Let’s see if I’ve got this straight.
As a member of the Hollinger International board of directors and audit committee, Marie-JosÈ Kravis, wife of Henry R. Kravis of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts fame, approves $60 million in non-compete payments that go to former Hollinger CEO Conrad Black and several of his associates. Given the context in which they were paid, the non-compete payments to Black were not particularly unusual or wrong.
The federal government then decides to prosecute Black and his associates on the theory that they misappropriated the $60 million from Hollinger. Probably in fear that she might also be indicted, Mrs. Kravis tells the feds that she didn’t realize what she was doing in approving the non-compete fees in favor of Black, et. al. The two other members of the audit committee said the same thing.
Subsequently, Mrs. Kravis and other Hollinger directors receive Wells Notices from the SEC for being negligent in approving the non-compete payments for Black. The typical SEC sanction in such manners is a ban from serving as an officer or director of a publicly-owned company, usually for life and at least for five years.
As a result, Mrs. Kravis agrees to testify for the government against Black and admits that she didn’t realize what she was doing in approving the $60 million in non-compete fees in favor of Black and the others.
The SEC then withdraws its Wells Notice to Mrs. Kravis.
So, the SEC threatens to ban Mrs. Kravis from being an officer or director of a publicly-owned corporation because she is an incompetent director, and then withdraws the threat when Mrs. Kravis confirms that she is an incompetent director.
And Conrad Black’s freedom and storied career hangs in the balance.
A truly civil society would not tolerate such a travesty.
Daily Archives: May 3, 2007
Rearranging the deck chairs at TSU
So, the regents who Texas Governor Rick Perry appointed to oversee Texas Southern University have now all resigned as a result of the latest edition of the chronic scandals at the institution. Governor Perry now plans on appointing five new regents, although it remains unclear where he is going to find five saints to step into the current TSU mess. Plus, there is no reason to think that Governor Perry’s new regents will be any better equipped to deal with TSU’s problems than Governor Perry’s former regents.
Governor Perry’s response is the typical band-aid approach to dealing with TSU’s problems that have been the norm for decades. As noted earlier here, TSU’s problems are systemic and cannot be resolved without rethinking and redefining the university’s purpose. Based on Governor Perry’s approach, you can count on that we will be discussing the next scandal at TSU in a few years.
As a matter of fact, it didn’t even take that long.
Update: The former TSU chief financial officer who was involved in the most recent TSU scandal was convicted today of misapplication of fiduciary property over $200,000. The jury is now hearing the sentencing phase of the trial.
Changing history
The NY Times’ medical reporter, Lawrence Altman, M.D., tells the story of how Houston’s famed heart surgeon Michael E. DeBakey changed the course of history by persuading the late Boris Yeltsin that he could survive heart bypass surgery after the Russian president had suffered a heart attack in the fall of 1996. The surgery saved Yeltsin’s life and allowed him to live for another decade.
Of course, there are some who would argue that Dr. DeBakey efforts did not change history for the better.