Money | AOL SEC Charges Ex-AOL Execs With Fraud Alleges they inflated revenue during merger with Time Warner By Rob Quinn Posted May 20, 2008 9:42 AM CDT Copied People walk by the Time Warner building, Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2007, in New York. (AP Photo/Diane Bondareff) The Securities & Exchange Commission has filed civil fraud charges against eight former AOL executives for allegedly inflating AOL's advertising revenues before its merger with Time Warner, the Wall Street Journal reports. The men are accused of giving firms money to buy ads on AOL that they didn't want or need in "round-trip' transactions. The SEC says that the fraudulent transactions boosted AOL's value by more than a billion dollars between 2000 and 2002, sending AOL's share price soaring and giving it leverage to buy Time Warner. The merger is now viewed as one of the worst in business history, with Time Warner's market capitalization having shriveled from $280 billion to $56 billion in the years since. Read These Next He was an Olympian. Now he's the FBI's most wanted. Disturbing turn of events in case of a teen found dead on a cruise. Earhart experts not exactly excited about the latest document dump. Longtime Simpsons character is 'dead as a doornail.' Report an error