Now that Apple’s board has cleared Steve Jobs of wrong-doing in the Apple back-dating probe, the feds may want a swing at the pinata.
Why? Well, for one, as Professor David Yermack pointed out to The Wall Street Journal, Apple’s board admitted that there had been a problem with Mr. Jobs: "They have pretty much admitted that he was directly involved in a fraud."
The second, and more compelling issue is that Mr. Jobs got restricted shares for his backdated options. Although the options were turned back to the company and not exercised, he did have a gain. Or as Bill Alpert at Barron’s writes: "Because Steve Jobs got his restricted shares in exchange for the backdated options (and some other options), I have trouble swallowing the Apple claim that Jobs got no benefit from the falsely valued options grant."
The board at Apple has good reason to do what it can to preserve the status of Jobs as CEO of Apple. Not so at the SEC and Justice Department.
Douglas A. McIntyre can be reached at [email protected]. He does not own securities in companies that he writes about.