Slashdot Mirror


A 'Witch Hunt' in Silicon Valley

garzpacho writes "BusinessWeek Online has an interview with Daniel Warmenhoven (CEO of Network Appliances), who joins a growing list of technology executives in saying that the government's search for backdated options among tech companies is going too far: 'It's become a witch hunt. I think the government is looking to find some egregious examples [of wrongdoing] and to publicly hang people for them. That's fine. But where does it stop? I'm not saying the past practices were all good. But I thought the SEC's role was to build investor confidence. What they're doing right now is destroying it, and I don't see the purpose. They're penalizing today's shareholders for events that occurred five years ago. But who is this protecting, exactly? With Enron, every shareholder in the company lost money. The same with Qwest, and with MCI-Worldcom. But I don't know who the injured party is here.'"

1 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. Well, then why does the WSJournal disagree? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In a print edition of the Wall Street Journal, they had (think it was D1, but the cover of one of the inside sections) a fairly lengthy article yesterday, and another lengthy one on Saturday (the weekend edition), on how Sarbanes-Oxley and back-dated options are in fact serious problems and most of the CEOs and senior execs who were so upset at options expensing being a balance sheet cost for tech businesses later turned out to be the people using back-dated options to steal money from the shareowners of the company.

    So, you may call it a witch hunt. I'll call it going after employees who steal from me, thank you very much.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --