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The Motley Fool March 3, 2004 Bill Mann |
WorldCom's Ebbers Surrenders WorldCom's CFO finally gives up the goods on the top man in an $11 billion fraud case. |
U.S. Banker August 2002 Holly Sraeel |
Truth is lost amidst chaos, corporate confessionals Not until boards are out of CEOs' hip pockets will investors and companies thrive. Boards should be completely independent, and no board member should have any ties whatsoever to the CEO, his executive team or the company. |
BusinessWeek December 18, 2006 |
Corporate Justice Recent decisions in cases involving Enron, Computer Associates and WorldCom. |
The Motley Fool February 19, 2004 Bill Mann |
Another Brick in the Enron Wall Prosecutors get their biggest prize to date: Enron executive Jeff Skilling. |
Chemistry World March 1, 2012 Rebecca Trager |
Leak suggests Dow hired firm to follow Bhopal activists Dow Chemical hired US intelligence companies to monitor the activities of protestors belonging to groups demanding justice for victims of the Bhopal disaster in India, according to emails published by whistleblower website WikiLeaks. |
The Motley Fool July 8, 2004 Bill Mann |
Lay Surrenders, Pleads Not Guilty It took more than two years for to make a case against the executive who lorded over Enron's collapse that federal prosecutors think will stick. |
The Motley Fool July 5, 2006 Bill Mann |
The Death of a Salesman How do you eulogize one of the most hated men in America? Ken Lay managed to destroy the wealth of tens of thousands of people and trigger much-needed reforms in how America regulates its public companies. |
Salon.com July 24, 2002 |
How to fix a broken economy Judging by his performance to date, President Bush can use all the help he can get. Here are some expert suggestions. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 14, 2012 Martha Lagace |
New Agenda for Corporate Accountability Reporting Harvard Business School professor Karthik Ramanna explains three ways to make corporate accountability reports potentially more useful to constituencies that include shareholders, communities, bondholders, and customers. |
BusinessWeek June 12, 2006 Maria Bartiromo |
The Ones Who Got Away If the Enron saga has a truth teller, it's Sherron Watkins, the whistleblowing executive who at least tried to do the right thing. Watkins hasn't been shy about speaking to the media or going on the lecture circuit. But her candor here may surprise you. |
Reason January 2004 |
Letters Liberty Belle... Bipartisan Coulterism... Denial of Service... etc. |
Bank Systems & Technology April 1, 2005 Katherine Burger |
School for Scandal In banking, it's the CIOs and other technology executives who must figure out how to stretch limited IT resources to provide the documentation, transparency and accountability the new regulations demand. |
National Defense May 2011 Nathaniel H. Sledge Jr. |
Viewpoint: Defense Acquisition in an Unaccountable World Current and former government officials testified in March before the subcommittee for financial management of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, which is looking into cost overruns on weapons development programs. |
The Motley Fool December 6, 2004 Rich Smith |
How Now, Dow? Gullible BBC fumbles story on Dow Chemical. The con's originator may be looking at both civil and criminal liability for stock manipulation as well as wire fraud charges, as his tactic bears many of the hallmarks of "phishing." |
Chemistry World August 5, 2009 Killugudi Jayaraman |
Bhopal returns to haunt former Union Carbide chief Fresh calls for the extradition of former Union Carbide chief executive Warren Anderson to India from the US have brought the Bhopal industrial disaster of 1984 back to the front page. |
Reason October 2003 Michael McMenamin |
St. Martha Why Martha Stewart should go to heaven and the SEC should go to hell. |