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Jury awards $956M to Liberty Media

(AP) NEW YORK - A federal jury on Monday awarded $956 million to U.S. media group Liberty Media (LMCA) after concluding that the French entertainment group Vivendi deceived it in a decade-old deal involving the USA Networks.

Liberty Media said in its own statement it planned to seek interest.

The jury in U.S. District Court in Manhattan issued the award after hearing evidence related to a stock swap involving the network. Liberty Media had accused Vivendi of deceiving it with rosy statements about its finances when executives inside the company were aware of a liquidity crisis.

After the verdict was announced, Vivendi said in a statement it will appeal, using "all available paths of action to overturn the verdict or reduce the damages award." It added that it believes "strongly that it did nothing wrong and will continue to vigorously defend itself."

The verdict stemmed from a lawsuit Liberty Media brought in 2003, accusing Vivendi of waiting until its transaction with USA Networks and Liberty Media officially closed before reacting publicly to a downgrade of its debt rating and addressing surrounding concerns about liquidity.

During closing arguments, Liberty Media attorney Michael Calhoon urged jurors to "look at these internal memos, inside the company, talking about what was really going on inside the company when the company was saying to the public and to Liberty something totally different."

He referenced the stock swap surrounding the transaction, saying: "We took the risk of the price falling. We didn't take the risk of fraud."

Repeatedly in the trial, jurors heard about an email in which Vivendi's chief financial officer wrote: "I feel like I'm in the death seat of a car. I hope it doesn't end in shame."

Vivendi lawyer Jim Quinn said the company had its own reasons for closing the deal and did not rely on misleading statements.

"I think we proved that in spades," he said.

He added that "despite warnings, despite the red flags, Liberty Media did nothing to investigate the problems at Vivendi."

In the end, the jurors were left to decide whether Vivendi had made false statements in its contract with Liberty. The jury found it had and assessed damages.

Calhoon had told jurors Vivendi should "pay for their fraud."

"They shouldn't get some kind of blizzard of confusion discount," he said.

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