caused the company's market value to drop $14 billion in one day in 1998.

"We are gratified by today's verdict," said New Jersey U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie. "The innocent victims of this $14 billion fraud engineered by Walter Forbes have waited a very long time for justice to be done. This is a great day for those who believe that everyone in our society must be held accountable for their conduct."

Messages seeking comment were left with Forbes' attorneys. Prosecutors said they expect Forbes to appeal.

Prosecutors say that Forbes participated in a scheme to inflate the stock of Cendant's predecessor, CUC International, by $500 million. The fraud was reported in 1998, causing Cendant's market value to drop by $14 billion in one day.

Forbes, who testified during the trial, has argued he knew nothing about the fraud. His co-defendant, former Cendant Vice Chairman E. Kirk Shelton, was convicted last year of conspiracy, mail fraud, wire fraud, securities fraud and making false statements to the SEC.

Forbes' bond was increased from $1 million to $1.2 million. He faces up to five years in prison on the conspiracy count and up to 10 years on each of the two counts involving false reporting to regulators when he is sentenced Jan. 17, authorities said.

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