Former CEO of AI Start-up Skael Charged With Fraud

<p><strong>SAN FRANCISCO<&sol;strong> – A federal grand jury indicted Baba Nadimpalli&comma; the founder and former Chief Executive Officer of SKAEL&comma; Inc&period; &lpar;SKAEL&rpar;&comma; with securities and wire fraud for defrauding investors and misleading them about the company’s revenue&comma; annual recurring revenue &lpar;ARR&rpar;&comma; and other financial and sales information&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>According to an indictment filed Jan&period; 17&comma; 2024 and unsealed Sept&period; 23&comma; 2024&comma; Nadimpalli&comma; 41&comma; a citizen of Australia who resided in San Francisco&comma; Calif&period;&comma; founded SKAEL in 2016 and served as its Chief Executive Officer from 2016 until July 2022&period;  SKAEL was a San Francisco-based&comma; software-as-a-service &lpar;&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Saas”&rpar; company that claimed to provide its corporate clients with artificial intelligence and automation software to assist customers with mundane&comma; time-intensive tasks by building &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Digital Employees&comma;” which SKAEL claimed could connect databases&comma; synthesize large amounts of information&comma; provide information and insights&comma; and perform tasks&period;  SKAEL earned revenue by charging implementation fees for the building of Digital Employees and subscription fees for the use of the Digital Employees once they were built&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The indictment alleges that from January 2020 until about February 2022&comma; SKAEL raised over &dollar;40 million in three rounds of financing&period; To induce prospective and existing investors to invest&comma; Nadimpalli allegedly made false claims regarding SKAEL’s revenue and ARR &lpar;a measure of total revenue expected per year from committed customers with signed contracts&comma; an important metric for investors&rpar;&comma; as well as customer and sales information&period;  For example&comma; in or around 2021&comma; Nadimpalli allegedly provided materially false information to investors in advance of their investments in SKAEL&comma; including representing that SKAEL was receiving ARR from certain companies that did not subscribe to SKAEL’s software and services&semi; overstating ARR from certain customers who were SKAEL customers&semi; and representing that customers who had terminated their SKAEL subscriptions were current customers with ARR&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The indictment further alleges that in or around February 2022&comma; SKAEL raised approximately &dollar;30 million in a Series A preferred stock offering which valued SKAEL at approximately &dollar;230 million after closing&period; In connection with the stock offering&comma; Nadimpalli allegedly directed the creation of an electronic data room for potential investors that contained &lpar;1&rpar; a spreadsheet that Nadimpalli maintained that contained materially false information about the company’s ARR and customers&semi; &lpar;2&rpar; a materially false profit and loss statement&semi; &lpar;3&rpar; a financial metrics spreadsheet that contained materially false subscription revenue and ARR amounts&semi; and &lpar;4&rpar; an investor presentation that contained materially false information about the company’s ARR&comma; revenue&comma; and customer adoption&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As described in the indictment&comma; in furtherance of the scheme&comma; Nadimpalli provided an investor and a financial employee false bank account information that included purported customer payments that had not actually been deposited&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Nadimpalli is charged with three counts of securities fraud and seven counts of wire fraud&period;  If convicted of securities fraud&comma; he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a fine of &dollar;5&comma;000&comma;000&period;  If convicted of wire fraud&comma; he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a fine of &dollar;250&comma;000&period;  However&comma; any sentence following conviction would be imposed by the court after consideration of the U&period;S&period; Sentencing Guidelines and the federal statute governing the imposition of a sentence&comma; 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 3553&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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