Similar Articles |
|
BusinessWeek July 4, 2005 Mike France |
Courtroom Strategies On Trial Recent high-profile verdicts have prosecutors and defense attorneys rewriting their playbooks. |
U.S. Banker September 2003 Michael Dumiak |
Personality Crisis Yards from Wall Street, stars are set to come out: When superbanker Frank Quattrone goes on trial in a few weeks, sticky late-summer Manhattan's federal court will need just a spark to ignite all that high octane mixed with air-conditioning. |
The Motley Fool September 9, 2004 Bill Mann |
Frank Quattrone Is a Bad Man But should the former Credit Suisse First Boston invetment banker go to jail to pay for the sins of hundreds? |
CFO February 1, 2006 Kate O'Sullivan |
The Best Defense In today's high-stakes legal environment, top white-collar attorneys are ready to defend the CFO. |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
On Trial This year, the wheels of justice may catch up to some corporate movers and shakers. |
The Motley Fool September 19, 2005 Seth Jayson |
Short the Ice Sculptors With Tyco's ex-CEO Dennis Kozlowski behind bars, the world may see less excess. But we all need to remember that plenty of ordinary shareholders paid the price -- quite literally -- for his greed. |
The Motley Fool November 15, 2006 Anders Bylund |
Tyco Takes the Stage Global services and manufacturing conglomerate just reported a strong quarter and fiscal year, and it appears to be moving confidently beyond its past troubles. Investors, take note. |
The Motley Fool January 2, 2004 Tom Taulli |
Motorola's Loss, Tyco's Gain Wall Street stood ready to inflict the ultimate punishment on Tyco. No more. |
The Motley Fool June 20, 2005 Seth Jayson |
Two Tyco Takedowns Kozlowski and Swartz are convicted for looting millions at investors' expense. Their convictions aren't enough to restore investors' losses, either in cash diverted to Kozlowski's shower-curtain budget or subsequent losses in stock value. |
BusinessWeek October 27, 2003 Robert Barker |
Too Late To Jump Back Into Tyco? At $22 a share, Tyco has nearly doubled from its low in March. Given Tyco's new financial basis and outlook, the question for investors is whether the stock remains a growth opportunity. |
BusinessWeek October 13, 2003 Linda Himelstein |
Inside Frank Quattrone's Money Machine The rise and fall of the high-tech investment banker who was an architect of Silicon Valley's financial culture |
BusinessWeek April 19, 2004 Mike France |
The Press Should Try Taking A Little Of Its Own Medicine The media's zeal for higher standards doesn't always extend to the Fourth Estate |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2006 John Churchill |
Frank Quattrone Back in the Biz Former Credit Suisse investment banker Frank Quattrone is free to move about the securities industry. After a mistrial, a conviction and an appeal that overturned it, Quattrone has won again. |
Fast Company September 2004 Scott Kirsner |
One Tough Assignment When CEO Ed Breen took over at Tyco, he fired the very board that had hired him. And that was just the start. |
BusinessWeek February 6, 2006 Jane Sasseen |
White-Collar Crime: Who Does Time? Corporate criminals are punished more harshly today than in the '80s, but hands-off executives may still face better odds. |
The Motley Fool April 2, 2004 Rich Smith |
Tyco's Kozlowski Walks The judge in the Kozlowski-Swartz case has declared a mistrial. |
The Motley Fool March 30, 2004 Seth Jayson |
The Real Crime at Tyco A culture of corporate excess may decriminalize boardroom thievery. |
Financial Planning September 1, 2005 Suzanne McGee |
Scandal! Corporate governance experts agree that the past two decades have been a particularly fertile period for scandals, generating an abundance of candidates for inclusion in a new series of "Wall Street Most Wanted" playing cards. What motivates the cheaters -- greed, fear or ego? |
BusinessWeek February 11, 2010 Diane Brady |
Ed Breen Sets a New Course for Tyco With a $2 billion acquisition, it's looking to do some deals again. Will that be enough to make a "wartime general" stick around? |
Knowledge@Wharton |
What Happens to the Inner Circle of the Ousted CEO? It's a situation that fortunately doesn't come up very often, but when it does, board members and/or the new CEO face a huge dilemma: How should they deal with the inner circle of an ousted CEO -- those top executives who presumably supported their former boss? |
BusinessWeek January 20, 2011 Serena Saitto |
Frank Quattrone: A Tech Dealmaker's Comeback Frank Quattrone's Qatalyst Group is climbing the rankings in Silicon Valley mergers. |
The Motley Fool March 11, 2005 Bill Mann |
Trial by Bill Investors should hold corporate executives to a higher standard than the courts do. A CEO's actions in all regards speak to the level of trust that investors can put in his or her stewardship of their money. |