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NEW YORK -- After saying a few months ago that Xerox risked meeting Eastman Kodak's fate, activist investor Carl Icahn is now warning shareholders that a proposed takeover by Japan's Fujifilm could lead to bankruptcy.

In a written response to questions from Nikkei on Monday, Xerox's largest individual shareholder said it was "absurd" for Xerox shareholders to accept the current offer to merge the U.S. company into existing joint venture Fuji Xerox.

"Based on the ongoing accounting scandal that appears to grow in size and scope every quarter, combining Xerox with Fuji Xerox could possibly lead to bankruptcy," Icahn said, adding: "In that case, we run the serious risk that the only money we will ever see is the one-time $9.80 cash dividend."

Kodak, like Xerox founded in Rochester, New York, was once the dominant maker of photographic film in the U.S. 

The accounting scandal he referred to involves Fuji Xerox subsidiaries in New Zealand and Australia inflating income from office equipment leases from fiscal 2010 through fiscal 2015. A subsequent restatement of past earnings resulted in a cumulative loss of 37.5 billion yen ($343 million). The subsidiaries are suspected of doctoring the numbers to increase bonuses for top managers.

Meanwhile, Icahn issued a new letter to Xerox shareholders on Monday saying that he and his ally, fellow top shareholder Darwin Deason, would consider a bid for Xerox of at least $40 per share.

"We are comfortable stating that an all-cash bid at a minimum of $40 per share would require our serious consideration," he wrote. But he added that another option would be to see a "standalone Xerox," independent from Fujifilm under a new "conflict-free" board.

In the written response to Nikkei, Icahn said Fujifilm's proposal "dramatically undervalues Xerox and overvalues Fuji Xerox." He also stated that "no one from Fuji has ever even reached out to us. It's sort of laughable."

On Tuesday, Xerox's director of public relations Carl Langsenkamp rejected Icahn's comments to Nikkei saying: "Xerox has refrained from engaging with Icahn/Deason on their campaign against the company, even as they have targeted our management and Board with personal, unsubstantiated attacks. Mr. Icahn's most recent statement, however, cannot go unchecked. To suggest that a combination of Xerox and Fuji Xerox creates a risk of bankruptcy is false and highly irresponsible."

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