In re General Motors Corp. Securities Litigation
On July 21, 2008, General Motors and its outside auditor, Deloitte & Touche LLP, agreed to pay a total of $303 million to settle the securities fraud lawsuit litigated by Labaton Sucharow LLP and other attorneys on behalf of a class of investors who purchased GM securities during the period between April 13, 2000, and March 30, 2006, inclusive. Of the $303 million settlement, General Motors agreed to pay $277 million, and Deloitte, $26 million.

The case was filed in September 2005, and, subsequently, two of Europe’s leading pension funds, Deka Investment GmbH, and Deka International S.A., Luxembourg, were appointed, together, to be Lead Plaintiff.

The Complaint alleges that, over a period of six years, General Motors, its officers and its outside auditor overstated GM’s income by billions of dollars, and GM’s operating cash flows by tens of billions of dollars, by a series of accounting manipulations that included, among other things, prematurely recognizing income from supplier rebates, misclassifying cash flow as operating rather than investing cash flow, and omitting to disclose the nature and amount of GM’s guarantee of pension benefits owing to workers at GM’s former parts division, now an independent corporation in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, Delphi, Corp.

Following the briefing of Defendants’ motions to dismiss, and without having first determined those motions, Judge Gerald E. Rosen, of the Eastern District of Michigan, sent the case to mediation, where Labaton Sucharow LLP was Co-Lead Counsel for investors, along with Grant & Eisenhofer P.A. The settlement fund obtained for investors as a result of the mediation is one of the largest ever achieved at such an early point in a securities fraud case.

The settlement remains to be formalized by the parties and approved by the District Court.