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Hubris Reaches New Highs

June 9th, 2008 @ 1:23 pm

4 Comments

Categories: Regulation, Shareholder Activism, Wisdom

Tags: General Electric Co., Real Estate, Stock Options, Business Operations, Human Resources, Benefits, Stock Options & Grants, Peter Galuszka

It had seemed that hubristic executives were, like, so 1990s. Maybe not.

Consider high-flying executive Henry T. Nicholas III, former Broadcom Corp. CEO, who was already in trouble for allegedly backdating stock options. Now a federal court in Santa Ana, Calf., has unsealed indictments against Nicholas accusing him of myriad drug charges. Among them are that he spiked the drinks of others with MDMA (ecstasy) without their knowledge and hired prostitutes and escorts for himself and customers and associates of the Irvine, Calf. specialty chip maker.

That’s pretty juicy stuff. But is it really big league? You be the judge, considering:

  1. Dennis Kozlowski, sentenced to at least eight years in prison for misappropriating Tyco International funds, blew a cool million for the 40th birthday party of his wife on Sardinia. The meeting, disguised as a shareholder confab to get the firm to pay for it, featured an ice sculpture Statue of David making water that turnout to be Stolichnaya vodka.
  2. Bernard John Bernie Ebbers, in prison for his WorldCom shenanigans, used company loans to expand his personal real estate empire that include a 500,000 acre ranch, the biggest, in Canada, minor league hockey team and trucking, timber, and livestock operations throughout the South.
  3. John Jack Welch, formerly of General Electric. Though never indicted or convicted of any crime, “Neutron” Jack got GE to provide an $80,000 a month apartment overlooking New York’s Central Park, thousands of dollars with of wine each month and tickets and reservations at various sporting events and five star restaurants.
  4. One more accusation against Nicholas. According to court documents, Nicholas distributed controlled substances on a private plane flying from Orange County, Calf. to Las Vegas. The marijuana smoke was so thick, according to the indictment, that the pilot had to slip on an oxygen mask.

So what’s your view? Who is the most hubristic?

Have a tidbit of executive wisdom you would care to share with fellow BNET readers?

 
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  •  
    1

    harkul

    06/10/08 | Report as spam

    I just won't fake it anymore

    These stories that I hear, and once they reach courts, I guess you have to pretty much believe them, just makes me angry. At the same time, from my personal experience, I can only say this, if the CEO or anybody else in charge, is totally out of line, I will not subscribe to it. And in fact, if more people would do this, there'd be less of these characters, bullies really, hanging around, and be in a position to be so disrespectful of other people. You just have to draw a line somewhere, and these ego maniacs, who seem to think they can bend the rules of conduct any which way they please, yell and scream, and get rich doing so, must be confronted.

  •  
    2

    hewalk

    06/11/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Hubris Reaches New Highs

    Mama said, girl be careful where you point---you'll always have three fingers pointing at yourself, and you don't want folks thinking of you as a self-centered smart-ass. Maybe the report tells us as much about the reporter as the subjects of the story. Mama was, like, so respectful, you know 1930's.

  •  
    3

    A.Lizard

    06/12/08 | Report as spam

    to "hewalk"

    And what's your reason to support CEOs who are burning their shareholders and the taxpayers by charging this kind of stupid as legit business expenses? You will never be a CEO in a position to do this. You sound like just another right-wing cheerleader for capitalism who can't be trusted to run a hot dog stand right.

  •  
    4

    Gr8energy

    06/12/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Hubris Reaches New Highs

    John Rogers of now defunct Pay By Touch managed to blow millions of venture capital and worst of all left hundreds of employees in limbo

    http://valleywag.com/365392/john-rogerss-pay-by-touch-finally-falls-apart

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