LAWFUEL – MICHAEL J. GARCIA, the United States Attorney for the
 Southern District of New York, announced that JOHN J. RIGAS, the
 founder and former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
 Adelphia Communications Corporation (“Adelphia”), and his son,
 TIMOTHY J. RIGAS, Adelphia’s former Chief Financial Officer, were
 re-sentenced yesterday by written opinion to 12 and 17 years in
 prison, respectively, in connection with their participation in a
 scheme to defraud investors, creditors and the public concerning
 the financial condition and operating performance of Adelphia.
 JOHN J. RIGAS, 83, and TIMOTHY J. RIGAS, 52, were found guilty by
 a jury in July 2004, after a five-month trial before United
 States District Judge LEONARD B. SAND — who imposed yesterday’s
 sentences and originally sentenced the defendants to 15 and 20
 years in prison, respectively. On May 24, 2007, the United
 States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the
 defendants’ convictions on all counts except one count of bank
 fraud, and directed that the defendants be re-sentenced. In
 reducing the defendants’ sentences by three years, Judge SAND
 indicated that “a minimal adjustment is appropriate” in light of
 the reversal of one of the bank fraud convictions. Judge SAND
 stated that the reversal: “in no meaningful way altered the
 seriousness of defendants’ crimes, nor the suffering which their
 conduct inflicted on so many people.” The defendants are
 currently serving their sentences.
According to the superseding Indictment filed in
 Manhattan federal court and the evidence at trial:
 From approximately 1999 through May 2002, JOHN J.
 RIGAS, TIMOTHY J. RIGAS, and others defrauded Adelphia’s
 creditors and investors by, among other things, making false and
 misleading statements concerning the company’s purported
 deleveraging through a variety of securities transactions; its
 “off-balance-sheet” debt; Adelphia’s compliance with various
 covenants and financial ratios required under its loan agreements
 and the indentures related to its bonds and other debt
 securities; the unauthorized and unreimbursed use of Adelphia’s
 funds and assets by the Rigas family; and the company’s operating
 performance — as reflected in such metrics as its EBITDA
 (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization),
 basic cable subscriber growth and plant rebuild progress.
 Adelphia was one of the most heavily indebted companies
 in the cable television industry, in part as a result of its
 rapid expansion through a series of highly leveraged acquisitions
 of other cable companies.
Adelphia faced intense pressure from
 investors, lenders, securities analysts and credit rating
 agencies to generate high levels of earnings to service its
 staggering debt load and to reduce its leverage, but Adelphia
 consistently failed to meet these expectations. In order to
 conceal that failure and avoid such consequences as a decline in
 Adelphia’s stock price, inability to access the capital markets,
 and default on its debts, JOHN J. RIGAS, TIMOTHY J. RIGAS, and
 others perpetrated a scheme to create the false appearance that
 Adelphia’s operating performance was consistently in line with
 Wall Street’s expectations, and that Adelphia was systematically
 deleveraging through, among other means, sales of equity
 securities to the Rigas family.
The Rigas family also used billions of dollars in
 Adelphia’s funds and assets for their own benefit. Among other
 things, JOHN J. RIGAS, TIMOTHY J. RIGAS, and others caused
 Adelphia to pay more than $250 million in connection with
 personal loans to the Rigas family. From approximately 1999
 through April 2002, JOHN J. RIGAS, TIMOTHY J. RIGAS, and others
 took unauthorized and undisclosed cash advances from Adelphia,
 totalling more than $50 million. In addition, the Rigas family
 spent approximately $13 million in corporate funds to construct a
 golf course located on land primarily owned by them. Such uses
 of Adelphia’s funds and assets by the Rigas family were not
 presented to or authorized by Adelphia’s Board of Directors, and
 were not disclosed to the non-family members of the board or to
 the public.
In his written opinion, Judge SAND ordered that, other
 than the prison terms and the reduction of the special
 assessments by $100 for each defendant, all other terms and
 conditions of the original sentences remain unchanged.
 The investigation and prosecution of the Adelphia fraud
 resulted in criminal forfeiture to the United States of over $700
 million.
That money will be distributed to the victims of the
 fraud pursuant to the Attorney General’s discretionary authority
 to restore forfeited property to victims in accordance with
 Department of Justice regulations. The United States Securities
 and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) will also be seeking authority
 from the United States District Court — which is overseeing its
 civil enforcement actions arising out of the Adelphia fraud — to
 combine the funds it has recovered in those actions with the
 forfeited funds for distribution to the victims.
 Mr. GARCIA, a member of the President’s Corporate Fraud
 Task Force, praised the investigative work of the United States
 Postal Inspection Service and thanked the SEC for its assistance
 in this matter.
Assistant United States Attorneys WILLIAM F. JOHNSON,
 BARBARA A. WARD, and SHARON COHEN LEVIN are in charge of the
 prosecution.
 08-158 ###