Tax evasion Before the asset inflation scandal hit, the
Income Tax Department had issued notices to the company seeking 6.17 billion tax, for the assessment years from 2003–04 to 2008–09 after disallowing exemptions claimed by the software firm. The
Central Board of Direct Taxes attached the properties of Mahindra Satyam on 30 January 2012, after issuing notices to the company seeking payment of the tax.
Maytas acquisition In December 2008, Satyam founder B. Ramalinga Raju made a final attempt to conceal his falsification of the Satyam Computer Services balance sheets by acquiring
Maytas Infrastructure and
Maytas Properties for $1.6 billion, despite concerns raised by independent directors. Both companies were founded by Raju's family members (Maytas is "Satyam" reversed) and were owned by Raju's sons. This eventually led to a review of the deal by the government, and a veiled criticism by the then
Vice President of India Hamid Ansari. Several of Satyam's clients responded by re-evaluating their relationship with the company. Satyam's investors lost about in the related
panic selling, as Satyam's shares fell 55% on the
New York Stock Exchange. Four members of the board of directors resigned on 29 December 2008.
Accounting scandal On 7 January 2009, Chairman
Raju resigned after publicly announcing his involvement in a massive
accounting fraud, in which he had inflated the company's cash assets by over $1 billion. In a letter to the
Securities and Exchange Board of India, he explained that "what started as a marginal gap between actual operating profit and the one reflected in the books of accounts continued to grow over the years ... It has attained unmanageable proportions as the size of the company operations grew significantly". In 2015, Raju was sentenced to seven years in jail and fined about $800,000. ==See also==