Current:Home > MyTV personality Carlos Watson testifies in his trial over collapse of startup Ozy Media -Legacy Profit Partners
TV personality Carlos Watson testifies in his trial over collapse of startup Ozy Media
View
Date:2025-04-19 08:29:30
NEW YORK (AP) — Former TV host Carlos Watson took the witness stand Monday in the criminal trial surrounding the collapse of his Ozy Media, insisting he hadn’t schemed to con the startup’s backers.
“Mr. Watson, did you conspire to commit securities fraud?” asked his lawyer, Ronald Sullivan Jr.
“I did not,” Watson said, and repeated it when asked about the other charges against him, aggravated identity theft and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
Watson, a former news and talk show host on networks including CNN and MSNBC, is the key defense witness in the federal trial. He and the now-defunct Ozy are accused of giving backers and lenders phony financial statistics, forged contracts and other false information that created a glowing image of a company that actually was on the rocks.
It disintegrated in fall 2021, after The New York Times raised questions about Ozy’s audience size claims and practices, particularly a phone call in which company co-founder Samir Rao impersonated a YouTube executive to champion Ozy to some investment bankers.
Watson and Ozy Media have pleaded not guilty and sought to cast blame for any misrepresentations on Rao. He pleaded guilty, testified against Watson and is awaiting sentencing.
Watson, in his first hours of testimony, put some distance between himself and the fast-growing Ozy’s financial details. He said he was more focused during its early years on its vision and staff than on ensuring “every decimal point” was correctly placed.
And he suggested that revenue numbers logged into the company’s main financial software program didn’t reflect all the money coming in.
Prosecutors have pointed to differences between such internal records and external presentations to support their allegations that Ozy was lying to outsiders about its financial condition. But Watson appeared to suggest the company’s use of the software had simply been a work in progress.
“Like a lot of young companies, it was kind of incomplete. People were doing the best they could,” but some revenue was logged in other spreadsheets, Watson said.
Affable and engaging, Watson, a Harvard University and Stanford Law School graduate, went through his modest Miami upbringing and varied career, which ranged from Wall Street to starting and selling a college counseling company to TV. He described brainstorming about what would become Ozy with his mother as she battled cancer in 2012.
“As a Black kid growing up in the ‘70s and ’80s, you wanted to know that the world would have space for your dreams and your ideas and your hopes ... and I wanted to create the kind of media that would elevate that,” he told jurors, who watched keenly. Three sat forward in their seats as they appeared to take careful notes.
Ozy launched a website and newsletters in 2013. The Mountain View, California-based company eventually added TV shows, podcasts and Ozy Fest, a music-and-ideas festival that was held annually for several years in New York’s Central Park.
veryGood! (16131)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Elliot Page Details Secret, 2-Year Romance With Closeted Celeb
- Appalachia Could Get a Giant Solar Farm, If Ohio Regulators Approve
- Oil Investors Call for Human Rights Risk Report After Standing Rock
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Kim Zolciak Won't Be Tardy to Drop Biermann From Her Instagram Name
- Firework injuries send people to hospitals across U.S. as authorities issue warnings
- IRS warns of new tax refund scam
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Adam DeVine Says He Saw a Person Being Murdered Near His Hollywood Hills Home
Ranking
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Leandro De Niro-Rodriguez, Robert De Niro's grandson, dies at age 19
- Michael Imperioli says he forbids bigots and homophobes from watching his work after Supreme Court ruling
- Woman stuck in mud for days found alive
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Michael Imperioli says he forbids bigots and homophobes from watching his work after Supreme Court ruling
- California Ups Its Clean Energy Game: Gov. Brown Signs 100% Zero-Carbon Electricity Bill
- Elliot Page Details Secret, 2-Year Romance With Closeted Celeb
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Natalee Holloway Suspect Joran Van Der Sloot Pleads Not Guilty in U.S. Fraud Case
Jon Gosselin Addresses 9-Year Estrangement From Kids Mady and Cara
Sarah-Jade Bleau Shares the One Long-Lasting Lipstick That Everyone Needs in Their Bag
Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
Judge Orders Dakota Access Pipeline Spill Response Plan, with Tribe’s Input
Appalachia’s Strip-Mined Mountains Face a Growing Climate Risk: Flooding
Raquel Leviss Wants to Share Unfiltered Truth About Scandoval After Finishing Treatment