Who is WorldCom? The company began as Long Distance Discount Services, Inc. (LDDS) in 1983, based in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. In 1985, LDDS selected Bernard Ebbers to be its CEO. The company went public in 1989 through a merger with Advantage Companies Inc. The company name was changed to LDDS WorldCom in 1995, and later just WorldCom. The company’s growth under WorldCom was fueled primarily through acquisitions during the 1990s and reached its apex with the acquisition of MCI in 1998. Among
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WorldCom took the telecom industry by storm when it began a frenzy of acquisitions in the 1990s. The low margins that the industry was accustomed to weren't enough for Bernie Ebbers, CEO of WorldCom. From 1995 until 2000, WorldCom purchased over sixty other telecom firms. In 1997 it bought MCI for $37 billion. WorldCom moved into Internet and data communications, handling 50 percent of all United States Internet traffic and 50 percent of all e-mails worldwide. By 2001, WorldCom owned one-third of
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eventually lose control of practices performed throughout the corporation. In This paper, I will evaluate the planning function of WorldCom management. In addition, it will analyze its legal ethnical and social issues the company faced. Lastly, it will examine the factors that influenced WorldCom tactical, operational, and strategic planning. The Planning function: WorldCom WorldCom is a telecommunications U.S based company found by Bernard Ebbers in 1983 as a small long distance discount telecom company
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Sarbanes Oxley Act was enacted in 2002 as a reaction to a number of major corporate and accounting scandals which included Enron, Tyco International, Adelphia, Peregrine Systems, and WorldCom. This Act which is commonly known by the acronym “SOX” was put in place to protect investors from unethical companies practicing questionable accounting standards. The Senate refers to this Act as the “Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act” and the House refers to is as the “Corporate and
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Case 1.11 WorldCom: The Definition of an Asset Line Cost Expenses WorldCom generally maintained its own lines for local service in heavily populated urban areas. However, it relied on non-WorldCom networks to complete most residential and commercial calls outside of these urban areas and paid the owners of the networks to use their services. For example, a call from a WorldCom customer in Boston to Rome might start on a local (Boston) phone company’s line, flow to WorldCom’s own network, and then
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Examining a Business Failure: WorldCom LDR531 12/13/2010 Lynette Grizelle Over the past 15 years there has been numerous business failures in the United States and most of these failures have been because of inadequate organizational behavior techniques. According to The Great American History Fact-Finder, the WorldCom bankruptcy was the “largest corporate fraud and business failure in the United States” (WorldCom Bankruptcy, 2004). Prior to their fall in 2002 WorldCom was the nation's second-largest
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buying dozens of other companies. It eventually became WorldCom. The company grew rapidly in the 1990s. Among the companies that were bought or merged with WorldCom were Advanced Communications Corp. (1992), Metromedia Communication Corp. (1993), Resurgens Communications Group (1993), IDB Communications Group Inc. (1994), Williams Technology Group, Inc. (1995), and MFS Communications Company (1996), and MCI in 1998. On November 4, 1997, WorldCom and MCI Communications (the second biggest U.S. long-distance
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Unethical behaviors in the accounting field is extremely important to investors and stock holders. This is critical information will help determine their investment in the company and the amount of stock that they are going to purchase. Misleading financial funds in order to gain personal leverage, misuse of analysis, exaggerating revenue of assets, bribery and security fraud are just a few problems of unethical behavior. In 2002, Enron/Andersen and the Worldcom scandal were two companies that
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ACC460 –Auditing Video Case Fraud and Tone at the Top - Video Case Questions This video is an informative video made for accounting students and employees that outlines the danger of corruption and fraud in the workplace. The majority of the video is an interview with Walt Pavlo of MCI Worldcom. He explains his case and the steps that lead him to take the actions that landed him in prison. While he is telling his story two gentalmen describe how Walt’s story relates to the world of auditing
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Waste Management Fraud Final Project BS 325 Dustin Nystel 12/17/10 Waste Management Overview Waste Management Inc. is a Houston Texas based company providing waste management and other services in North America. Yahoo financial summarizes the company as follows: Waste Management Inc. offers collections, transfer, recycling, disposal, and waste-to-energy services. Its recycling operations include collections material processing, plastics materials recycling, and commodities recycling
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