General Electric CEO Larry Culp isn’t backing down, instead, he is assembling the troops to take on a whistleblower accusing his company of financial fraud.

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Thursday, Culp purchased $2 million worth of stock as the shares tumbled 11 percent to show he means business. He has now plowed $5 million of his own money into GE shares this week. The company’s top brass has also been buying up shares which rebounded in early trading Friday.

Ticker Security Last Change %Chg
GE GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY 8.56 +0.55 +6.90%

GE’s staunch defense, which continued Friday as the company reached out to investors updating them on the efforts being made to defend the company after the forensic accountant Harry Markopolos, who gained notoriety by flagging Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme two years before it was dismantled, published a report accusing the company of hiding its problems through fraudulent financial filings.

“This is my accounting fraud team’s ninth insurance fraud case in the past nine years and it’s the biggest, bigger than Enron and WorldCom combined,” Markopolos said in the report. Enron and Worldcom filed bankruptcy in Dec. 2001 and July 2002, respectively, after their accounting frauds were exposed.

Markopolos’ report out Thursday concluded GE’s accounting missteps total $38 billion, or about 40% of its market value. The drop in GE shares was the worst in 11 years.

“The fact that he wrote a 170-page paper but never talked to company officials goes to show that he is not interested in accurate financial analysis, but solely in generating downward volatility in GE stock so that he and his undisclosed hedge fund partner can personally profit,” Culp told FOX Business in an emailed statement.

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