



It seeks Jobs's testimony in the SEC's lawsuit against Nancy Heinen, who was sued April 24 for allegedly backdating stock-option grants to Jobs and members of his executive team, the people, who requested anonymity because deposition subpoenas aren't made public, notes Bloomberg. Heinen was sued for allegedly backdating a 7.5 million share-option grant to Jobs in 2001 and an earlier grant to his executive team.
Jobs recommended some favorable dates on options other than his own, Apple said Dec. 29. Heinen's lawyers sought to depose 45 people, including the recipients of the grants, according to a court filing.
"These include the range of individuals involved in the stock option granting'' at Apple, including "the grant recipients themselves,'' according to an Aug. 31 document filed by the SEC and Heinen's lawyers in federal court in San Francisco. Steve Dowling, an Apple spokesman, declined to comment for Bloomberg. Mark Pomerantz, an attorney for Jobs, didn't return a call to his office after normal business hours. Also, Marc Fagel, an SEC attorney in San Francisco, declined to comment.
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