Contractor Accuses LA Times of Padding Circulation Figures
Posted in: UncategorizedIn 2007, the U.S. Attorney’s office in Brooklyn announced it was ceasing prosecution of Tribune publications Newsday and Hoy for padding circulation figures, in exchange for the papers agreeing to pay a $15 million fine and $83 million in restitution. Now comes a lawsuit on the west coast alleging similar goings on, at that time, at another Tribune Publishing property, the Los Angeles Times.
From the Courthouse News report by William Dotinga:
At some point, [plaintiff Tom] Daley says he became aware of “past fraudulent behavior at the Times, whereby the Times entered into agreements to ‘buy its own newspapers’ and count the purchases as part of its circulation,” the complaint states.
“This fraud was designed to deceive the Times‘ advertisers and was very similar to a situation involving newspapers Newsday and Hoy, which led to federal arrests and convictions of Tribune employees. In fact, while the U.S. Attorney in New York was prosecuting employees of Tribune regarding Newsday and Hoy, the Times was engaging in essentially the same illegal activities in Los Angeles. As with the Newsday and Hoy case, the fraud perpetrated here was performed by high-level executives.”
No high-level executives are parties to the complaint.
Daley says he notified law enforcement and the LA Times of his suspicions, and claims he knows of other cases of “systematic circulation and advertisement fraud in numerous other business programs that they operate, all of which were designed to deceive the advertisers and subscribers.”
As a result of his findings, Daley, who was first contracted with the paper in 2007, says a meeting was arranged with outside counsel and a representative from the paper in February 2013. He claims that within a few months, during which time he continued to provide the paper with evidence of illicit activity, his $6.4 million contract with the publication was canceled, in breach.
It’s unclear from the summary of the February 25 Superior Court filing what time period the alleged circulation padding covers, or whether the law enforcement authorities Daley notified are actively involved. The Newsday and Hoy transgressions occurred between 2001 and 2004, leading nine executives to be sentenced to five years’ probation.
Newsday was sold in 2008 to Cablevision, while Hoy remains in the Tribune fold. Daley meanwhile worked previously at the LA Times as a business development manager, from 1996 to 20005.
[Image via: courthousenews.com]
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