Skip to main content

Former Apple Attorney Settles with the SEC

Former Apple Attorney Settles with the SEC

Apple’s long-festering stock-option backdating scandal may finally be put to rest: former Apple general counsel Nancy Heinen has settled with the SEC for $2.2 million. Back in April 2007, Heinen and former Apple CFE Fred Anderson were sued by the SEC for fraudulently back-dating sizable stock options grants to Apple executives—including Apple CEO Steve Jobs. Although options back-dating isn’t illegal, its real impact on a corporation’s bottom line must be disclosed. The SEC’s suit alleged company records were altered to conceal the impact of the backdating.

Former CFO Fred Anderson settled with the SEC the same day the suit was brought, paying $3.5 million and admitting no wrongdoing. He is currently a managing director of private equity outfit Elevation Partners, best known for its association with U2 lead singer Bono and selling Bioware and Pandemic Studios to Electronic Arts.

In her settlement, Heinen neither admitted to nor denied the charges in the SEC suit, but will pay $2.2. million in disgorgement, interest, and penalties, and will be barred from serving as an officer or director in a public company for five years. In a statement issued through her attorney, Heinen said "I cherish the great people I worked with at Apple, and I am proud of my contributions to its historic turnaround and current success. With this lawsuit behind me, I look forward to addressing the greater challenges of social justice and economic disparity."

Apple conducted an extensive internal investigation in 2006 to investigate options backdating, and found that while backdating had happened, its executives weren’t involved in any wrongdoing. In late 2006, the company restated some $84 million in financials owing to options backdating.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Steve Jobs’ 1973 job application is now in an unusual auction
Steve Jobs unveils the iPhone in 2007.

Even giants of the tech world had to start somewhere, evidenced by a job application (below) filled out by the late Apple chief Steve Jobs in 1973 at the tender age of 18.

The one-page document is currently in an auction that closes on Wednesday, July 28, with moneyed fans of the tech giant expected to bid big bucks for the unique artifact.

Read more
The strange tale of how an Apple II computer still powers Russia’s Lenin Museum
Apple II Computer

The Lenin Museum. Credit: Yuri Litvinenko/Creative Commons Image used with permission by copyright holder

Apple computers can be found all over the world, and plenty wind up in unusual places. But perhaps the one in the strangest place of all is the Apple II that powers the keystone exhibit in Russia’s Lenin Museum, 20 miles south of Moscow.

Read more
Mac OS X is 20 years old today. Here’s why it was so revolutionary
Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced the new Mac OS X at the MacWorld Conference in San Francisco

Today marks the 20th anniversary of Mac OS X, the Mac operating system that changed everything. Arriving only a couple years after the first iMac, it helped forge Apple’s image as the king of cool -- and changed computing forever.

At the turn of the millennium, Apple was the talk of the tech world. The company had nearly gone bust before Steve Jobs’ dramatic return in 1997, but just a year later, it launched the playful, colorful iMac G3 to massive acclaim. While the hardware felt downright space age, the operating system looked dated, full of dull grays and boxy windows.

Read more