The government made the right call.
In retrying former McKesson HBOC Chairman Charles McCall, prosecutors decided not to put one-time cooperator and former CEO Albert Bergonzi on the stand.
The government made the right call. In retrying former McKesson HBOC Chairman Charles McCall, prosecutors decided not to put one-time cooperator and former CEO Albert Bergonzi on the stand. That forced McCall's lawyers to summon Bergonzi instead, and the jury didn't think much of his testimony. The jury convicted McCall on Thursday on four securities fraud counts and one charge of circumventing accounting controls. They acquitted the company's former GC, Jay Lapine, on each of the three counts he faced.
November 20, 2009 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
The government made the right call.
In retrying former McKesson HBOC Chairman Charles McCall, prosecutors decided not to put one-time cooperator and former CEO Albert Bergonzi on the stand.
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