Ex-CEO of Silicon Valley mobile app startup HeadSpin charged with fraud

Reuters

Published Aug 25, 2021 02:59PM ET

By Jonathan Stempel and Chris Prentice

(Reuters) - U.S. authorities on Wednesday charged a co-founder and former chief executive of HeadSpin with defrauding investors out of as much as $80 million by overstating the Silicon Valley startup's revenue and other key financial metrics.

Manish Lachwani was accused of lying to HeadSpin investors from 2018 to early 2020 about the ability of his privately-held provider of mobile app testing services to attract and retain business, including from major Silicon Valley companies.

The U.S. Department of Justice said Lachwani's misconduct included directing employees to count revenue from prospective customers who never bought anything and former customers who had taken their business elsewhere.

Authorities said the inflated metrics enabled HeadSpin to sell preferred shares at inflated prices in two funding rounds that gave the Palo Alto, California-based company a $1.1 billion valuation, large enough to be considered a "unicorn."

Lachwani, 45, of Los Altos, California, was criminally charged with securities fraud and wire fraud, and faces up to 20 years in prison on each count. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed related civil charges.

A lawyer for Lachwani could not immediately be reached for comment.

Founded in 2015, HeadSpin was not charged. The company said it has cooperated with the government's investigation and will continue doing so.

After discovering the inflated revenue, HeadSpin forced Lachwani to resign in May 2020 and reduced its valuation to about $300 million, court papers show.