ignition-partners

Wilson Sonsini lawyer erases fraud-ridden Entellium from client list

Owen Thomas · 10/09/08 09:00PM

If your company ever gets into serious trouble, wouldn't you like to know your lawyer's standing behind you publicly? Better hope you're not represented by Wilson Sonsini, then. After Seattle software startup Entellium saw its CEO and CFO charged with wire fraud and cooking the company's books, Entellium disappeared from Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati partner Craig Sherman's list of clients. Google's cache shows Entellium was on the list as recently as last Friday. Sherman still represents Ignition Partners, a prominent VC firm which claims Entellium's top execs defrauded it. We'll give Sherman and Wilson Sonsini credit for good financial judgment: Ignition still has money, while authorities are investigating what happened to the $50 million Entellium raised from Ignition and others

How deep did Entellium's fraud go?

Owen Thomas · 10/09/08 03:40PM

$50 million of venture capital down the drain. A fraudulent set of books, going back to 2004. How did this happen? Entellium, a Seattle-based software company, saw CEO Paul Johnston and CFO Parrish Jones resign, days before the two were charged with wire fraud. What no one has explained: How on earth were the two executives able to get away with overstating the company's revenues to investors by a factor of four?Ignition Partners, which put in $19 million of the $50 million in venture capital, is playing dumb, insisting it never would have invested had it known the company's true financial condition. But Entellium, which started in Malaysia in 2000, was trouble from the start. It went through a period, after the popping of the bubble, when employees went unpaid. Since then, it attracted investments from Ignition and others, including Intel Capital, West River Capital, Sigma Ventures, and Mavcap, a Malaysian venture fund. Are we to believe that all of these investors committed their limited partners' money without a thorough audit? Silicon Valley Bank, a tipster tells us, loaned Entellium millions of dollars and acted as the company's bank. It examined the company's books quarterly for the past three years — part of the normal loan-review process — and surely was aware of how much money was flowing into its accounts — or rather, not flowing in. Montgomery Securities and Cascadia Capital helped Entellium raise money. Were they, too, deceived as to the company's financial condition when they presented venture capitalists with its numbers? It is possible that Johnston and Jones are very clever fellows. But a scenario where they simply got away with defrauding every financial institution they dealt with beggars belief. The alternative scenario: That at least some of Entellium's backers were aware of the fraud, and invested in the hope that it would become someone else's problem soon enough.

Software startup's ex-execs charged with defrauding VCs

Owen Thomas · 10/09/08 01:00AM

Here's an inventive business model: When you're not actually making money, try making it up. The former CEO and CFO of Entellium, a software startup in Seattle, have been charged with wire fraud after an employee found the company keeping a cooked set of books for its investors. Paul Johnston, the CEO, and Parrish Jones, the CFO, resigned abruptly last month. 40 of the company's 60 employees in Seattle were laid off, having been told that the "money ran out." Or ran away: Authorities are trying to find where the company's $50 million in venture capital went.Entellium, an online customer-relationship management software company which competed — not very well, it turns out — with the likes of Salesforce.com and NetSuite, had raised that $50 million from venture capitalists, including Ignition Partners, a high-profile firm founded in part by former Microsoft executives. Ignition had invested $2 million as recently as April. The company told investors it had taken in $15.5 million since 2006. The real number: $3.8 million. Johnston, in his resignation email, said that he had started overstating revenues almost as soon as the company was founded in 2004. Barry Abraham, a former executive and shareholder, wonders why investors never conducted an audit. His explosive charge: Abraham claims the board knew of the fraud, but hoped Entellium's real business would become someone else's problem before it was discovered. In fact, Entellium floated talk of a sale to Avidian, another Seattle-area software company, shortly before the charges were unveiled. In the complaint filed by prosecutors, Ignition's board members say they never would have invested had they known the real state of Entellium's finances. Would anyone be surprised to hear that the rest of Ignition's portfolio companies now have audits scheduled?