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Computer Associates Computer Software

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Troubled software maker Computer Associates (Quote, Chart) continued a major house-cleaning Monday, naming former Vivendi Universal Games head Kenneth Cron as its interim CEO and restating $2.2 billion in revenues amid a federal accounting probe.

Cron steps into the role vacated last week by CEO Sanjay Kumar, who resigned amidst an accounting scandal the Islandia, N.Y.-based company is moving to put behind it.

Also promoted was newly-installed CFO Jeff Clarke as chief operating officer at CA. Clarke stepped in as the top financial executive only this month. Clarke will wear both hats within the company while the board of directors looks for a permanent CEO and new CFO.

The company also forced the resignation of the senior vice president of worldwide sales, Stephen Richards, who was replaced by Greg Corgan in the position. In a conference call with investors and reporters Monday morning, board chairman Lewis Ranieri said with the current team in place, he doesn't feel compelled to rush the search for permanent replacements.

"Sanjay [Kumar] has built a terrific team and board has augmented it with Ken [Cron] and promoting Jeff [Clarke], so we have no sense of crisis, and as a result want to do this search well, rather than quickly," he said.

He did acknowledge the search criteria has been established by board members, but would not detail whether they are looking for someone within or without the software industry.

The CEO fill-in comes five days after Kumar, former chairman and CEO, was forced to resign in the wake of continued investigations into the company's accounting practices.

Ranieri did drop some hints to explain why the board created the chief software architect position for Kumar, rather than force him from the company entirely as some expected. In addition to the management team already in place because of Kumar, he noted the former chairman and CEO was the one to put its current business practices in place with the New Business Model in October 2000, after years of questionable accounting practices.

It seems, according to Ranieri and Walter Schuetze, former SEC chief accountant and head of CA's internal audit, that quarterly and annual financial statements at the time were assessed on a '35-day' month. That way, contracts that should have been reported as beginning in a new quarter were still being reported as revenue for the previous quarter, an accounting juggle that helped CA's bottom line revenue numbers.

"It's important to note that the '35-day month' practice involved the premature timing of revenue recognition, not the making up of revenues," Scheutze said in a statement. "Thus, the restatement involved the movement of revenue from one quarter to another. This practice was wrong, and CA has taken and will take any remedial steps necessary."

Because of the '35-day' month scheme, the company has been fending off class-action lawsuits and an SEC probe for almost a year as its internal auditing team went through finances dating back to 2000. As a result, CA filed a Form 8-K with federal regulators Monday for "prematurely recognized" revenues of $1.782 billion in 2000 and $445

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