I guess I should not have expected a press release that said “I am not a crook.” Shareholders must be relieved that they weren’t going to see Jobs banned from being a public director, or even get the typical slap on the wrist (of a $10+ million fine) that such charges tend to bring. A civil action and a shareholder lawsuit are still pending, but somehow (unlike OJ) I imagine the result will be the same.
This happy outcome does not nullify the one particularly sordid aspect of the backdating kerfuffle†: how Jobs threw two of his most valued executives under the bus to save his own skin (and, some would argue, the company): CFO Fred Anderson and General Counsel Nancy Heinen, who also will not be charged. The strong suspicion is that even if they were personally involved, any such policy would have been approved by higher authorities.
After serving as CFO of ADP, Anderson joined Apple in 1996 as the only bright light of competence during the brief, dark Amelio era (which is why he was the only board member who got to keep his job when the iCEO came aboard). The company couldn’t buy a clue on its finances and inventory until Anderson imposed the necessary discipline.
Anderson was a holdover not a NeXTie, so it’s not surprising that there’s no love lost between the two nowadays. Last year, after he settled charges, he fired back at Jobs saying that the CEO knew more than he claimed.
Photo of Nancy Heinen from Apple Insider.
† Merriam-Webster dictionary:
- scandal: 2: loss of or damage to reputation caused by actual or apparent violation of morality or propriety : disgrace
- kerfuffle: see fuss. fuss: 2a) a state of agitation especially over a trivial matter
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