mardi 11 septembre 2007

HP scandal: where are they now?

San Jose Mercury News
The HP spying scandal ruined careers, decimated family businesses and sullied previously sterling reputations. Here is a brief update on the key players:
* Tom Perkins, partner emeritus, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, former HP board member. Perkins blew the whistle on HP's investigation after learning his phone records were obtained by investigators. At press time, he was in Europe on his massive yacht, the Maltese Falcon, with a crew from "60 Minutes." His autobiography, "Valley Boy," is due from Penguin Nov. 5.
* Patricia Dunn, former chair. Hewlett-Packard Dunn initiated two internal investigations into boardroom leaks while chair of HP. She resigned from the board in September 2006. The California attorney general dropped felony charges against her in March. Dunn is spending time with her family, trying to stay healthy and fight cancer. She has also given talks on the lecture circuit.
* George "Jay" Keyworth, former HP board member. Keyworth resigned from HP's board in September 2006, acknowledging that he was the source of an article on CNET about a management retreat to discuss strategy. He is chairman of the Progress & Freedom Foundation, a Washington think tank, and on the board of General Atomics.
* Larry Sonsini, chair, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. As HP's outside counsel, Sonsini interviewed board members about leaks to the press in 2005 for then-CEO Carly Fiorina, and in 2006 his firm was asked by HP to investigate its use of pretexting during the subsequent boardroom leak probes. At the end of last year, he was replaced as HP's outside counsel, though his company still does legal work for HP.
* Ann Baskins, former general counsel HP. After a 24-year-career with HP, Baskins resigned as the company's head attorney on the morning of a congressional hearing in Washington, D.C. Married to a Wilson Sonsini lawyer, Tom DeFilipps, Baskins is not currently practicing as an attorney.
* Kevin Hunsaker, former ethics chief HP. Hunsaker, a lawyer, was the person who ended up running the investigation to uncover the boardroom leak. In June, Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Ray E. Cunningham dismissed pretexting charges against Hunsaker after he completed 96 hours of community service during which he worked for the Fair Housing Law Project, a community legal aid service.
* Ron DeLia, Security Outsourcing Solutions of Boston; Matthew DePante, Action Research Group of Melbourne, Fla.; Bryan Wagner, a data broker in Littleton, Colorado. Charges against outside investigators Delia and DePante were dismissed after they performed community service. Wagner pleaded guilty to two felonies; sentencing is set for Oct. 3. DeLia's company is still operating, but the scandal has had a "devastating" personal and financial impact, said his lawyer, John Williams. The DePantes were both "financially and emotionally devastated," said attorney Susy Ribero-Ayala. "They shut down their business. It took a toll on their family."