FTI CONSULTING INC
DEF 14A, 1999-04-23
MANAGEMENT CONSULTING SERVICES
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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                                WASHINGTON, D.C.

                            PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
                         Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant [X]

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:

[ ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement

[ ]  Confidential,  for  Use  of the  Commission  Only  (as  permitted  by  Rule
     14a-6(e)(2))

[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement

[ ]  Definitive Additional Materials

[ ]  Soliciting    Material    Pursuant   to    (section)    240.14a-11(c)    or
     (section)240.14a-12

                              FTI CONSULTING, INC.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required.

[ ]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rule 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

     1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

     2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

     3)   Per unit  price  or other  underlying  value of  transaction  computed
          pursuant to Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the
          filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

     4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

     5)   Total fee paid:

[ ]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0- 11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the  offsetting  fee was paid
     previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

     1)   Amount Previously Paid:

     2)   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

     3)   Filing Party:

     4)   Date Filed:

================================================================================


<PAGE>

                           [FTI CONSULTING, INC. LOGO]

                              2021 Research Drive
                              Annapolis, MD 21401

                                 (410) 224-8770

                                                                 April 26, 1999

Dear Stockholder:

     On behalf of the Board of Directors,  I cordially  invite you to attend the
1999 Annual Meeting of FTI Consulting,  Inc.'s  stockholders on May 19, 1999, at
9:30 a.m. EDT at FTI Consulting's  principal  business  office,  located at 2021
Research Drive, Annapolis, Maryland.

     Enclosed  with  this  letter  is a Notice of the  Annual  Meeting,  a Proxy
Statement,  a proxy  card,  and a return  envelope.  Both the  Notice  of Annual
Meeting and the Proxy  Statement  provide  details of the business  that we will
conduct at the Annual Meeting and other information  about FTI Consulting.  Also
enclosed  with  this  letter  is  FTI   Consulting,   Inc.'s  Annual  Report  to
Stockholders for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998.

     At the Annual Meeting, we will ask you to:

     o    Elect three (3) Class III directors;

     o    Approve the amendment to our 1997 Stock Option Plan, as amended;

     o    Ratify the selection of Ernst & Young, LLP as independent  accountants
          for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1999; and

     o    Transact any other  business that is properly  presented at the Annual
          Meeting.

     Whether or not you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, please sign, date and
promptly  return the proxy card in the enclosed  prepaid return  envelope.  Your
shares of common stock will be voted at the Annual  Meeting in  accordance  with
your proxy  instructions.  Of course,  if you attend the Annual  Meeting you may
vote in person.  If you plan to attend the meeting,  please mark the appropriate
box on the enclosed proxy card.

                                        Sincerely,


                                        /s/  Jack B. Dunn, IV
                                        ----------------------------------------
                                        Jack B. Dunn, IV
                                        Chief Executive Officer and
                                        Chairman of the Board of Directors


                             YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT

             Please Sign, Date and Return Your Proxy Card Before the
           Annual Meeting If you have any questions about voting your
            shares, please contact Theodore I. Pincus, Executive Vice
          President and Chief Financial Officer, FTI Consulting, Inc.,
             2021 Research Drive, Annapolis, MD 21401, telephone no.
                                 (410) 224-8770

<PAGE>



                              FTI CONSULTING, INC.

                  NOTICE OF 1999 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                       -----------------------------------------
                       Date: May 19, 1999

                       Time: 9:30 a.m.

                       Place: 2021 Research Drive, Annapolis, MD
                       -----------------------------------------

Dear Stockholders:

     At the 1999 Annual Meeting, we will ask you to:

     o    Elect three (3) Class III Directors;

     o    Approve the amendment to our 1997 Stock Option Plan, as amended;

     o    Ratify the selection of Ernst & Young LLP as  independent  accountants
          for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1999; and

     o    Transact any other  business that is properly  presented at the Annual
          Meeting.

     You will be able to vote your shares of common stock at the Annual  Meeting
if you were a stockholder of record at the close of business on April 22, 1999.

                                        By order of the Board of Directors:

                                        Nancy B. Currie
                                        Assistant Secretary

April 26, 1999


                  YOUR VOTE AT THE ANNUAL MEETING IS IMPORTANT.

   PLEASE INDICATE YOUR VOTE ON THE ENCLOSED PROXY CARD AND RETURN IT IN THE
 ENCLOSED ENVELOPE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE, EVEN IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING.

   IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT VOTING YOUR SHARES, PLEASE CONTACT THEODORE I.
 PINCUS, EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER, FTI CONSULTING,
  INC., 2021 RESEARCH DRIVE, ANNAPOLIS, MD 21401, TELEPHONE NO. (410) 224-8770

           IF YOU ATTEND THE MEETING, YOU WILL BE ABLE TO REVOKE YOUR
                            PROXY AND VOTE IN PERSON.

<PAGE>



                        [FTI CONSULTING, INC. LETTERHEAD]
                               2021 Research Drive
                               Annapolis, MD 21401


                                                                  April 26, 1999


                       PROXY STATEMENT FOR ANNUAL MEETING

     This Proxy Statement  provides  information that you should read before you
vote on the proposals  that will be presented to you at the 1999 Annual  Meeting
of FTI  Consulting's  stockholders.  The 1999 Annual Meeting will be held on May
19, 1999 at 9:30 a.m. EDT at FTI Consulting's principal business office, located
at 2021 Research Drive, Annapolis, Maryland 21401.

     This  Proxy  Statement  provides  detailed  information  about  the  Annual
Meeting, the proposals on which you will be asked to vote at the Annual Meeting,
and other relevant information.

     On April 26, 1999, we began mailing information to people who, according to
our records,  owned shares of common stock at the close of business on April 22,
1999.  We have mailed with that  information  a copy of FTI  Consulting,  Inc.'s
Annual Report to Stockholders for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998.



<PAGE>



                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                                                        PAGE NO.
                                                                        --------

Information About the 1999 Annual Meeting and Voting ..................       1
Proposals to be Presented at the Annual Meeting .......................       3
 1. Election of Directors .............................................       3
 2. Approval of Amendment to the 1997 Stock Option Plan, as amended ...       3
 3. Ratification of Ernst & Young, LLP as Independent Accountants .....       7
Stock Ownership .......................................................       8
The Board of Directors ................................................      10
Executive Officers and Compensation ...................................      13
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions ........................      18
Other Information .....................................................      19






                                        i

<PAGE>



              INFORMATION ABOUT THE 1999 ANNUAL MEETING AND VOTING

THE ANNUAL MEETING

     The Annual  Meeting  will be held on May 19,  1999 at 9:30 a.m.  EDT at FTI
Consulting's   principal  business  office,  located  at  2021  Research  Drive,
Annapolis, Maryland.


THIS PROXY SOLICITATION

     We are sending you this Proxy Statement  because FTI Consulting's  Board of
Directors  is seeking a proxy to vote your shares of common  stock at the Annual
Meeting.  This Proxy Statement is intended to assist you in deciding how to vote
your shares.  On April 26, 1999,  we began  mailing this Proxy  Statement to all
people who, according to our stockholder  records,  owned shares of common stock
at the close of business on April 22, 1999.

     FTI  Consulting  is  paying  the  cost of  requesting  these  proxies.  FTI
Consulting's directors,  officers and employees may request proxies in person or
by  telephone,  mail,  telecopy  or letter.  FTI  Consulting  also has  retained
Corporate  Investor  Communications,  Inc.  to assist in  seeking  proxies.  FTI
Consulting will pay Corporate  Investor  Communications  a fee of  approximately
$4,000  plus  reasonable  out-of-pocket  expenses,  for  this  assistance.   FTI
Consulting   will  reimburse   brokers  and  other  nominees  their   reasonable
out-of-pocket  expenses for forwarding  proxy materials to beneficial  owners of
our common stock.


VOTING YOUR SHARES

     You have one vote for each share of FTI Consulting's  common stock that you
owned of record at the close of business on April 22, 1999. The number of shares
you own (and may vote at the Annual  Meeting)  is listed on the  enclosed  proxy
card.

     You may vote your shares of common  stock at the Annual  Meeting  either in
person or by proxy.  To vote in person,  you must attend the Annual  Meeting and
obtain and submit a ballot.  Ballots for voting in person will be  available  at
the Annual Meeting.  To vote by proxy, you must complete and return the enclosed
proxy card.  By completing  and returning the proxy card,  you will be directing
the persons  designated on the proxy card to vote your shares of common stock at
the Annual  Meeting in accordance  with the  instructions  you give on the proxy
card.

     IF YOU  DECIDE TO VOTE BY PROXY,  YOUR PROXY CARD WILL BE VALID ONLY IF YOU
SIGN, DATE AND RETURN IT BEFORE THE ANNUAL MEETING.

     If you  complete  the proxy card except for the voting  instructions,  then
your shares will be voted FOR the proposed  election of the Class III Directors,
FOR approval of the amendment to the 1997 Stock Option Plan, as amended, and FOR
ratification  of the  selection  of  Ernst  &  Young,  LLP  as  the  independent
accountant's of FTI Consulting for the 1999 fiscal year.


REVOKING YOUR PROXY

     If you decide to change  your vote,  you may revoke  your proxy at any time
before it is voted. You may revoke your proxy in any one of three ways:

     o    You may notify the  Assistant  Secretary of FTI  Consulting in writing
          that you wish to revoke your proxy.

     o    You may submit a proxy dated later than your original proxy.

     o    You may attend the  Annual  Meeting  and vote.  Merely  attending  the
          Annual  Meeting will not by itself  revoke a proxy;  you must obtain a
          ballot and vote your shares of common stock to revoke the proxy.


                                        1

<PAGE>



VOTE REQUIRED FOR APPROVAL


Proposal 1: Election of Three                The three  nominees for election as
 Class III  Directors                        Class III Directors who receive the
                                             most votes will be elected.  So, if
                                             you do not  vote  for a  particular
                                             nominee,  or you indicate "withhold
                                             authority to vote" for a particular
                                             nominee  on your proxy  card,  your
                                             vote will not count either "for" or
                                             "against" the nominee.

Proposal 2: Approval of Amendment            The affirmative  vote of a majority
 to the 1997 Stock Option Plan, as           of the  votes  cast  at the  Annual
 Amended                                     Meeting is  required to approve the
                                             amendment  to the 1997 Stock Option
                                             Plan, as amended.  If you "abstain"
                                             from voting,  your  abstention will
                                             not  count  as a vote  cast  for or
                                             against the proposal.

Proposal 3: Ratification of Selection of     The affirmative  vote of a majority
 Independent Accountants                     of the  votes  cast  at the  Annual
                                             Meeting is  required  to ratify the
                                             selection      of       independent
                                             accountants.  So, if you  "abstain"
                                             from voting,  your  abstention will
                                             not  count  as a vote  cast  for or
                                             against the proposal.


     If you hold your  shares  with a broker and you do not tell your broker how
to vote,  your broker has the  authority  to vote on Proposals 1 and 3, but does
not have  authority to vote on Proposal 2. If you do not tell your broker how to
vote on  Proposal  2, the effect will be that your vote will not count as a vote
cast for or against the proposal.

     Quorum.  On the  record  date for the  Annual  Meeting  (April  22,  1999),
4,829,132 shares of common stock were issued and outstanding. A "quorum" must be
present at the Annual  Meeting in order to transact  business.  A quorum will be
present  if  2,414,567  shares of common  stock are  represented  at the  Annual
Meeting,  either in person (by the stockholders) or by proxy. If a quorum is not
present,  a vote  cannot  occur.  In  deciding  whether  a  quorum  is  present,
abstentions  will be counted as shares of common stock that are  represented  at
the Annual Meeting.


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

     FTI Consulting,  Inc.'s Annual Report to  Stockholders  for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1998, including consolidated  financial statements,  is being
mailed to all stockholders  entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting together with
this Proxy Statement.  The Annual Report does not constitute a part of the proxy
solicitation  material.  That report tells you how to get additional information
about FTI Consulting.


                                        2

<PAGE>



                 PROPOSALS TO BE PRESENTED AT THE ANNUAL MEETING

     We will present the following  three  proposals at the Annual  Meeting.  We
have described in this proxy  statement all the proposals that we expect will be
made  at the  Annual  Meeting.  If we or a  stockholder  properly  presents  any
proposal to the meeting, we will, to the extent permitted by applicable law, use
your  proxy to vote  your  shares of common  stock on the  proposal  in our best
judgment, if the proposal is submitted after March 19, 1999.

1.   ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     FTI  Consulting's  Amended  and  Restated  Articles  of  Incorporation,  as
amended,  provide that the  Company's  Board of Directors  will consist of three
classes. The members of each class are elected for three-year terms. Pursuant to
the By-Laws, as amended, the size of the Board is seven directors,  of which the
three directors denominated as Class III Directors are to be elected at the 1999
Annual  Meeting.  The terms of the Class I and Class II Directors will expire at
the Annual Meetings of Stockholders to be held in 2000 and 2001, respectively.

     The nominees for election to the Board of Directors as Class III  Directors
are:

                                 Jack B. Dunn, IV
                                 Stewart J. Kahn
                                 Scott S. Binder

     Each director will be elected to serve for a three-year term, or thereafter
until his  replacement  is chosen and  qualifies.  Of the nominees for Class III
directors,  Mr.  Dunn is  presently a member of the Board of  Directors  and has
consented  to serve as a director  if elected.  Messrs.  Kahn and Binder are not
currently  board  members.  Mr. Binder has been nominated for election to fill a
vacancy  resulting  from the 1998  resignation  of Daniel  Luczak as a Class III
Director.  Joseph  Reynolds has decided not to stand for  reelection at the 1999
Meeting and Stewart J. Kahn has been  nominated for that  directorship.  Messrs.
Kahn and Binder have also consented to serve as directors if elected. As part of
a $13,000,000  investment by Allied Capital  Corporation  and Allied  Investment
Corporation  in the Company,  FTI  Consulting  agreed to use its best efforts to
cause Mr. Binder's election to the Board.  More detailed  information about each
of the nominees is available in the section of this booklet titled "The Board of
Directors," which begins on page 10.

     If  either  of the  nominees  cannot  serve  for any  reason  (which is not
anticipated),  the Board of  Directors  may  designate a  substitute  nominee or
nominees.  If that  happens,  we will vote all valid proxies for the election of
the  substitute  nominee or nominees.  The Board of Directors may also decide to
leave the Board seat or seats open until a suitable  candidate or candidates are
located, or it may decide to reduce the size of the Board.

       THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE
                  NOMINEES FOR ELECTION AS CLASS III DIRECTORS.


2.   APPROVAL OF AMENDMENT TO THE 1997 STOCK OPTION PLAN, AS AMENDED

     FTI  Consulting  is asking you to approve the  amendment  to the 1997 Stock
Option Plan, as amended (the "1997  Plan"),  to increase the number of shares of
common  stock that FTI  Consulting  can issue upon  exercise of options  granted
under the plan from 2,000,000 to 3,000,000. The amendment became effective as of
April 21, 1999 contingent upon stockholder approval.

     What  follows  is a  summary  of  the  1997  Plan  as it  will  be  if  the
stockholders approve the amendment. We intend for this to be a fair and complete
summary of the  Amended  Plan,  but we are also  attaching  the full text of the
amended 1997 Plan as Exhibit A, which governs.


SUMMARY OF THE PLAN

     Purpose and Scope. FTI Consulting has used and intends to use the 1997 Plan
to recruit,  reward, and retain employee and non-employee  directors and certain
other service providers.  Under the 1997 Plan the Board's Compensation Committee
(or, if it chooses, the Board) may grant options for up to 3,000,000


                                        3

<PAGE>



shares.  (As with the other numbers in this section of the proxy, the limit will
change to reflect any changes in the number of FTI Consulting's shares of common
stock if FTI Consulting issues stock dividends, splits its stock, or makes other
specified changes.)

     Plan Administration. The 1997 Plan authorizes the Compensation Committee to
administer   the  plan,   unless  the  Board   chooses  to  do  so.   (The  term
"Administrator"  will  cover  whichever  body is  administering  the  plan.) The
Administrator's  authority includes granting options,  determining which options
are incentive stock options  ("ISOs") and which are  nonqualified  stock options
("NQSOs"), determining the exercise price of the options granted, and exercising
broad discretion to set or amend other terms (other than for Formula Options, as
defined  below).  FTI  Consulting  may use funds received under the Plan for any
general corporate purpose.

     Participants.  The  Administrator  may grant  options to all  employees and
directors of (and certain other service  providers  to) FTI  Consulting  and its
subsidiaries,  a total of  approximately  430 persons as of April 15, 1999.  (We
will refer to persons who receive options as "optionees.") The Administrator may
also grant  options to replace  options  when FTI  Consulting  acquires  another
company and, where appropriate, to mirror the terms of those replaced options.

     Shares Available Under the 1997 Plan. The Administrator can currently grant
options for up to 2,000,000  shares of common stock,  less the number  currently
covered by options  under this plan.  The  proposed  amendment  to the 1997 Plan
would  increase  the number of  authorized  shares to  3,000,000.  The shares of
common stock will come from  authorized  but  unissued  shares or from shares of
common stock FTI Consulting owns,  including shares of common stock purchased on
the market.  If any option  granted  under the 1997 Plan  expires or  terminates
before the optionee has fully  exercised  it, the shares  subject to that option
will be available for future  grants under the 1997 Plan.  Because the 1997 Plan
provides for discretionary  grants of options, FTI Consulting cannot predict the
specific amounts particular persons will receive.

     As of  April  15,  1999,  there  were  4,829,132  shares  of  common  stock
outstanding  and  1,868,389  shares of common stock  reserved for issuance  upon
exercise of outstanding  options (of which 809,379 shares were granted under FTI
Consulting's  1992 Stock Option Plan, which plan has been superseded by the 1997
Plan), for a total of 6,697,521  shares of common stock  outstanding or reserved
for  issuance.  If the  stockholders  approve the amendment to the 1997 Plan and
options for all of the shares were granted under the 1997 Plan at this time, the
1,940,990 shares  remaining under the 1997 Plan would  constitute  22.47% of the
shares of common stock that would be issued or reserved for issuance.

     Options.  The Administrator can grant options (the right to purchase shares
at a fixed price for up to a fixed length of time).  Those options can be either
NQSOs or ISOs.  The primary  difference  between the two forms are that stricter
tax rules and limits apply to ISOs.

     Individual  Grant Limits.  Under the 1997 Plan, the  Administrator  may not
grant options for more than 500,000  shares to any  individual in any plan year.
Counting  against this number would be any options granted in a year that expire
or that the  Administrator  replaces  within the same year.  This limit  assists
compliance   with  the  tax  rule  described  below  that  may  limit  executive
compensation deductions.

     ISO Limits.  Three  special  limits apply to ISOs under the 1997 Plan.  The
first is that ISO  treatment is limited  based on when the options  first become
exercisable; only the first $100,000 of shares of common stock (valued as of the
date of grant) that becomes  exercisable  under an individual's  ISOs in a given
year will receive ISO tax  treatment.  The second  limitation is that the option
price must at least equal to 100% of the fair market  value of the shares on the
date of grant of the option.  The third  limitation is that the option price for
stockholders  holding 10% or more of the outstanding shares of the common shares
must at least  equal  110% of the fair  market  value of FTI  Consulting  common
stock.

     Option  Price.  The exercise  price for all options (the price someone must
pay for a share of common stock) is based on the market price when granted.  (As
of April  22,  1999,  the fair  market  value as  defined  in the 1997  Plan and
reported by the American  Stock  Exchange  was $4.0625 per share,  based on that
day's closing price.) The Administrator  must grant NQSOs with an exercise price
at least  equal  to 50% of the fair  market  value  on the  date of  grant.  FTI
Consulting does not receive separate  consideration  for the granting of awards,
other than the services the participants provide.


                                        4

<PAGE>



     Option  Exercise  and  Transfer  Restrictions.  An  optionee  employee  can
normally only exercise an option while employed by FTI Consulting, unless his or
her employment or option agreement  provides  otherwise.  If an optionee becomes
disabled or dies,  he or his estate  will have up to 12 months to  exercise  the
options.  An optionee  cannot  transfer his options  other than to someone after
death.

     Director Formula Options.  The 1997 Plan provides for an automatic grant of
an NQSO for 16,000 shares when a non-employee  director (an "Eligible Director")
first  joins  the  Board.  These  initial  formula  options  become  exercisable
one-third  a year  after the date of grant,  another  third two years  after the
grant,  and the final  third  three  years  after the grant.  The 1997 Plan also
provides for an automatic grant of an NQSO for 12,500 for any Eligible  Director
who remains in service  beyond an Annual  Meeting.  These later  options  become
exercisable  one-half on the date six months after grant and the  remaining  one
half on the first  anniversary  of the date of grant.  Options  will also become
exercisable  at the  first to  occur  of the  director's  death,  disability  or
attainment  of age 70.  The  exercise  price for  options  granted  to  Eligible
Directors  will be the fair  market  value of the  common  stock on the date the
option is  granted.  These  options  expire if not already  exercisable  when an
Eligible  Director  leaves the Board.  Exercisable  options  remain in place for
their original term

     Option  Expiration.  Options  will  terminate  no later than 10 years after
their date of grant.  However,  options  intended to be ISOs under the 1997 Plan
will  expire no later  than five years  after the date of grant if the  optionee
owns (or is treated as owning) more than 10% of the outstanding shares of common
stock. The  Administrator  may not grant options under the 1997 Plan after March
25, 2007.

     Termination of Service.  The Administrator has discretion to fix the period
in which options  granted to employees  may be exercised  after  termination  of
employment. Exercisable options granted to Eligible Directors remain exercisable
for the remaining term of the option unless the Board specifies otherwise.

     Substantial  Corporate  Changes.  If  FTI  Consulting  has  a  "substantial
corporate change" (examples of which include total  liquidation,  sale of all of
the shares of FTI Consulting,  a merger in which it does not survive, or sale of
substantially all of its assets),  all options will automatically  vest, subject
to  compliance  with the "pooling of interest"  accounting  rules in  applicable
situations. In some circumstances, either an acquirer must assume or replace the
options or the  optionees  will have some period of time before the  transaction
occurs to exercise  options or take other  actions with the options  after which
time the 1997 Plan will terminate

     Term of Options.  Each option granted under the 1997 Plan will terminate no
later than ten years  after the date the  option is  granted.  However,  options
intended  to be ISOs  granted to  employees  under the 1997 Plan will  expire no
later than five years after the date of the grant if the option is granted to an
employee who owns (or is deemed to own) more than 10% of the outstanding  common
stock.

     Stockholder  Approval.  In  general,  stockholder  approval  will  only  be
required  after the initial  approval for changes to the ISOs (or when the rules
of the stock exchanges  require  submission) and only to the extent necessary to
preserve their tax treatment. The Board may, as it is this time, submit the plan
on other occasions.

     Amendments and Termination.  The Board may at any time suspend,  terminate,
modify or amend the plan. No suspension, termination,  modification or amendment
of the plan may  adversely  affect any  option  previously  granted,  unless the
optionee consents.


TAX CONSEQUENCES

     NONQUALIFIED  SHARE  OPTIONS An optionee will not be taxed when he receives
an NQSO.  When he exercises  an NQSO,  he will  generally  owe taxes on ordinary
income on the  difference  between  the value of the  shares of common  stock he
receives and the price he pays, with the "spread" treated like additional salary
for an  employee.  He may then owe taxes  again if and when he sells the shares.
That tax would be on the difference  between the price he received for the share
and his "basis," which is the sum of the price he originally paid plus the value
of the shares on which he originally paid income taxes. Depending


                                        5

<PAGE>



upon  how  long he held  the  shares  before  selling,  he may be  eligible  for
favorable  tax rates for  certain  kinds of  capital  gains.  In  addition,  FTI
Consulting  will  receive an income tax  deduction  for any amounts of "ordinary
income" to him.

     INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS.  An optionee will not be taxed when he receives an
ISO and will not be taxed when he exercises the ISO, unless he is subject to the
alternative  minimum  tax  ("AMT").  If he holds  the  shares  of  common  stock
purchased  upon  exercise of the ISO (the "ISO  Shares")  for more than one year
after the date he  exercised  the option  and for more than two years  after the
option grant date,  he generally  will  realize  long-term  capital gain or loss
(rather than ordinary income or loss) when he sells or otherwise disposes of the
ISO  Shares.  This gain or loss will  equal the  difference  between  the amount
realized upon such disposition and the amount paid for the ISO Shares.

     If the optionee sells the ISO Shares in a "disqualifying disposition" (that
is,  within one year from the date he exercises the ISO or within two years from
the date of the ISO grant),  he generally will recognize  ordinary  compensation
income  equal to the  lesser of (i) the fair  market  value of the shares on the
date of  exercise  minus the price he paid or (ii) the amount he realized on the
sale.  For a  gift  or  another  disqualifying  disposition  where  a  loss,  if
sustained,  would not usually be recognized,  he will recognize  ordinary income
equal to the fair market  value of the shares on the date of exercise  minus the
price he paid. Any amount realized on a disqualifying  disposition  that exceeds
the amount treated as ordinary  compensation  income (or any loss realized) will
be a long-term or a short-term capital gain (or loss), depending,  under current
law, on whether he held the shares for at least 12 months.  FTI  Consulting  can
generally take a tax deduction on a disqualifying  disposition  corresponding to
the ordinary  compensation  income he recognizes but cannot deduct the amount of
the capital gains.

     Alternative  Minimum Tax. The difference between the exercise price and the
fair market value of the ISO Shares on the date of exercise is an  adjustment to
income for  purposes of the AMT.  The AMT  (imposed to the extent it exceeds the
taxpayer's  regular tax) is a certain  percentage  of an  individual  taxpayer's
alternative  minimum taxable income that is lower than the regular tax rates but
covers more income. Taxpayers determine their alternative minimum taxable income
by adjusting regular taxable income for certain items, increasing that income by
certain  tax  preference  items,  and  reducing  this  amount by the  applicable
exemption amount. If a disqualifying disposition of the ISO Shares occurs in the
same  calendar  year as exercise  of the ISO,  there is no AMT  adjustment  with
respect  to those ISO  Shares.  Also,  upon a sale of ISO  Shares  that is not a
disqualifying  disposition,  alternative  minimum taxable income is reduced when
the  taxpayer  sells by the excess of the fair market value of the ISO Shares at
exercise over the amount paid for the ISO Shares.

     POTENTIAL  LIMITATION ON COMPANY  DEDUCTIONS.  Code Section 162(m) denies a
deduction to any publicly held  corporation for  compensation it pays to certain
employees in a taxable year to the extent that compensation  exceeds  $1,000,000
for a covered employee. It is possible that compensation  attributable to awards
under the 1997  Plan,  when  combined  with all other  types of  compensation  a
covered  employee  receives  for the year from FTI  Consulting,  may cause  this
limitation to be exceeded in any particular year.

     The tax rules disregard certain kinds of compensation,  including qualified
"performance-based  compensation,"  for  purposes of the  deduction  limitation.
Compensation   attributable   to  options  will  qualify  as   performance-based
compensation,  provided that: (i) the plan contains a per-employee limitation on
the number of shares for which options may be granted during a specified period;
(ii) the stockholders approve that per-employee limitation;  (iii) the option is
granted by a  compensation  committee with voting  members  comprised  solely of
"outside  directors";  and (iv)  either the  exercise  price of the option is at
least equal to the fair market value of the shares on the date of grant,  or the
option is granted (or  exercisable)  only upon the  achievement (as certified by
the compensation  committee) of an objective performance goal established by the
compensation  committee  while  the  outcome  is  substantially  uncertain.  FTI
Consulting expects the options to qualify as performance-based compensation.

     The above TAX  CONSEQUENCES  section  summarizes the general  principles of
current  federal  income tax law  applicable to the purchase of shares of common
stock  under the 1997 Plan.  While we believe  that the  description  accurately
summarizes existing provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as


                                        6

<PAGE>



amended,  and its  legislative  history  and  regulations,  and  the  applicable
administrative   and  judicial   interpretations,   these  statements  are  only
summaries,  and the  rules in  question  are  quite  detailed  and  complicated.
Moreover,  legislative,  administrative,   regulatory  or  judicial  changes  or
interpretations  may  occur  that  would  modify  such  statements.   Individual
financial  situations  may vary,  and state  and local tax  consequences  may be
significant.  Therefore,  no one  should act based on this  description  without
consulting his own tax advisors  concerning the tax  consequences  of purchasing
shares under the Plan and the disposing of those shares. In addition,  different
rules may apply if the  optionee  is  subject  to  foreign  tax laws or pays the
exercise price using shares he already owns.


NEW PLAN BENEFITS

     Other than the formula  grants to  Eligible  Directors,  the  Administrator
makes  grants  under the 1997 Plan at its  discretion.  Consequently,  we cannot
fully determine the amount or dollar value at this time, other than to note that
the Administrator has not granted options contingent on approval of the increase
in shares under the 1997 Plan.  The following  formula  benefits will be awarded
under the 1997 Plan, as amended:


                                                                        NUMBER
               NAME AND POSITION                                       OF SHARES
- -------------------------------------------------------------------   ----------
Jack B. Dunn, IV                                                   
 Chief Executive Officer ..........................................          *

Stewart J. Kahn                                                    
 President ........................................................          *

Joseph R. Reynolds, Jr.                                            
 Vice Chairman of the Board and                                    
 Chairman of Applied                                               
 Sciences Consulting ..............................................          *

Patrick A. Brady                                                   
 Executive Vice President and                                      
 Chief Operating Officer ..........................................          *

Theodore I. Pincus                                                 
 Executive Vice President and                                      
 Chief Financial Officer ..........................................          *

Executive Officer Group ...........................................          *

Non-Executive Director Group ......................................     66,000

Non-Executive Officer Employee Group ..............................          *

- ----------
*    The  Administrator   expects  to  grant  options  to  executive   officers,
     non-executive  officers and employees but those option grants have not been
     determined at this time.


 THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THIS PROPOSAL.


3.   RATIFICATION OF ERNST & YOUNG, LLP AS INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

     The Audit  Committee and the Board of Directors is seeking  ratification of
the  appointment  of  Ernst  &  Young,  LLP  as  FTI  Consulting's   independent
accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1999.  Representatives  from
Ernst & Young,  LLP will be  available  at the  Annual  Meeting  to answer  your
questions and make a statement if they desire.


 THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THIS PROPOSAL.


                                        7

<PAGE>



                                 STOCK OWNERSHIP

     There were 4,829,132 shares of common stock of FTI Consulting,  Inc. issued
and  outstanding on April 22, 1999. The following table shows how many shares of
common  stock (and  securities  that are  currently,  or will be within 60 days,
convertible  or  exercisable  for shares of common  stock) on a fully  converted
basis were owned on April 15,  1999 by (1) each person who owned more than 5% of
the  issued  and  outstanding  shares of common  stock,  (2) the  directors  and
director  nominees of FTI  Consulting,  (3) the Chief  Executive  Officer of FTI
Consulting,  (4)  the  other  persons  named  in  the  "Executive  Officers  and
Compensation--Summary  Compensation  Table"  table  on  page  14,  and  (5)  all
executive  officers and directors of FTI Consulting as a group.  The owners have
sole voting and investment power unless otherwise indicated.  The address of the
directors and named officers is c/o FTI  Consulting,  Inc., 2021 Research Drive,
Annapolis, Maryland 21401.


                                                           NUMBER       PERCENT
                                                             OF           OF
         NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER              SHARES       SHARES
- -----------------------------------------------------   ------------   --------
Grotech III Pennsylvania Fund, LP (1)(2) ............       27,840        0.6%
 9690 Deereco Road, Timonium, MD 21093
Grotech III Companion Fund, LP (2) (3) ..............       46,439        1.0%
 9690 Deereco Road, Timonium, MD 21093
Grotech Partners III, LP (2) (4) ....................      389,721        8.1%
 9690 Deereco Road, Timonium, MD 21093
Grotech Capital Group (4) ...........................       35,600        0.7%
9690 Deereco Road, Timonium, MD 21093
Joseph R. Reynolds, Jr. .............................      441,416        9.1%
Jack B. Dunn, IV (5) ................................      280,823        5.6%
Dennis J. Shaughnessy (4)(6) ........................       60,600        1.2%
State of Wisconsin Investment Board (7) .............      313,000        6.5%
 P.O. Box 7842, Madison, WI 53707
Investment Counselors of Maryland, Inc. (8) .........      381,000        7.9%
 803 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MD 21201
Stewart J. Kahn (9) .................................      378,000        7.3%
George P. Stamas (10) ...............................       41,438        0.9%
Patrick A. Brady (11) ...............................      134,102        2.7%
Peter F. O'Malley (12) ..............................       59,063        1.2%
James A. Flick Jr. (13) .............................       49,331        1.0%
Theodore I. Pincus ..................................        1,000          *
All directors and executive officers as a group
 (9 persons) ........................................    1,445,773       25.4%

- ----------
*    Less than 1%.

(1)  Includes 27,240 shares of common stock and a warrant currently  exercisable
     for 600 shares of common stock.

(2)  Includes 45,438 shares of common stock and a warrant currently  exercisable
     for 1,001 shares of common stock.

(3)  Includes 381,322 shares of common stock and a warrant currently exercisable
     for 8,399 shares of common stock.

(4)  Grotech  Capital  Group,  Inc.  is  the  general  partner  of  Grotech  III
     Pennsylvania  Fund, LP, Grotech III Companion Fund, LP and Grotech Partners
     III, LP. Dennis J. Shaughnessy, a director of FTI Consulting, is a Managing
     Director of Grotech Capital Group, Inc. Grotech Capital Group, Inc. has the
     right to  exercise  sole  voting and  dispositive  power over the shares of
     common  stock  held by each  Fund.  Mr.  Shaughnessy  disclaims  beneficial
     ownership of the shares of common stock and warrant  shares held by Grotech
     III  Pennsylvania  Fund,  LP,  Grotech III  Companion  Fund, LP and Grotech
     Partners III, LP.

(5)  Includes  218,093  shares of common  stock  issuable  upon the  exercise of
     options,  which are currently exercisable or will become exercisable within
     60 days,  granted under the 1992 Stock Option Plan and 1997 Plan.  Includes
     12,730  shares of common stock over which Mr. Dunn and his wife,  Elizabeth
     Dunn, share voting and investment power.

(6)  Includes  26,000  shares of common stock and 35,600  shares of common stock
     issuable  upon the  exercise  of options  granted to Mr.  Shaughnessy  as a
     non-employee director of FTI Consulting, which are currently exercisable or
     will be  exercisable  within 60 days,  under the 1992 Stock Option Plan and
     the 1997 Plan.  Pursuant  to an  arrangement  between Mr.  Shaughnessy  and
     Grotech Capital Group, Inc., Grotech Capital Group, Inc. has the sole right
     to exercise the options and exercise  voting and investment  power over the
     shares of common stock issuable on exercise of the options. Mr. Shaughnessy
     disclaims beneficial ownership of the options and such shares.


                                        8

<PAGE>



(7)  Based on Schedule 13G filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission on
     February 4, 1999.

(8)  Based on Schedule 13 G filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
     February 19, 1999.

(9)  Includes  300,000  shares of  common  stock  issuable  on  conversion  of a
     currently  convertible  note,  60,000  shares of common  stock  issuable on
     exercise of a  currently  exercisable  warrant and 18,000  shares of common
     stock.

(10) Includes  35,600  shares of common  stock  issuable  upon the  exercise  of
     options,  which are currently exercisable or will become exercisable within
     60 days,  granted under the 1992 Stock Option Plan and 1997 Plan.  Includes
     5,838  shares of common stock over which Mr.  Stamas and his wife,  Georgia
     Stamas, share voting and investment power.

(11) Includes  2,500 shares of common  stock and 131,602  shares of common stock
     issuable  upon  the  exercise  of  stock   options,   which  are  currently
     exercisable or will become  exercisable  within 60 days,  granted under the
     1992 Stock Option Plan and 1997 Plan.

(12) Includes  23,463  shares of common stock and 35,600  shares of common stock
     issuable  upon  the  exercise  of  stock   options,   which  are  currently
     exercisable or will become  exercisable  within 60 days,  granted under the
     1992 Stock Option Plan and 1997 Plan.

(13) Includes  13,731  shares of common stock and 35,600  shares of common stock
     issuable  upon  the  exercise  of  stock   options,   which  are  currently
     exercisable or will become  exercisable  within 60 days,  granted under the
     1992 Stock Option Plan and 1997 Plan.



                                        9

<PAGE>



                             THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

MEMBERSHIP

     We have set forth below  certain  information  regarding the members of FTI
Consulting's  Board of Directors.  At the Annual  Meeting,  Jack B. Dunn, IV has
been nominated for re-election as a Class III Director. Scott S. Binder has been
nominated for election to fill the vacancy  resulting from the 1998  resignation
of Daniel  Luczak as a Class III  Director.  Joseph  Reynolds has decided not to
stand for  reelection  at the 1999  Annual  Meeting and Stewart J. Kahn has been
nominated for that directorship.


CLASS III DIRECTOR NOMINEE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      DIRECTOR              PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION AND                 OTHER
          NOMINEE             AGE       SINCE                 BUSINESS EXPERIENCE                DIRECTORSHIPS
- --------------------------   -----   ----------   -------------------------------------------   --------------
<S>                          <C>     <C>          <C>                                           <C>
Jack B. Dunn, IV .........    48       1992       Mr.  Dunn  became  Chairman of the Board of        None
                                                  Directors  on  December  29,  1998.   Since
                                                  October 1995,  Mr. Dunn has served as Chief
                                                  Executive  Officer of FTI Consulting.  From
                                                  October 1995 to December 1998, he served as
                                                  President of FTI Consulting.  From May 1994
                                                  to  October   1995,   he  served  as  Chief
                                                  Operating  Officer of FTI Consulting.  From
                                                  October 1992  through  September  1995,  he
                                                  served as FTI Consulting's  Chief Financial
                                                  Officer.  Mr. Dunn is a limited  partner of
                                                  the Baltimore Orioles. Prior to joining FTI
                                                  Consulting,  he was a Managing  Director of
                                                  Legg Mason Wood Walker,  Incorporated;  and
                                                  directed its  Baltimore  corporate  finance
                                                  and investment banking activities.

Stewart J. Kahn ..........    55                  Mr.  Kahn has  served as  President  of FTI        None
                                                  Consulting  since  December 29,  1998.  Mr.
                                                  Kahn is also the  Chief  Executive  Officer
                                                  and a director of Kahn Consulting, Inc., an
                                                  accounting    and    financial     services
                                                  consulting firm, and KCI Management,  Inc.,
                                                  a servicing firm to Kahn Consulting,  Inc.,
                                                  which became wholly owned  subsidiaries  of
                                                  FTI Consulting in September 1998.  Prior to
                                                  September 1998, Mr. Kahn was a director and
                                                  President  of  Kahn   Consulting   and  KCI
                                                  Management, Inc. since 1989.

Scott S. Binder ..........    44                  Since 1997, Mr. Binder has been a Principal        None
                                                  with   Allied   Capital   Corporation,    a
                                                  Washington D.C. based firm which invests in
                                                  small to  medium  size  business  entities.
                                                  From 1985 until June 1997,  Mr.  Binder was
                                                  President of Overland Capital  Corporation,
                                                  an  owner  operator  of  cable   television
                                                  systems and radio stations. From April 1991
                                                  until  September  1998,  Mr.  Binder  was a
                                                  director of CIH,  Ltd. a  Washington,  D.C.
                                                  public affairs  consulting firm. Mr. Binder
                                                  is a certified public accountant.
</TABLE>

                                       10

<PAGE>



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   DIRECTOR          PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION AND                         OTHER
     CLASS I DIRECTORS       AGE    SINCE               BUSINESS EXPERIENCE                       DIRECTORSHIPS
- --------------------------- ----- --------- ------------------------------------------ ----------------------------------
<S>                         <C>   <C>       <C>                                        <C>

James A. Flick ............  64     1992     Mr.   Flick  is  the   President,   Chief  Mr.  Flick is a  director  of the
                                             Executive  Officer  and a director of the  Ryland Group,  Inc.,  Capital One
                                             Dome    Corporation,    a   real   estate  Financial Corporation,  Bethlehem
                                             development   and   management   services  Steel Credit Affiliates and Youth
                                             company.  He is  also  the  President  of  Services International, Inc.     
                                             Winnow,  Inc. From 1991 through 1994, Mr.  
                                             Flick was an Executive  Vice President of
                                             Legg Mason Wood Walker, Incorporated.

Peter F. O'Malley .........  60     1992     Mr.  O'Malley  currently  serves  as  the  Mr.  O'Malley  is a  director  of
                                             President of Aberdeen Creek  Corporation,  Potomac  Electric  Power Company,
                                             a   privately-held   company  engaged  in  Giant Foods, Inc. and Legg Mason,
                                             investment,   business   consulting   and  Inc.                             
                                             development  activities.  Mr. O'Malley is  
                                             the  founder,  and since 1989 has been Of
                                             Counsel  to,  the law  firm of  O'Malley,
                                             Miles, Nylen & Gilmore.
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   DIRECTOR          PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION AND                         OTHER
     CLASS II DIRECTORS      AGE    SINCE               BUSINESS EXPERIENCE                       DIRECTORSHIPS
- --------------------------- ----- --------- ------------------------------------------ ----------------------------------
<S>                         <C>   <C>       <C>                                        <C>

Dennis J. Shaughnessy .....  51     1992     Mr. Shaughnessy is a Managing Director of  Mr.  Shaughnessy is a director of
                                             Grotech  Capital  Group,  Inc., a venture  TESSCO  Technologies,  Inc., U.S.
                                             capital firm  headquartered  in Timonium,  Vision, Inc. and Polk Audio, Inc.
                                             Maryland.  Prior to  becoming  a Managing  
                                             Director  of  Grotech  Capital  Group  in
                                             1989,  Mr.   Shaughnessy  was  the  Chief
                                             Executive  Officer of CRI  International,
                                             Inc.

George P. Stamas ..........  48     1992     Since April 1996,  Mr.  Stamas has been a               None
                                             Partner  with  the law  firm  of  Wilmer,
                                             Cutler  &  Pickering.  Prior  to  joining
                                             Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering in April 1996,
                                             Mr.  Stamas was a partner in the law firm
                                             of Piper & Marbury. Mr. Stamas is counsel
                                             to,  and  a  limited   partner   of,  the
                                             Baltimore  Orioles.   Wilmer,   Cutler  &
                                             Pickering  is one of  several  law  firms
                                             that provide  services to FTI Consulting,
                                             Inc.
</TABLE>


BOARD ORGANIZATION AND MEETINGS

     Pursuant to the  By-Laws,  as amended,  currently  the size of the Board is
seven members.  During a portion of 1998  there was one  vacancy on the Board of
Directors  resulting from the  resignation  of a Class III Director.  During the
fiscal year ended  December 31, 1998,  FTI  Consulting's  Board of Directors met
seven  times,  held no telephone  meetings and took action by unanimous  written
consent  one time.  Except  as noted,  each of the  current  nominees  who was a
director  and every  other  director  attended  at least 75% of the total  Board
meetings and meetings of  committees  of the Board of Directors  that the member
was eligible to attend.

     The Board of Directors has the following committees:

     Audit Committee.  The Audit Committee makes recommendations to the Board of
Directors concerning the engagement of independent accountants; reviews with the
independent accountants the plans and results of the audit engagement;  approves
professional  services  provided  by  the  independent  accounts;   reviews  the
independence of the accountants; considers the range of audit and non-audit fees


                                       11

<PAGE>



and reviews the adequacy of internal  accounting  controls.  The Audit Committee
met three times, held no telephone meetings and did not act by unanimous written
consent in 1998. The members of the Audit  Committee  are: James A. Flick,  Jr.,
Peter F. O'Malley and Dennis J. Shaughnessy.

     Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee makes recommendations to
the Board of Directors with respect to the compensation of executive officers of
FTI  Consulting  and  administers  its stock option plans,  incentive  plans and
employee  benefit  plans.  The  Compensation  Committee  met one time,  held one
telephone  meeting and acted seven times by unanimous  written  consent in 1998.
The members of the  Compensation  Committee are:  James A. Flick,  Jr., Peter F.
O'Malley and Dennis J. Shaughnessy.


COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

     FTI Consulting  reimburses its directors for their  out-of-pocket  expenses
incurred in the performance of their duties as directors of FTI Consulting.  FTI
Consulting  does not pay  fees to its  directors  for  attendance  at  meetings.
Non-employee  directors  are  eligible  to receive  grants of options to acquire
shares of common stock under the 1997 Plan.  Under the 1997 Plan,  each Eligible
Director elected after May 1998 will receive options for 16,000 shares of common
stock at the fair market value on the date of grant.  The initial  option grants
will become  exercisable one third after six months,  two-thirds  after one year
and in full  after two years  from the date of grant and will have a term of ten
years.  Each  Eligible  Director  director  who is  elected  or  continues  as a
non-employee  director after an Annual Meeting will  automatically be granted an
option to purchase 12,500 shares of common stock at the fair market value on the
date of grant.  These options will become  exercisable one half after six months
and in full  after  one year  from the date of grant and will have a term of ten
years. Mr. Binder,  who is standing for election,  would be an Eligible Director
of FTI  Consulting  and, if elected,  will receive  options for 16,000 shares of
common stock. The other Eligible Directors are Messrs.  O'Malley,  Flick, Stamas
and Shaughnessy.  At April 15, 1999,  427,200  non-qualified  stock options have
been granted to non-employee  directors,  of which 402,200 options are currently
exercisable and 25,000 options will become exercisable within 60 days.



                                       12

<PAGE>



                      EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND COMPENSATION

     The following table and  biographical  descriptions set forth the name, age
and principal  occupations during the past five years for each executive officer
who is not also a director of FTI Consulting. The information is as of April 15,
1999, unless otherwise indicated.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             OFFICER                               PRINCIPAL BUSINESS
             NOMINEE                 AGE      SINCE                          EXPERIENCE FOR PAST FIVE YEARS
- ---------------------------------   -----   ---------   -----------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                 <C>     <C>         <C>

Patrick A. Brady ................    45       1984      Mr. Brady has been the Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Operating
                                                        Officer of FTI Consulting  since 1996. From 1994 to 1996, Mr. Brady was
                                                        Executive Vice President and General  Manager of Visual  Communications
                                                        and Trial Consulting  Services for FTI Consulting.  Prior to that time,
                                                        Mr. Brady spent ten years with FTI Consulting  specializing  in project
                                                        management and the development of project management  methodologies for
                                                        dealing  with  major  failure  investigations  and  complex  litigation
                                                        matters.

Theodore I. Pincus ..............    56       1999      Mr. Pincus has been the Executive  Vice  President and Chief  Financial
                                                        Officer of FTI  Consulting  since  April  1999.  Prior to  joining  FTI
                                                        Consulting, Mr. Pincus was Executive Vice President and Chief Financial
                                                        Officer  of Nitinol  Medical  Technologies  in Boston  from May 1995 to
                                                        March  1999  and  was  President  of  the  Pincus  Group,  a  financial
                                                        consulting firm, from December 1989 to May 1995. Earlier in his career,
                                                        he rose to  Partner  at  Ernst &  Young  and was  Partner-in-Charge  of
                                                        Management  Consulting in the New York Region of KMG Main Hurdman, both
                                                        public accounting firms. He is a certified public accountant.

Joseph R. Reynolds, Jr. .........    57       1982      Mr. Reynolds has served as Vice Chairman of the Board of FTI Consulting
                                                        since January 1996 and will  continue to serve in that  position  until
                                                        the  Annual  Meeting.  In  gratitude  and  recognition  of his years of
                                                        service,  the Board  has  decided  to make Mr.  Reynolds  its  honorary
                                                        (non-voting)  Chairman-Emeritus effective following the Annual Meeting.
                                                        Mr.  Reynolds has been Chairman,  Applied  Sciences  Consulting for FTI
                                                        Consulting  since January 1996. Mr. Reynolds  co-founded FTI Consulting
                                                        in 1982 and served as FTI  Consulting's  President  from September 1988
                                                        until  January 1996.  Mr.  Reynolds has  twenty-five  years of forensic
                                                        engineering  experience.  Mr. Reynolds was the founding Chairman of The
                                                        Johns Hopkins  University Society of Engineering Alumni and is a member
                                                        of the National  Advisory Council for the School of Engineering and the
                                                        Executive   Committee   for  the  Johns   Hopkins   University   Alumni
                                                        Association.
</TABLE>

     The  executive  officers  are  elected by the Board of  Directors  and hold
office until their successors are elected and qualify.


                                       13

<PAGE>



                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

     We have set forth below,  for the periods  indicated,  certain  information
concerning the cash and non-cash  compensation  earned by FTI  Consulting's  (i)
Chief Executive Officer,  and (ii) four most highly compensated persons who were
serving as executive officers of FTI Consulting on December 31, 1998.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               LONG-TERM
                                                   ANNUAL COMPENSATION                    COMPENSATION AWARDS
                                  ------------------------------------------------------ ---------------------
                                                                                               SECURITIES
                                                                          OTHER ANNUAL    UNDERLYING OPTIONS/      ALL OTHER
   NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION     FISCAL YEAR   SALARY(1)     BONUS    COMPENSATION(2)         SARS(#)         COMPENSATION(3)
- --------------------------------- ------------- ----------- ---------- ----------------- --------------------- ----------------
<S>                               <C>           <C>         <C>        <C>               <C>                   <C>
Jack B. Dunn (4) ................     1998       $312,000    $ 60,000       $ 7,300              40,000             $3,800
 Chairman and Chief                   1997       $242,700    $110,600       $ 3,880              80,000             $3,800
 Executive Officer                    1996       $215,000      None         $ 2,800              94,000             $3,000

Stewart J. Kahn (5) .............     1998       $142,900      None         $   850             100,000              None
 President

Joseph R. Reynolds, Jr. .........     1998       $213,362    $  7,350       $15,900               None              $2,900
 Vice Chairman of the Board           1997       $184,400    $ 20,000       $13,900               None              $3,000
 and Chairman, Applied                1996       $197,000    $ 20,000       $10,700               None              $3,200
 Sciences Consulting

Patrick A. Brady ................     1998       $241,500    $ 10,000       $ 1,100               None              $3,500
 Executive Vice President             1997       $205,200    $ 92,900       $   600             150,000             $3,600
 and Chief Operating Officer          1996       $181,000      None         $   700              33,600             $3,000

Gary Sindler ....................     1998       $192,100      None         $ 2,400               None              $3,300
 Executive Vice President,            1997       $162,100    $ 75,200       $ 1,300             100,000             $3,500
 Chief Financial Officer and          1996       $ 73,000      None         $ 2,700              30,000             $  600
 Secretary (6)
</TABLE>

- ----------
(1)  Includes  amounts  earned but  deferred at the  election  of the  executive
     officer,  such as salary  deferrals  under  FTI  Consulting's  401(k)  Plan
     established under Section 401(k) of the Code.

(2)  These  amounts   represent  FTI   Consulting's   payment  of  matching  and
     discretionary contributions to FTI Consulting's 401(k) Plan, life insurance
     and long-term  disability  coverage.  FTI Consulting's 401(k) contributions
     for 1998 for Messrs. Dunn, Kahn,  Reynolds,  Brady and Sindler were $4,500,
     $850, $10,000, $ 0 and $1,000, respectively.  The additional life insurance
     premiums paid by FTI Consulting for 1998 for Messrs.  Dunn, Kahn, Reynolds,
     Brady and Sindler were $2,500, $500, $5,700, $900 and $1,100, respectively.

(3)  These amounts represent FTI Consulting's  payments for automobile  expenses
     provided to the named officers.

(4)  Mr. Dunn ceased to serve as President on December 29, 1998.

(5)  Mr. Kahn assumed the position of  President of FTI  Consulting  on December
     29, 1998. Mr. Kahn did not earn any  compensation  in that position  during
     1998.  Mr. Kahn is also employed  under a written  employment  agreement as
     Chief Executive Officer of Kahn Consulting, Inc. and KCI Management,  Inc.,
     wholly owned  subsidiaries of FTI Consulting.  The amounts reported in this
     Table were earned by Mr. Kahn for serving in those positions.

(6)  Mr.  Sindler  resigned  all of his offices  with FTI  Consulting  effective
     February 15, 1999.  Mr.  Sindler will remain an employee of FTI  Consulting
     until December 31, 1999 or such earlier date as he and FTI Consulting shall
     agree. Mr. Sindler will retain the rights to his options until such time as
     he is no longer an employee.


                                       14

<PAGE>



                        OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

     The  following  table sets forth the  options  granted to FTI  Consulting's
named officers during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                                  INDIVIDUAL GRANTS                             VALUE
                               ------------------------------------------------------- AT ASSUMED ANNUAL RATES
                                                   PERCENT OF                               OF STOCK PRICE     
                                   NUMBER OF      TOTAL OPTIONS                         APPRECIATION FOR OPTION
                                   SECURITIES      GRANTED TO                                    TERM
                                   UNDERLYING     EMPLOYEES IN   EXERCISE   EXPIRATION ------------------------
             NAME               OPTIONS GRANTED    FISCAL YEAR   PRICE(1)      DATE       5%(2)      10% (2)
- ------------------------------ ----------------- -------------- ---------- ----------- ----------- ------------
<S>                            <C>               <C>            <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>
Jack B. Dunn (3) (4) .........       10,000       1.8%          $ 16.08        2-08     $104,520    $274,968
                                     10,000       1.8             19.59        4-08      127,335     334,989
                                     10,000       1.8              9.90        7-08       64,350     169,290
                                     10,000       1.8              4.50       10-08       29,250      76,950
Stewart J. Kahn (3) ..........      100,000      17.9              5.50        9-08      357,500     940,500
Joseph R. Reynolds ...........           --        --                --          --           --          --
Patrick A. Brady .............           --        --                --          --           --          --
Gary Sindler (5) .............           --        --                --          --           --          --
</TABLE>

- ----------
(1)  All  options  were  granted  at or  above  the  fair  market  value  of FTI
     Consulting's  common  stock on the date of grant as  reported on the Nasdaq
     National Market.

(2)  The dollar amounts under these columns are the results of  calculations  at
     assumed compounded rates of stock appreciation of five percent (5%) and ten
     percent  (10%)  from the date of the  grant to the  expiration  date of the
     options.  The  potential  realizable  value is  reported  net of the option
     price, but before income taxes associated with exercise These assumed rates
     of growth were selected by the SEC for illustration purposes only. They are
     not  intended  to forecast  possible  future  appreciation,  if any, of FTI
     Consulting's  stock price. No gain to the optionees is possible  without an
     increase  in stock  prices,  which will  benefit all  stockholders.  A zero
     percent (0%) gain in stock price will result in a zero percent (0%) benefit
     to optionees.

(3)  Options become  exercisable  one-third on the first anniversary of the date
     of grant,  two-thirds on the second anniversary of the date of grant and in
     full on the third anniversary of the date of grant.

(4)  Mr. Dunn  receives an option grant for 10,000 shares of common stock on the
     day following the  announcement of each quarterly  earnings  release.  Such
     options are granted with an exercise  price 10% higher than the fair market
     value of FIT  Consulting's  common  stock on the date of grant  and  become
     fully exercisable upon an increase of 25% in the market value of the common
     stock but not earlier than one year after the first anniversary of the date
     of grant.

(5)  Mr.  Sindler  resigned  all of his offices  with FTI  Consulting  effective
     February 15, 1999.  Mr.  Sindler will remain an employee of FTI  Consulting
     until December 31, 1999 or such earlier date as he and FTI Consulting shall
     agree. Mr. Sindler will retain the rights to his options until such time as
     he is no longer an employee.


AGGREGATED  OPTION EXERCISES IN FISCAL 1998 AND VALUE OF OPTIONS AT DECEMBER 31,
1998

     The following table sets forth the options  exercised by the named officers
during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   NUMBER OF SECURITIES
                                                                  UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED         VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                                       OPTIONS HELD              IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS
                                                                 AT FISCAL YEAR-END(2)(#)      AT FISCAL YEAR-END($)(3)
                              SHARES ACQUIRED       VALUE      ----------------------------- ----------------------------
            NAME               ON EXERCISE(#)   REALIZED($)(1)  EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE   EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE
- ---------------------------- ----------------- --------------- ------------- --------------- ------------- --------------
<S>                          <C>               <C>             <C>           <C>             <C>           <C>
Jack B. Dunn ...............      40,000           $454,800       218,093         76,666        $45,059          --
Stewart J. Kahn ............          --                 --            --        100,000             --          --
Joseph R. Reynolds .........          --                 --            --             --             --          --
Patrick A. Brady ...........       2,000             23,625       131,602         49,998             --          --
Gary Sindler(4) ............          --                 --        86,667         43,333             --          --
</TABLE>

- ----------
(1)  Based on the Fair Market Value of FTI  Consulting's  shares of common stock
     on the date of exercise  (the closing  price) minus the exercise  price and
     multiplied by the number of shares acquired.


                                       15

<PAGE>



(2)  Includes both "in-the-money" and "out-of-the-money" options. "In-the-money"
     options are options  with  exercise  prices  below the market  price of FTI
     Consulting's common stock on December 31, 1998.

(3)  Based on the closing price of FTI Consulting's common stock on December 31,
     1998 ($3.38) minus the exercise price.

(4)  Mr.  Sindler  resigned  all of his offices  with FTI  Consulting  effective
     February 15, 1999.  Mr.  Sindler will remain an employee of FTI  Consulting
     until December 31, 1999 or such earlier date as he and FTI Consulting shall
     agree. Mr. Sindler will retain the rights to his options until such time as
     he is no longer an employee.


EMPLOYMENT ARRANGEMENTS

     FTI Consulting  entered into employment  agreements  with Messrs.  Dunn and
Reynolds,  effective  January 1, 1996, that contained  automatic  provisions for
extension  of the  employment  term.  As of April 22,  1999,  each  contract  is
scheduled  to expire at the close of  business  on December  31,  2001,  but the
contract  will be extended  for an  additional  year on December 31 of each year
unless by that date either  party gives notice of his  intention  not to further
extend the term.  Without further action, the contracts will expire in any event
at the close of business on December 31, 2005.

     Each of Messrs.  Dunn' and Reynolds'  employment  agreements terminate upon
the  death  or  disability  of the  executive;  termination  of the  executive's
employment for or without cause; or resignation of the executive  voluntarily or
for good reason.  The  agreements  provide for annual review.  In addition,  Mr.
Reynolds  is  eligible  to receive  an annual  bonus  calculated  as 1.8% of the
earnings of the Applied Sciences  Consulting group 90 days after the end of each
fiscal year.

     If FTI Consulting were to terminate Mr. Dunn's or Mr. Reynolds'  employment
without cause or the executive  resigned for certain specified good reasons,  he
would be entitled to severance benefits equal to the amount of his annual salary
for the remainder of the contract term ("Severance Period"),  plus a bonus based
upon the average  annual  percentage  of salary he  received as a  discretionary
bonus over the three years  immediately  preceding  termination.  The agreements
provide  that  during the  Severance  Period  Messrs.  Dunn and  Reynolds  would
continue to be treated as executives for purposes of all of the benefit programs
of FTI  Consulting  described  in the  agreements,  except  that  medical,  life
insurance, and related benefits would cease if comparable benefits were provided
by successor employers. In addition, Messrs. Dunn and Reynolds would be entitled
to elect to be paid a lump sum or other  agreed  severance  allowance in lieu of
the severance  benefits  described above in an amount of cash agreed upon by the
executives  and FTI  Consulting  that would equal the then  present  fair market
value of the amount of the severance benefits otherwise payable.

     Kahn Consulting,  Inc. entered into a revised employment agreement with Mr.
Kahn effective September 17, 1998, when FTI Consulting acquired Kahn Consulting.
Under  this  agreement,  Mr.  Kahn  serves as chief  executive  officer  of Kahn
Consulting,  Inc. and KCI Management,  Inc. Since December 29, 1998, he has also
served  as  President  of  FTI  Consulting.  FTI  Consulting  is  a  third-party
beneficiary of the agreement and therefore may take action on its own to enforce
the agreement  even though it is not  specifically a party to it. The expiration
date  under  the  contract  is  September  17,  2002,  but the  contract  may be
terminated earlier or extended later than that date.

     The Kahn employment  agreement  terminates upon Mr. Kahn's death or (at the
election of Kahn Consulting, Inc. or FTI Consulting) disability;  termination of
Mr.  Kahn's  employment  for or  without  cause;  or  resignation  by  Mr.  Kahn
voluntarily or for good reason.  The agreement provides for annual review of Mr.
Kahn's  salary by the Chief  Executive  Officer of FTI  Consulting.  Mr. Kahn is
eligible  for an annual  bonus equal to 12.5% of the excess over  $3,000,000  of
earnings of Kahn  Consulting,  Inc.  (before  interest,  income taxes,  goodwill
amortization, and certain overhead costs) if this earnings amount exceeds 25% of
the total  revenues of Kahn  Consulting,  Inc.  and other  operations  under its
supervision.  FTI Consulting or Kahn Consulting,  Inc. will pay any bonus within
75 days after the end of the applicable fiscal year.


COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     Compensation Philosophy.  Our goal is to design and administer an executive
compensation  program to (i) attract and retain  qualified  executive  officers,
(ii) reward  executive  officers for  performance in achieving FTI  Consulting's
business objectives and enhancing stockholder value, (iii) align the executive


                                       16

<PAGE>



officers' interests with those of the stockholders,  and (iv) provide incentives
for the creation of long-term  stockholder  value. The key elements of executive
compensation  are base salary,  annual  incentive and performance  bonuses,  and
equity options.  We review and approve FTI  Consulting's  policies and practices
regarding  executive  compensation,   including  (a)  base  salary  levels,  (b)
incentive  compensation plans and related  performance awards, and (c) long-term
incentives, principally equity option awards.

     We believe that compensation  must be competitive,  as well as directly and
materially linked to FTI Consulting's performance. In administering compensation
program,  our  objectives  include  the  following:   attracting  and  retaining
executive  talent,  motivating  executives  to maximize  operating  performance,
measuring performance on both an individual and a company-wide basis, reflecting
FTI  Consulting's  progress in meeting  growth and  profitability  targets,  and
linking  executive and stockholder  interests through the grant of stock options
and other equity-based compensation.

     The key components of FTI Consulting's  executive compensation program have
historically  consisted of salary,  annual incentive  bonuses and stock options.
The long-term  compensation of FTI Consulting's executive officers has consisted
primarily  of  stock  options.   The  short-term   compensation   has  consisted
principally of base salary and a cash bonus.  Our policy with respect to each of
these elements is discussed below.

     Base Salary  Levels.  We believe that base salary levels at FTI  Consulting
are reasonably  related to the salary levels of executive officers of comparable
companies at similar stages of  development.  The Board and we set base salaries
and determined other  compensation for 1998 based on those factors.  Some of the
senior executives have employment  agreements that set floors on base salary and
other elements of compensation for their contract terms, but we can increase the
base  salary at any  point.  We expect  that any such  increases  will take into
account   such   factors   as   individual   past   performance,    changes   in
responsibilities, changes in pay levels of companies we consider comparable, and
inflation.

     Bonus Awards. FTI Consulting uses performance  bonuses to reflect the level
of  involvement  and success of its  executive  officers in advancing  corporate
goals.  The  awards  earned  depend on the  extent to which FTI  Consulting  and
individual  performance  objectives are achieved.  FTI  Consulting's  objectives
consist of operating,  strategic and financial  goals that are  considered to be
critical to the our fundamental  long-term goal of building  stockholder  value.
For fiscal year 1998, these objectives  were: (i) evaluating,  negotiating,  and
reaching  agreement as to expansion  of the  business  and its  prospects,  (ii)
implementation of the planned growth of FTI Consulting, (iii) continued advances
toward  project  goals in  consolidation  and  management,  and (iv) progress in
certain  financial and  administrative  activities.  The Compensation  Committee
awarded  $70,000 in bonuses to named  officers for fiscal year 1998 in the early
part of the year. We take into account the targets and  recommendations  made by
the Chief Executive Officer in this process. In reaction to certain difficulties
FTI Consulting faced before year's end, we did not follow past practices and did
not award further bonuses for the year.

     Long-Term Incentive  Compensation.  The Board and stockholders approved the
1997 Plan as the principal means of providing long-term  incentives.  We believe
that the use of equity  incentives  better  aligns  the  interest  of  executive
officers with those of stockholders  and promotes  long-term  stockholder  value
than does cash alone.  We administer  the 1997 Plan,  determine the terms of the
options and the number of shares of common stock subject to option  grants,  and
set significant  terms.  In setting the grants,  we relied on our own experience
and that of our financial and other advisers.

     Compensation  of the Chief  Executive  Officer.  We use the same procedures
described  above in setting the annual salary,  bonus,  and long-term  incentive
compensation  of  the  Chief  Executive  Officer  (the  "CEO").  The  Board  had
established  the CEO's salary for this report's  period by contract,  and we had
granted him incentive stock options and nonqualified stock options. He continued
to  receive  formula  grants  of  options  under  a  program  we had  previously
established.   In  considering  the  CEO's   compensation,   we  considered  FTI
Consulting's   achievements  of  some  of  its  performance  goals  and  further
considered  key  subjective  factors such as the CEO's work in  negotiating  and
supervising acquisitions, rebuilding a management team, recruiting and retaining
highly  qualified  individuals.  In  awarding  any  future  long-term  incentive
compensation,  we will consider the CEO's performance,  overall  contribution to
the Company,  retention of employees,  the number of options not yet exercisable
and the total number of options to be granted.


                                       17

<PAGE>



     Compensation  Deduction Limit. The Securities and Exchange  Commission (the
"SEC") requires that this report comment on FTI Consulting's policy with respect
to a special rule under the tax laws,  Section  162(m) of the  Internal  Revenue
Code. That section can limit the  deductibility  on a Subchapter C corporation's
federal  income tax return of  compensation  of $1.0 million to any of the named
officers.

     A company  can deduct  compensation  (including  from  exercising  options)
outside  that  limit  if  it  pays  the  compensation  under  a  plan  that  its
stockholders  approve  and that is  performance-related  and  non-discretionary.
Option  exercises  are  typically  deductible  under such a plan if granted with
exercise  prices at or above the market  price  when  granted.  Our policy  with
respect  to this  section  is to make  every  reasonable  effort to ensure  that
compensation  complies with Section 162(m), while  simultaneously  providing FTI
Consulting's  executives with the proper  incentives to remain with and increase
the prospects of FTI  Consulting.  FTI Consulting  did not pay any  compensation
with respect to 1998 that would be outside the limits of Section 162(m).

                                             Compensation Committee

                                             James A. Flick, Jr.
                                             Peter F. O'Malley
                                             Dennis J. Shaughnessy


                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

     During the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998, FTI Consulting, Inc. or its
subsidiaries  entered  into the  following  transactions  involving an executive
officer,  director,  nominee  for  election  as a  director,  or 5%  or  greater
stockholder.


OFFICERS

     Stewart J. Kahn is the President of FTI Consulting and the Chief  Executive
Officer of Kahn  Consulting,  Inc.  ("KCI") and KCI Management,  Inc.  ("KCIM"),
subsidiaries  of FTI  Consulting.  FTI  Consulting  acquired  KCI  and  KCIM  on
September 17, 1998.  Mr. Kahn was a stockholder  of KCI and KCIM. FTI Consulting
acquired KCI and KCIM  pursuant to a stock  purchase  agreement  for  aggregated
consideration  of  $20,000,000,  of  which  $10,000,000  was  paid in  cash  and
$10,000,000  was in the form of  promissory  notes.  Of that  amount,  Mr.  Kahn
received  $5,000,000  in cash and  $5,000,000  in  promissory  notes  payable as
follows:  (1)  $2,500,000 on September  15, 1999 and (2)  $2,500,000 on June 30,
2000.  The notes  provide for simple  interest to accrue at the rate of 7.5% per
annum.

     As of March 31, 1999, FTI  Consulting  and the holders of promissory  notes
issued in connection with the acquisitions of Kahn and KCIM, including Mr. Kahn,
agreed to restructure the notes. Mr. Kahn's note was restructured to provide for
payment in the following manner:  (1) $500,000 was paid as of March 31, 1999 and
(2) $4,500,000 will mature on June 30, 2002 at which time the principal  balance
and all accrued interest will be payable in full. Of the $4,500,000,  $1,500,000
accrues  interest at the rate of 6% and $3,000,000  accrues interest at the rate
of 9.25%.  The note for $1,500,000 is convertible at the option of the holder at
any time for 300,000 shares of common stock based on a conversion price of $5.00
per share. In connection  with the  restructuring  of the notes,  FTI Consulting
issued to Mr. Kahn a warrant exercisable for 60,000 shares of common stock at an
exercise  price of $3.21 per share.  The warrant  expires  March 31, 2004,  five
years from the date of issuance.


DIRECTORS

     During  1998,  Wilmer,  Cutler & Pickering,  of which  George P. Stamas,  a
director  of FTI  Consulting,  is a  Partner,  provided  legal  services  to FTI
Consulting.  During 1998,  FTI  Consulting  incurred legal fees in the aggregate
amount of $336,771 for legal services from Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering.


DIRECTOR NOMINEES

     Scott S.  Binder is a Principal  of Allied  Capital  Corporation.  In March
1999,  FTI Consulting  issued  $13,000,000 of  subordinated  debentures  bearing
interest at 9.25% per annum  through  June 2000,  and 12% per annum  thereafter,
until  maturity in March 2004,  of which  $5,700,000  were  purchased  by Allied
Capital


                                       18

<PAGE>



Corporation and $7,300,000 were purchased by Allied Investment Corporation.  The
subordinated  debentures are secured by a second priority interest in all of the
assets of FTI  Consulting,  and prohibits  the payment of dividends  without the
consent of the lender.  In  connection  with the  issuance  of the  subordinated
debentures,  the  lender  was  issued  warrants  to  purchase  an  aggregate  of
392,505,73  shares of common stock at an exercise price of $3.205 per share,  of
which a warrant  exercisable for 172,098.67 shares of common stock was issued to
Allied Capital  Corporation and a warrant  exercisable for 220,407.06  shares of
common stock was issued to Allied Investment Corporation.  If the debentures are
paid in full before the close of business on June 30, 2000, the number of shares
of common  stock that are  issuable on exercise of the warrant  issued to Allied
Capital  Corporation  will be reduced to 111,713.17  and the number of shares of
common  stock that are  issuable on  exercise  of the  warrant  issued to Allied
Investment Corporation will be reduced to 143,071.25.  The right to exercise the
warrants will expire six years after the date the debentures are paid in full.


                                OTHER INFORMATION

COMPANY PERFORMANCE

     The following graph compares the cumulative total stockholder return on the
common  stock of the FTI  Consulting  from May 8, 1996  (the date the  shares of
common  stock were first  offered and sold to the public at the  initial  public
offering price of $8.50 per share) through December 31, 1998 with the cumulative
total  return of forty  percent  (40%) and the  cumulative  total  return of The
Nasdaq Stock Market  ("Nasdaq") (U.S.) Index and a peer group index comprised of
Charles  River   Associates,   Inc.,   Engineering   Animation   Inc.,   Esquire
Communications  Ltd.,  Exponent Inc., FYI Inc., Hagler Bailly Inc., Kroll O Gara
Co.,  Lai  Worldwide  Inc.,   Metzler  Group  Inc.  and  Profit  Recovery  Group
International  Inc.  (collectively,  the "Peer Group") Index.  FTI  Consulting's
common stock price and the price of the Nasdaq (U.S.) Index are published daily.
The Peer Group Index was compiled by FTI Consulting as of March 31, 1999.

     The graph  assumes an  investment  of $100 in each of FTI  Consulting,  the
Nasdaq (U.S.) Index and the Peer Group on May 8, 1996.  The  comparison  assumes
that all dividends,  if any, are  reinvested  into  additional  shares of common
stock during the holding period.


                                 

Research Data Group                                       Total Return Worksheet


                                                                 Begin:   5/8/96
                                                                  FYE:  12/31/97
FTI Consulting, Inc. (FCN)                                        End:  12/31/98



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            Beginning
        Transaction Closing   No. of     Dividend   Dividend    Shares    Ending  Cum. Tot.
Date*       Type    Price**   Shares***  per Share    Paid    Reinvested  Shares   Return

<S>       <C>        <C>       <C>                                        <C>      <C>
5/8/96     Begin      8.500    11.76                                      11.765   100.00

12/31/96  Year End    9.750    11.76                                      11.765   114.71

12/31/97  Year End   12.500    11.76                                      11.765   147.06

12/31/98    End       3.375    11.76                                      11.765    39.71

</TABLE>

*   Specified ending dates or ex-dividend dates.
**  All  Closing  Prices and  Dividends  are adjusted for stock splits and stock
    dividends.
***'Begin Shares' based on $100 investment.




                                                                             Fcn

                                    4/22/99



                                       19

<PAGE>



SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Based on our records and other  information,  we believe that our directors
and  officers who are  required to file  reports  under  Section 16 reported all
transactions  in  FTI  Consulting's   shares  of  common  stock  and  derivative
securities,  including  options for shares and warrants for shares,  on a timely
basis during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998, except that (1) Patrick A.
Brady filed the Form 4 to report the April 28, 1998  acquisition of 2,000 shares
of common stock on exercise of stock options on May 12, 1998 rather than May 11,
1998, and (2) Dennis J.  Shaughnessy  and George P. Stamas filed the Forms 5 for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998 on February 17, 1998 instead of February
16, 1998.


PROPOSALS FOR THE 1999 ANNUAL MEETING

     If  you  want  to  include  a  proposal  in the  proxy  statement  for  FTI
Consulting's  2000 Annual Meeting,  send the proposal to FTI  Consulting,  Inc.,
Attn: Theodore I. Pincus,  Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer,
at 2021 Research Drive, Annapolis, Maryland 21401. Proposals must be received on
or before January 28, 2000 to be included in next year's proxy statement. Please
note that proposals must comply with all of the requirements of Rule 14a-8 under
the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934,  as  well  as the  requirements  of FTI
Consulting's  Amended and Restated  Articles of Incorporation,  as amended,  and
By-Laws, as amended.  FTI Consulting will be able to use proxies given to it for
next year's meeting to vote for or against any such proposal at FTI Consulting's
discretion unless the proposal is submitted to FTI Consulting on or before March
13, 2000.



                                       20

<PAGE>



                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                              FTI CONSULTING, INC.
                       1997 STOCK OPTION PLAN, AS AMENDED

PURPOSE...................  FTI Consulting,  Inc., a Maryland corporation ("FTI"
                            or the "Company"),  wishes to recruit,  reward,  and
                            retain employees and outside  directors.  To further
                            these objectives,  the Company hereby sets forth the
                            FTI  Consulting,  Inc.  1997 Stock  Option Plan (the
                            "Plan"),  effective,  as  of  March  25,  1997  (the
                            "Effective Date"), to provide options ("Options") to
                            employees and outside  directors to purchase  shares
                            of the Company's common stock (the "Common Stock").

OPTIONEES.................  All  Employees of FTI and the Eligible  Subsidiaries
                            are eligible for option  grants under this Plan,  as
                            are  the   directors   of  FTI   and  the   Eligible
                            Subsidiaries   who  are  not  employees   ("Eligible
                            Directors"). Eligible employees and directors become
                            optionees  when  the  Administrator  grants  them an
                            option under this Plan. The  Administrator  may also
                            grant options to certain  other  service  providers.
                            The term optionee also includes,  where appropriate,
                            a person  authorized  to exercise an Option in place
                            of the original recipient.

                            Employee  means any person  employed as a common law
                            employee of the Company or an Eligible Subsidiary.

ADMINISTRATOR.............  The Administrator will be the Compensation Committee
                            of the Board of Directors of FTI (the  "Compensation
                            Committee").  The  Board may also act under the Plan
                            as though it were the Compensation Committee.

                            The  Administrator  is  responsible  for the general
                            operation  and  administration  of the  Plan and for
                            carrying out its provisions and has full  discretion
                            in interpreting and  administering the provisions of
                            the Plan.  Subject to the express  provisions of the
                            Plan, the Administrator may exercise such powers and
                            authority of the FTI Board as the  Administrator may
                            find  necessary  or  appropriate  to  carry  out its
                            functions.   The   Administrator  may  delegate  its
                            functions   (other  than  those   described  in  the
                            GRANTING   OF  OPTIONS   section)   to  officers  or
                            employees of FTI.

                            The Administrator's  powers will include, but not be
                            limited to, the power to amend,  waive or extend any
                            provision or  limitation  of any Option other than a
                            Formula Option.  The  Administrator  may act through
                            meetings   of  a  majority  of  its  members  or  by
                            unanimous consent.

GRANTING   OF   OPTIONS...  Subject to the terms of the Plan, the  Administrator
                            will,   in  its  sole   discretion,   determine  the
                            recipients  of  option  grants,  the  terms  of such
                            grants, the schedule for  exercisability  (including
                            any  requirements  that the  optionee or the Company
                            satisfy   performance   criteria),   the   time  and
                            conditions  for  expiration  of the Option,  and the
                            form of payment due upon exercise.

                            The  Administrator's  determinations  under the Plan
                            need not be uniform  and need not  consider  whether
                            possible optionees are similarly situated.


                                       A-1

<PAGE>



                            Options  granted to  employees  may be  nonqualified
                            stock options  ("NQSOs") or incentive  stock options
                            ("ISOs")  within the  meaning of Section  422 of the
                            Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time
                            to time (the "Code"), or the corresponding provision
                            of any  subsequently  enacted tax  statute.  Options
                            granted to Eligible Directors must be NQSOs.

                            The   Administrator   may  also  grant   Options  in
                            substitution  for options  held by  individuals  who
                            become  employees  of the  Company or of an Eligible
                            Subsidiary  as a result of the  Company's  acquiring
                            the individual's  employer.  If necessary to conform
                            the  Options  to the  options  for  which  they  are
                            substitutes,  the Administrator may grant substitute
                            Options  under terms and  conditions  that vary from
                            those the Plan otherwise requires.

DATE  OF  GRANT...........  The Date of Grant  will be the date as of which  the
                            Administrator  awards an Option to an  optionee,  as
                            specified  in  the  Administrator's  minutes,  or as
                            specified in this Plan.

EXERCISE   PRICE..........  The Exercise Price is the value of the consideration
                            that  an  optionee  must  provide  under  an  Option
                            Agreement in exchange for one share of Common Stock.
                            The Administrator  will determine the Exercise Price
                            under each  Option.  The  Administrator  may set the
                            Exercise  Price of an Option  without  regard to the
                            Exercise  Price of any other Options  granted at the
                            same or any other time.

                            The  Exercise  Price  per share for NQSOs may not be
                            less than 50% of the Fair Market Value of a share on
                            the Date of Grant. If an Option is intended to be an
                            ISO,  the  Exercise  Price per share may not be less
                            than 100% of the Fair  Market  Value (on the Date of
                            Grant) of a share of Stock  covered  by the  Option;
                            provided,   however,  that  if  the  employee  would
                            otherwise be barred from  receiving an ISO by reason
                            of the  provisions  of Code  Sections  422(b)(6) and
                            424(d) (relating to more than 10% stockholders), the
                            Exercise  Price of an Option  that is intended to be
                            an ISO may not be less than 110% of the Fair  Market
                            Value  (on the  Date of  Grant)  of a share of Stock
                            covered by the Option.

    Fair  Market  Value...  Fair  Market  Value of a share of  Common  Stock for
                            purposes  of the  the  Plan  will be  determined  as
                            follows:

                                 if the  Common  Stock is traded  on a  national
                                 securities exchange,  the closing sale price on
                                 that date;

                                 if the  Common  Stock is not traded on any such
                                 exchange, the closing sale price as reported by
                                 the National Association of Securities Dealers,
                                 Inc. Automated  Quotation System ("Nasdaq") for
                                 such date;

                                 if no such  closing sale price  information  is
                                 available,  the  average of the closing bid and
                                 asked  prices as  reported  by Nasdaq  for such
                                 date; or

                                 if  there  are no such  closing  bid and  asked
                                 prices,  the  average  of the  closing  bid and
                                 asked   prices   as   reported   by  any  other
                                 commercial service for such date.


                                       A-2

<PAGE>



                            For any date  that is not a  trading  day,  the Fair
                            Market  Value of a share of  Common  Stock  for such
                            date shall be  determined  by using the closing sale
                            price or the  average of the  closing  bid and asked
                            prices,   as   appropriate,   for  the   immediately
                            preceding trading day.

                            The  Company may use the  consideration  it receives
                            from the optionee for general corporate purposes.

EXERCISABILITY............  The  Administrator  will  determine  the  times  and
                            conditions  for  exercise of each Option but may not
                            extend  the  period  for  exercise  beyond the tenth
                            anniversary of its Date of Grant.

                            Options will become exercisable at such times and in
                            such manner as the Administrator  determines and the
                            Option Agreement indicates;  provided, however, that
                            the Administrator  may, on such terms and conditions
                            as it determines appropriate, accelerate the time at
                            which the  optionee  may  exercise any portion of an
                            Option.

                            No portion of an Option that is  unexercisable at an
                            optionee's termination of employment will thereafter
                            become  exercisable,  unless  the  Option  Agreement
                            provides   otherwise,   either   initially   or   by
                            amendment.

LIMITATION  ON  ISOS......  An Option granted to an employee will be an ISO only
                            to the extent that the  aggregate  Fair Market Value
                            (determined  at the Date of Grant) of the stock with
                            respect to which ISOs are  exercisable for the first
                            time by the optionee during any calendar year (under
                            the Plan and all other  plans of the Company and its
                            subsidiary corporations,  within the meaning of Code
                            Section  422(d)),  does not  exceed  $100,000.  This
                            limitation  will be applied by taking  Options  into
                            account  in the  order in which  such  Options  were
                            granted.

DIRECTOR  FORMULA  GRANTS.  Each  Eligible  Director  who is  first  elected  or
                            appointed to the Board the first  Annual  Meeting of
                            the Stockholders following the Effective Date (i.e.,
                            after  the 1998  Meeting)  will  receive  a  Formula
                            Option as of his election or appointment to purchase
                            16,000  shares  of  Common   Stock.   Each  Eligible
                            Director  serving  on the Board of  Directors  at an
                            Annual Meeting whose term will continue  beyond that
                            Meeting  will  receive a  Formula  Option as of that
                            Meeting to purchase 12,500 shares of Common Stock.

    Exercise  Price.......  The  Exercise  Price of each  Option  granted  to an
                            Eligible  Director  will be the Fair Market Value on
                            the Date of Grant.

    Exercise  Schedule....  A  Formula   Option   granted  upon  each   Eligible
                            Director's  first  election  or  appointment  to the
                            Board will become  exercisable  for one-third of the
                            shares it covers  on the  first  anniversary  of the
                            Date of Grant, two-thirds of the shares it covers on
                            the second  anniversary of the Date of Grant and for
                            the  remaining  one-third of the shares it covers on
                            the  third  anniversary  of the  Date  of  Grant.  A
                            Formula  Option  granted each Eligible  Director for
                            succeeding  Annual Meetings will become  exercisable
                            for  one-half  of the  shares it covers  six  months
                            after  the  Date of  Grant,  and  for the  remaining
                            one-half  of the  shares  it  covers  on  the  first
                            anniversary  of the Date of Grant.  A Formula Option
                            will become  exercisable  in its  entirety  upon the
                            director's  death,  disability  or attainment of age
                            70. Options will be forfeited to the extent they are
                            not then  exercisable if a director resigns or fails
                            to be reelected as a director.


                                       A-3

<PAGE>



METHOD  OF EXERCISE.......  To exercise  any  exercisable  portion of an Option,
                            the optionee must:

                                  Deliver a written  notice of  exercise  to the
                                  Secretary  of the Company (or to whomever  the
                                  Administrator  designates) in a form complying
                                  with any rules the  Administrator  may  issue,
                                  signed  by the  optionee  and  specifying  the
                                  number of shares  of Common  Stock  underlying
                                  the  portion  of the Option  the  optionee  is
                                  exercising;

                                  Pay the full  Exercise  Price by  cashier's or
                                  certified check for the shares of Common Stock
                                  with  respect  to which  the  Option  is being
                                  exercised,  unless the Administrator  consents
                                  to  another  form  of  payment   (which  could
                                  include the use of Common Stock); and

                                  Deliver    to    the    Administrator     such
                                  representations    and    documents   as   the
                                  Administrator,  in its  sole  discretion,  may
                                  consider necessary or advisable.

                                  Payment in full of the Exercise Price need not
                                  accompany  the  written   notice  of  exercise
                                  provided  the  notice  directs  that the stock
                                  certificates  for the shares  issued  upon the
                                  exercise  be  delivered  to a licensed  broker
                                  acceptable to the Company as the agent for the
                                  individual  exercising  the  option and at the
                                  time the stock  certificates  are delivered to
                                  the  broker,  the  broker  will  tender to the
                                  Company cash or cash equivalents acceptable to
                                  the Company and equal to the Exercise Price.

                                  If the Administrator agrees to payment through
                                  the tender to the  Company of shares of Common
                                  Stock, the individual must have held the stock
                                  being  tendered for at least six months at the
                                  time of surrender.  Shares of stock offered as
                                  payment  will  be  valued,   for  purposes  of
                                  determining  the extent to which the  optionee
                                  has paid the  Exercise  Price,  at their  Fair
                                  Market  Value  on the  date of  exercise.  The
                                  Administrator  may  also,  in its  discretion,
                                  accept  attestation  of  ownership  of  Common
                                  Stock  and issue a net  number of shares  upon
                                  Option exercise.

OPTION  EXPIRATION........  No one may  exercise  an Option  more than ten years
                            after its Date of Grant (or five  years,  for an ISO
                            granted to a more-than-10% stockholder).  Unless the
                            Option   Agreement   provides   otherwise,    either
                            initially  or by  amendment,  no one may exercise an
                            Option after the first to occur of:

   Employment Termination.  The date of  termination  of employment  (other than
                            for  death  or  Disability),  where  termination  of
                            employment means the time when the employer-employee
                            or other service-providing  relationship between the
                            employee  and  the  Company  ends  for  any  reason,
                            including  retirement.  Unless the Option  Agreement
                            provides  otherwise,  termination of employment does
                            not   include   instances   in  which  the   Company
                            immediately  rehires  a common  law  employee  as an
                            independent  contractor.  The Administrator,  in its
                            sole  discretion,  will  determine  all questions of
                            whether particular terminations or leaves of absence
                            are terminations of employment;


                                       A-4

<PAGE>



    Disability............  For  disability,   the  earlier  of  (i)  the  first
                            anniversary   of  the   optionee's   termination  of
                            employment  for disability and (ii) thirty (30) days
                            after the optionee no longer has a disability, where
                            disability  means  the  inability  to  engage in any
                            substantial   gainful  activity  by  reason  of  any
                            medically determinable physical or mental impairment
                            that can be  expected to result in death or that has
                            lasted or can be expected  to last for a  continuous
                            period of not less than twelve months; or

    Death.................  The date twelve months after the  optionee's  death.
                            If  exercise  is  permitted  after   termination  of
                            employment,  the Option will nevertheless  expire as
                            of the date that the former  employee  violates  any
                            covenant  not  to  compete  in  effect  between  the
                            Company and the former employee.

                            Nothing in this Plan  extends  the term of an Option
                            beyond the tenth  anniversary  of its Date of Grant,
                            nor does anything in this OPTION EXPIRATION  section
                            make an Option  exercisable  that has not  otherwise
                            become exercisable.

OPTION  AGREEMENT.........  Option  Agreements  will set forth the terms of each
                            Option and will include  such terms and  conditions,
                            consistent with the Plan, as the  Administrator  may
                            determine are necessary or advisable.  To the extent
                            the  agreement is  inconsistent  with the Plan,  the
                            Plan will govern.  The Option Agreements may contain
                            special rules.

STOCK  SUBJECT  TO  PLAN..  Except as adjusted below under SUBSTANTIAL CORPORATE
                            CHANGES,  the  aggregate  number of shares of Common
                            Stock that may be issued under the Options  (whether
                            ISOs or NQSOs) may not exceed  3,000,000  shares and
                            no individual may receive Options under the Plan for
                            more than  500,000  shares in a calendar  year.  The
                            Common  Stock will come from either  authorized  but
                            unissued  shares or from  previously  issued  shares
                            that the  Company  reacquires,  including  shares it
                            purchases on the open market. If any Option expires,
                            is canceled or terminates for any other reason,  the
                            shares of Common Stock  available  under that Option
                            will  again be  available  for the  granting  of new
                            Options (but will be counted  against that  calendar
                            year's limit for a given individual).

                            No  adjustment  will be made for a dividend or other
                            right for which the record date precedes the date of
                            exercise.

                            The  optionee  will have no rights of a  stockholder
                            with  respect to the  shares of stock  subject to an
                            Option  except to the extent  that the  Company  has
                            issued   certificates   for  such  shares  upon  the
                            exercise of the Option.

                            The  Company  will  not  issue   fractional   shares
                            pursuant  to the  exercise  of an  Option,  but  the
                            Administrator  may,  in its  discretion,  direct the
                            Company to make a cash payment in lieu of fractional
                            shares.

PERSON  WHO MAY EXERCISE..  During the optionee's lifetime, only the optionee or
                            his   duly    appointed    guardian    or   personal
                            representative  may exercise the Options.  After his
                            death,  his  personal  representative  or any  other
                            person  authorized under a will or under the laws of
                            descent  and  distribution  may  exercise  any  then
                            exercisable  portion of an Option.  If someone other
                            than the  original  recipient  seeks to exercise any
                            portion of an Option,  the Administrator may request
                            such  proof  as  it  may   consider   necessary   or
                            appropriate  of the  person's  right to exercise the
                            Option.


                                       A-5

<PAGE>



ADJUSTMENTS UPON CHANGES IN
 CAPITAL  STOCK...........  Subject to any required action by the Company (which
                            it shall  promptly  take) or its  stockholders,  and
                            subject to the  provisions of  applicable  corporate
                            law, if, after the Date of Grant of an Option,

                                  the   outstanding   shares  of  Common   Stock
                                  increase  or  decrease  or change  into or are
                                  exchanged  for a  different  number or kind of
                                  security  by reason  of any  recapitalization,
                                  reclassification,  stock split,  reverse stock
                                  split,  combination  of  shares,  exchange  of
                                  shares, stock dividend,  or other distribution
                                  payable in capital stock, or

                                  some other increase or decrease in such Common
                                  Stock occurs  without the Company's  receiving
                                  consideration,

                            the  Administrator  will  make a  proportionate  and
                            appropriate  adjustment  in the  number of shares of
                            Common Stock  underlying  each  Option,  so that the
                            proportionate  interest of the optionee  immediately
                            following   such   event   will,   to   the   extent
                            practicable,  be the same as immediately before such
                            event.  Any such  adjustment  to an Option  will not
                            change  the total  price  with  respect to shares of
                            Common Stock  underlying the unexercised  portion of
                            the   Option  but  will   include  a   corresponding
                            proportionate  adjustment  in the Option's  Exercise
                            Price.

                            The Administrator will make a commensurate change to
                            the  maximum  number and kind of shares  provided in
                            the STOCK SUBJECT TO PLAN section.

                            Any issue by the  Company of any class of  preferred
                            stock,  or  securities  convertible  into  shares of
                            common or  preferred  stock of any  class,  will not
                            affect,  and no adjustment by reason thereof will be
                            made with respect to, the number of shares of Common
                            Stock  subject to any Option or the  Exercise  Price
                            except  as  this  Adjustments  section  specifically
                            provides. The grant of an Option under the Plan will
                            not  affect  in any way the  right  or  power of the
                            Company  to  make  adjustments,   reclassifications,
                            reorganizations   or  changes  of  its   capital  or
                            business structure, or to merge or to consolidate or
                            to dissolve, liquidate, sell, or transfer all or any
                            part of its business or assets.

    Substantial
       Corporate  Change..  Upon a Substantial  Corporate  Change,  the Plan and
                            the Options will terminate  unless provision is made
                            in writing in connection with such transaction for

                                  the assumption or  continuation of outstanding
                                  Options, or

                                  the substitution for such options or grants of
                                  any  options or grants  covering  the stock or
                                  securities    of    a    successor    employer
                                  corporation, or a parent or subsidiary of such
                                  successor,  with appropriate adjustments as to
                                  the  number  and kind of  shares  of stock and
                                  prices,   in  which  event  the  Options  will
                                  continue  in the manner and under the terms so
                                  provided.


                                       A-6

<PAGE>



                            Unless the Board determines otherwise,  if an Option
                            would otherwise  terminate pursuant to the preceding
                            sentence,  the optionee will have the right, at such
                            time  before  the  consummation  of the  transaction
                            causing  such  termination  as the Board  reasonably
                            designates,  to exercise any unexercised portions of
                            the  Option,  whether  or not  they  had  previously
                            become exercisable.  However,  the acceleration will
                            not occur if it would render unavailable "pooling of
                            interest" accounting for any reorganization, merger,
                            or consolidation of the Company.

                            A Substantial Corporate Change means the

                                  dissolution or liquidation of the Company,

                                  merger,  consolidation,  or  reorganization of
                                  the Company with one or more  corporations  in
                                  which  the   Company  is  not  the   surviving
                                  corporation,

                                  the sale of substantially all of the assets of
                                  the Company to another corporation, or

                                  any   transaction   (including   a  merger  or
                                  reorganization  in which the Company survives)
                                  approved  by the  Board  that  results  in any
                                  person or entity  (other than any affiliate of
                                  the Company as defined in Rule 144(a)(1) under
                                  the   Securities   Act)  owning  100%  of  the
                                  combined  voting power of all classes of stock
                                  of the Company.

SUBSIDIARY   EMPLOYEES....  Employees of Company  Subsidiaries  will be entitled
                            to  participate  in the Plan,  except  as  otherwise
                            designated   by  the  Board  of   Directors  or  the
                            Committee.

                            Eligible  Subsidiary  means  each  of the  Company's
                            Subsidiaries,   except   as  the   Board   otherwise
                            specifies.  For ISO  grants,  Subsidiary  means  any
                            corporation  (other than the Company) in an unbroken
                            chain of corporations beginning with the Company if,
                            at the time an ISO is granted to a Participant under
                            the Plan, each of the  corporations  (other than the
                            last  corporation in the unbroken  chain) owns stock
                            possessing 50% or more of the total combined  voting
                            power of all  classes  of stock in one of the  other
                            corporations in such chain.  For NQSOs, the Board or
                            the  Committee  can use a  different  definition  of
                            Subsidiary in its discretion.

LEGAL  COMPLIANCE.........  The  Company  will not  issue  any  shares of Common
                            Stock   under  an  Option   until   all   applicable
                            requirements imposed by Federal and state securities
                            and other laws,  rules and  regulations,  and by any
                            applicable  regulatory  agencies or stock exchanges,
                            have been fully met.  To that end,  the  Company may
                            require the optionee to take any  reasonable  action
                            to comply with such requirements before issuing such
                            shares.  No  provision  in the Plan or action  taken
                            under it  authorizes  any action  that is  otherwise
                            prohibited by Federal or state laws.


                                      A-7

<PAGE>



                            The  Plan  is  intended  to  conform  to the  extent
                            necessary  with all provisions of the Securities Act
                            of  1933  ("Securities   Act")  and  the  Securities
                            Exchange Act of 1934 and all  regulations  and rules
                            the Securities and Exchange  Commission issues under
                            those laws.  Notwithstanding anything in the Plan to
                            the contrary,  the Administrator must administer the
                            Plan and Options may be granted and  exercised  only
                            in a way that  conforms  to such  laws,  rules,  and
                            regulations.  To the extent  permitted by applicable
                            law, the Plan and any Options will be deemed amended
                            to the  extent  necessary  to  conform to such laws,
                            rules and regulations.

PURCHASE FOR INVESTMENT AND
 OTHER   RESTRICTIONS.....  Unless a registration statement under the Securities
                            Act covers the  shares of Common  Stock an  optionee
                            receives   upon   exercise   of  his   Option,   the
                            Administrator  may  require,  at the  time  of  such
                            exercise,  that the  optionee  agree in  writing  to
                            acquire  such  shares  for  investment  and  not for
                            public resale or distribution,  unless and until the
                            shares  subject to the Option are  registered  under
                            the Securities Act. Unless the shares are registered
                            under  the   Securities   Act,  the  optionee   must
                            acknowledge:

                                  that the shares  purchased  on exercise of the
                                  Option are not so registered,

                                  that the  optionee  may not sell or  otherwise
                                  transfer the shares unless

                                       the shares have been registered under the
                                       Securities  Act in  connection  with  the
                                       sale  or  transfer  thereof,  or  counsel
                                       satisfactory to the Company has issued an
                                       opinion  satisfactory to the Company that
                                       the sale or other transfer of such shares
                                       is  exempt  from  registration  under the
                                       Securities Act, and

                                       such sale or transfer  complies  with all
                                       other    applicable   laws,   rules   and
                                       regulations,   including  all  applicable
                                       Federal and state  securities laws, rules
                                       and regulations.

                            Additionally, the Common Stock, when issued upon the
                            exercise of an Option,  will be subject to any other
                            transfer  restrictions,  rights of first refusal and
                            rights of repurchase set forth in or incorporated by
                            reference into other applicable documents, including
                            the   Company's    articles   or    certificate   of
                            incorporation,   by-laws  or  generally   applicable
                            stockholders' agreements.

                            The Administrator may, in its sole discretion,  take
                            whatever  additional actions it deems appropriate to
                            comply with such  restrictions  and applicable laws,
                            including   placing  legends  on  certificates   and
                            issuing  stop-transfer orders to transfer agents and
                            registrars.


                                       A-8

<PAGE>

TAX  WITHHOLDING..........  The optionee  must satisfy all  applicable  Federal,
                            state   and  local   income   and   employment   tax
                            withholding  requirements  before the  Company  will
                            deliver stock  certificates  upon the exercise of an
                            Option.  The  Company  may  decide  to  satisfy  the
                            withholding     obligations    through    additional
                            withholding on salary or wages.  If the Company does
                            not or cannot withhold from other compensation,  the
                            optionee  must  pay the  Company,  with a  cashier's
                            check or certified  check, the full amounts required
                            by withholding.  Payment of withholding  obligations
                            is  due  at  the  same  time  as is  payment  of the
                            Exercise Price. If the Committee so determines,  the
                            optionee   may  instead   satisfy  the   withholding
                            obligations  by  directing  the  Company  to  retain
                            shares  from  the  Option  exercise,   by  tendering
                            previously  owned  shares  or by  attesting  to  his
                            ownership  of shares (with the  distribution  of net
                            shares).

TRANSFERS, ASSIGNMENTS, AND
 PLEDGES..................  Unless  the  Administrator   otherwise  approves  in
                            advance in writing,  an Option may not be  assigned,
                            pledged or otherwise transferred in any way, whether
                            by  operation  of law or  otherwise,  or through any
                            legal   or    equitable    proceedings    (including
                            bankruptcy),  by the optionee to any person,  except
                            by  will  or by  operation  of  applicable  laws  of
                            descent and distribution. If Rule 16b-3 then applies
                            to an  Option,  the  optionee  may not  transfer  or
                            pledge shares of Common Stock acquired upon exercise
                            of an  Option  until at least  six (6)  months  have
                            elapsed  from  (but  excluding)  the Date of  Grant,
                            unless  the  Administrator   approves  otherwise  in
                            advance in writing.

AMENDMENT OR TERMINATION OF
 PLAN  AND  OPTIONS.......  The Board may amend,  suspend or terminate  the Plan
                            at any time, without the consent of the optionees or
                            their  beneficiaries;  provided,  however,  that  no
                            amendment  will deprive any optionee or  beneficiary
                            of  any  previously   declared  Option.   Except  as
                            required by law or by the CORPORATE CHANGES section,
                            the Administrator may not, without the optionee's or
                            beneficiary's   consent,   modify   the   terms  and
                            conditions  of an Option so as to  adversely  affect
                            the   optionee.   No   amendment,    suspension   or
                            termination of the Plan will, without the optionee's
                            or  beneficiary's  consent,  terminate  or adversely
                            affect   any   right  or   obligations   under   any
                            outstanding Options.

PRIVILEGES OF
 STOCK  OWNERSHIP.........  No  optionee  and no  beneficiary  or  other  person
                            claiming  under or through such  optionee  will have
                            any right,  title or interest in or to any shares of
                            Common Stock allocated or reserved under the Plan or
                            subject  to any Option  except as to such  shares of
                            Common Stock,  if any, that have been issued to such
                            optionee.

EFFECT ON 1992
 OPTION PLAN..............  No  additional  options  will be  granted  under the
                            Forensic Technologies International Corporation 1992
                            Stock Option Plan.

EFFECT  ON  OTHER PLANS...  Whether  exercising an Option causes the optionee to
                            accrue  or  receive  additional  benefits  under any
                            pension  or other  plan is  governed  solely  by the
                            terms of such other plan.


                                       A-9

<PAGE>



LIMITATIONS  ON LIABILITY.. Notwithstanding any other provisions of the Plan, no
                            individual  acting as a director,  employee or agent
                            of the  Company  shall be  liable  to any  optionee,
                            former  optionee,  spouse,  beneficiary or any other
                            person for any  claim,  loss,  liability  or expense
                            incurred in connection with the Plan, nor shall such
                            individual  be  personally  liable  because  of  any
                            contract  or other  instrument  he  executes in such
                            other capacity.  The Company will indemnify and hold
                            harmless  each  director,  employee  or agent of the
                            Company  to whom any duty or power  relating  to the
                            administration  or  interpretation  of the  Plan has
                            been or  will  be  delegated,  against  any  cost or
                            expense  (including  attorneys'  fees) or  liability
                            (including  any sum  paid in  settlement  of a claim
                            with the FTI  Board's  approval)  arising out of any
                            act or omission to act  concerning  this Plan unless
                            arising out of such person's own fraud or bad faith.

NO  EMPLOYMENT  CONTRACT..  Nothing   contained  in  this  Plan  constitutes  an
                            employment  contract  between  the  Company  and the
                            optionee.  The Plan does not give the  optionee  any
                            right to be  retained  in the  Company's  employ nor
                            does it enlarge or diminish the  Company's  right to
                            terminate the optionee's employment.

APPLICABLE  LAW...........  The laws of the State of  Maryland  (other  than its
                            choice of law  provisions)  govern this Plan and its
                            interpretation.

DURATION  OF PLAN.........  Unless the FTI Board  extends the Plan's  term,  the
                            Administrator  may not grant Options after March 25,
                            2007. The Plan will then terminate but will continue
                            to govern unexercised and unexpired Options.

APPROVAL OF STOCKHOLDERS..  The Plan must be  submitted to the  stockholders  of
                            the  Company  for  their  approval  within 12 months
                            after the Board of Directors  of the Company  adopts
                            the Plan.  The  adoption of the Plan is  conditioned
                            upon the approval of the stockholders of the Company
                            and failure to receive  their  approval  will render
                            the Plan and any outstanding options thereunder void
                            and of no effect.


                                      A-10

<PAGE>


                  PROXY FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                              FTI CONSULTING, INC.

                    THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE
           BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND MAY BE REVOKED PRIOR TO ITS EXERCISE

     The  undersigned  stockholder(s)  of FTI  Consulting,  Inc. (the "Company")
hereby appoints Messrs.  James A. Flick, Jr. and Theodore I. Pincus, and each of
them singly,  as proxies,  each with full power of substitution,  for and in the
name of the undersigned at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of FTI Consulting,
Inc. to be held on May 19, 1999, and at any and all  adjournments,  thereof,  to
vote  all  shares  of  common  stock  of  said  Company  held of  record  by the
undersigned on April 22, 1999, as if the undersigned were present and voting the
shares.

     THIS  PROXY WHEN  PROPERLY  EXECUTED  WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER  DIRECTED
HEREIN BY THE  UNDERSIGNED  STOCKHOLDER.  IF NO DIRECTION IS GIVEN,  THIS PROXY
WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2 AND 3.

                        (TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE)

<PAGE>



                        Please date, sign and mail your
                      proxy card back as soon as possible!

                         Annual Meeting of Stockholders
                              FTI CONSULTING, INC.

                                  May 19, 1999




                Please Detach and Mail in the Envelope Provided
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


A /X/ Please mark your votes as in this example.


1.   ELECTION OF CLASS III DIRECTORS.

FCR all nominees (except as marked to the contrary) / /

WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for the nominees listed at right / /  Nominees:
                                                                 Jack B. Dunn IV
                                                                 Stewart J. Kahn
                                                                 Scott S. Binder

(INSTRUCTIONS:  To  withhold  authority  to vote  for  any  nominee,  write  the
nominee's name on the space provided below.)


- --------------------------------


2.   Approval of the amendment to the 1987 Stock Option Plan, as amended.

     FOR / /             AGAINST / /           ABSTAIN / /


3.   Ratification  of the  appointment of the accounting  firm of Ernst & Young,
     LLP to serve as independent  accountants for FTI  Consulting,  Inc. for the
     fiscal year ending December 31, 1999.

     FOR / /             AGAINST / /           ABSTAIN / /


4.   The  proxies are  authorized  to vote in their  discretion  upon such other
     business as may properly come before the meeting to the extent permitted by
     law.


THE SHARES  REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER  DIRECTED.  IN
THE ABSENCE OF ANY DIRECTION, THE SHARES WILL BE VOTED FOR EACH NOMINEE NAMED IN
PROPOSAL  1, FOR  PROPOSAL  2 AND FOR  PROPOSAL  3, AND IN  ACCORDANCE  WITH THE
PROXIES'  DISCRETION  ON SUCH OTHER  BUSINESS  THAT MAY PROPERLY COME BEFORE THE
MEETING TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW.


                                                I PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING / /

SIGNATURE:                        SIGNATURE IF HELD JOINTLY:              
          ---------------------                            ---------------------

DATE:             , 1999
     ------------

Note:  Please date this Proxy and sign  exactly as your name(s) appears  herein.
       When signing as attorney, administrator, trustee or guardian, please give
       your full name as such.

       If there is  more  than  one  trustee,  all should sign. All joint owners
       should sign.








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