In Outcome Health trial, defense tries to prove witness was responsible for fraud, not company founders
A former, young executive at
Witness and former Outcome executive
Desai’s testimony in the case, against his former bosses, is expected to be pivotal, with defense attorneys blaming the alleged fraud on Desai and prosecutors saying Desai was merely following his bosses’ lead. Desai has already pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and struck a deal with the government to testify in exchange for a potentially reduced sentence.
Outcome was once one of the most talked-about tech companies in
Shah, Agarwal and Purdy now face charges of mail fraud, wire fraud and bank fraud. All three have pleaded not guilty to the charges, some of which carry sentences of up to 30 years in prison.
When Desai was on the stand last week, he described how the company would run pharmaceutical companies’ ads on fewer screens than promised, yet still charge the drug companies the full amounts. Prosecutors showed the jury strings of emails between Desai, Shah, Agarwal and Purdy discussing the issue while they were at the company. Desai, now age 30, was 20 years old when he started working full-time at Outcome, which was then called
On Monday morning, a defense attorney for Shah led Desai through a different set of questions, aiming to show that Desai committed fraud, while lying to and keeping information from Shah.
Shah’s attorney
“Once you hired those young people in, it was you who corrupted each one of those in your team,” Hueston said.
Desai confirmed Monday that he taught them the corrupt practices, but maintained that he was merely extending “business practices that had been taught to me.”
“I was part of the business practices, and I led the team that was doing it, but it was not just me,” Desai said.
Hueston, however, then showed Desai a list of analysts who had left the company, with many of them expressing concern with the way Outcome did business. Under questioning, Desai said that he didn’t recall discussing many of their departures with Shah.
“I would often talk around the problem with Rishi where I would not confirm their accusations,” Desai said. Desai acknowledged on the stand that he lied to Purdy when he was asked if he had fabricated return-on-investment reports, and he lied to Shah when, on one occasion, he said he had been operating with integrity.
Hueston also pressed Desai for details about the plea deal he struck with the government. Under the deal, the government is expected to recommend a reduced amount of time in prison if Desai cooperates and testifies truthfully in the trial, though the sentence will still be up to a judge. Without the deal, Desai may have faced decades in prison.
“The only way out for you was to try to make the case against others,” Hueston said.
“No, it was only to tell the truth,” Desai responded.
Defense attorneys, including those for Agarwal and Purdy, are expected to continue cross-examining Desai this week. The trial began
Outcome and its leaders have faced a number of legal actions in recent years, following a 2017
Outcome settled a lawsuit by investors in early 2018, after investors alleged the company misled advertisers and investors about the company’s performance. At that point, Shah and Agarwal stepped down from daily operations of the company, and, six months later, resigned from their board positions.
In 2019, Outcome, as a company, agreed to pay
In
©2023 Chicago Tribune. Visit chicagotribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Gus Mutscher, Texas House speaker who resigned amid the Sharpstown stock fraud scandal, dies at 90
Billionaire Adani's empire loses $154 billion in a month
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News