- Thousands protest Koran burning plan in Afghan north
- Obama says Koran burning can badly damage U.S. abroad | Video
- U.S. waits Japan nod on F-35 security pact
- Four dead in San Francisco suburb gas line inferno | Video
- Host company pulls plug on Florida pastor's website
- Factbox: Key problems facing new Nokia CEO Elop
- "Project Runway" keeps NY fashion week guessing
- Judge rules ban on gays in military unconstitutional
- UPDATE 1-Four dead in San Francisco suburb gas line inferno
- Nokia brings in Microsoft exec to replace CEO | Video
NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. NASDAQ delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.
U.S. sues Oracle, alleges software contract fraud
WASHINGTON |
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Justice Department said on Thursday it sued Oracle Corp, alleging it defrauded the federal government on a software contract in effect from 1998 to 2006 that involved hundreds of millions of dollars in sales.
The lawsuit alleged Oracle misrepresented its true commercial sales practices, ultimately leading to government customers receiving deals inferior to those Oracle gave its commercial customers, the department said.
Under the contract, the General Services Administration (GSA) used Oracle's disclosures about its commercial sales practices to negotiate minimum discounts for government agencies that bought Oracle's software.
The contract required Oracle to update GSA when commercial discounts improved and extend the same improved discounts to government customers.
The lawsuit was initially filed in federal court in Virginia by Paul Frascella, Oracle's senior director of contract services, the department said, adding it then decided to intervene in the case and to file a complaint under the False Claims Act.
(Reporting by James Vicini; editing by Andre Grenon)






