Category: Uncategorized

  • Meet Txu Ex John Wilder Super Tycoon

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  • Out of the Park and Into Politics

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  • Al Gore is the New Kevin Bacon

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  • A change of direction for Chiquita – CQB

    Portfolio has an excellent story this month detailing Chiquita Brands‘ illicit payments to Colombian paramilitary groups responsible for killing thousands of people.

    No wonder there was some outrage when a U.S. court recently approved a deal that punished Chiquita with only a fine.

    “For $25 million those who financed a mass massacre of Colombians were able to purchase impunity,” Colombia Interior Minister Carlos Holguin told the Associated Press.

    Between 1997 and 2004, Chiquita gave $1.7 million to the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, or A.U.C. Chiquita called it extortion, saying it felt compelled to make the payments. Otherwise, its workers could have been killed.

    Portfolio’s Kevin Gray writes that Chiquita’s full board of directors wasn’t informed of the payments until April 2003. Former CEO Cyrus Freidheim decided to continue them, but by February 2004 new CEO Fernando Aguirre had stopped them.

    Aguirre joined Chiquita in January 2004 from Procter & Gamble. Both companies are based in Cincinnati.

    This is not the Chiquita of billionaire financier Carl Lindner. His control ended when the company emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2002. Each of Chiquita’s eight directors is new since then, according to company filings.

    Overseas Shipholding Group CEO Morten Arntzen, private investor Robert Fisher, former P&G CEO Durk Jager and S.C. Johnson & Son executive Steven Stanbrook joined the board in 2002.

    Jaime Serra, former Mexico secretary of finance, joined in 2003, and Aguirre the following year. Clare Hasler, executive director of the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Service, joined in 2005. Howard Barker Jr., former partner at KMPG, joined last month.

  • A Change of Direction for Chiquita

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  • Taser achieves verb status – TASR

    “Don’t tase me, bro!” immediately entered the national lexicon when university police in Florida zapped a student at a John Kerry speech last month. The phrase already has its own entry in Wikipedia and is well on its way to becoming part of the “permanent cultural lexicon,” Wired says.

    But the incident also substantially raised the profile of Taser International, makers of the police zappers. Company stock is skyrocketing on new orders and it has fended off dozens of lawsuits. On Monday, Taser reported a doubling of its third-quarter sales. Its shares surged nearly 11 percent Tuesday. The stock is trading at its highest level in two years.

    In 2006, only 20% of U.S. domestic law enforcement agents carried Taser stun guns; in 2007, that figure is expected to hit 30%, according to an analyst at Craig-Hallum Capital.

    This is a far better picture for Taser International than two years ago, when it was hit with embarrassing revelations about insider stock sales and investigations by the SEC and the Arizona attorney general. (The investigations ultimately resulted in no charges against the company.)

    Forbes reported that several members of the founding Smith family and board members of Taser sold large amounts of stock just before the price collapsed in early 2005. Phillips W. Smith retired as chairman and sold $40.8 million worth of holdings. His sons Patrick and Thomas Smith sold $23 million and $17.7 million of Taser stock respectively, totaling 22% of their combined common stock holdings.

    The company also was stung in 2004 after President Bush appointed Bernard Kerik, a company director, to run the Homeland Security Department. Kerik made $6.2 million exercising stock options from Taser, which had contracts with Homeland Security and New York City. Taser was one of many companies that received contracts through Kerik’s relationship with former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, after he left his job as New York City police commissioner in 2001. Kerik subsequently withdrew his name from consideration as Homeland Security secretary.

    There have been an estimated 84 deaths associated with Tasers but the Scottsdale, Ariz., company has been aggressive in defending itself in court. Taser announced on its web site this month the 59th time a wrongful death or injury lawsuit had been dismissed or judged in favor of Taser.

    On Tuesday, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana dismissed a lawsuit against Taser. In that case, the family of a 55-year-old man, who was intoxicated, didn’t show why he went into cardiac arrest when he was shocked by a Taser.

    On the web
    Taser’s Stunning Comeback – Forbes

  • Taser Achieves Verb Status

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  • And now the Anderson-Salomon wedding video

    As Pamela Anderson writes in her online diary, “The Adventures of Scum and Pam Have Begun.”

    While her relationship with her new husband, Rick Salomon, aka “Scum,” seems to have escalated quickly, the two have a lot in common.

    They’ve not only been friends for years, but they both starred in highly publicized sex tapes.

    Salomon became a household name after co-starring with Paris Hilton in the infamous One Night in Paris, while Anderson’s X-rated honeymoon footage with former husband, Tommy Lee, went public in 1998.

    The couple exchanged vows last week in Las Vegas, in between Anderson’s two performances in Hans Kl… The Beauty Of Magic.

    This is the third marriage for Anderson. Her first two husbands, musicians Kid Rock and Lee, made headlines recently at the MTV Video Music Awards when they were involved in a physic…

    On the web: Pamela Anderson diary