February 11, 2009 8:06 PM
- Text
Bill Gates Pays $800K Fine
(CBS/AP)
The world's richest man is out $800,000 for violating federal rules by making a large investment in a pharmaceutical company.
Bill Gates, the billionaire chairman of Microsoft Corp., agreed to the civil penalty for the violation arising from his 2002 acquisition of more than $50 million in Icos Corp. securities.
The agreement settles a Justice Department lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Washington contending Gates should have complied with investment notification rules because he intended to participate in the company's business decisions.
Federal law imposes notification and waiting period requirements on certain individuals and companies before they can complete acquisitions of stock or assets worth more than $50 million. The maximum penalty is $11,000 for each day in violation.
The case is unrelated to Microsoft or the Justice Department's antitrust case involving the software giant. Icos is headquartered in Bothell, Wash.
Gates, with a fortune estimated at $46.6 billion, was listed in February as the richest person in the world by Forbes magazine for the 10th straight year.
The $800,000 fine is more than 14 times the net worth of the median U.S. household. But given his holdings, Gates could "afford" to pay the $800,000 fine more than 58,000 times.
The Justice Department fine pales in comparison to the $200 million Gates recently donated to combat AIDS in India. His Gates foundation has given away more than $7 billion to date.
Bill Gates, the billionaire chairman of Microsoft Corp., agreed to the civil penalty for the violation arising from his 2002 acquisition of more than $50 million in Icos Corp. securities.
The agreement settles a Justice Department lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Washington contending Gates should have complied with investment notification rules because he intended to participate in the company's business decisions.
Federal law imposes notification and waiting period requirements on certain individuals and companies before they can complete acquisitions of stock or assets worth more than $50 million. The maximum penalty is $11,000 for each day in violation.
The case is unrelated to Microsoft or the Justice Department's antitrust case involving the software giant. Icos is headquartered in Bothell, Wash.
Gates, with a fortune estimated at $46.6 billion, was listed in February as the richest person in the world by Forbes magazine for the 10th straight year.
The $800,000 fine is more than 14 times the net worth of the median U.S. household. But given his holdings, Gates could "afford" to pay the $800,000 fine more than 58,000 times.
The Justice Department fine pales in comparison to the $200 million Gates recently donated to combat AIDS in India. His Gates foundation has given away more than $7 billion to date.
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