Are Prosecutors Telling Warren Buffett How to Run His Company?
17th April 2008
But, regardless of Brandon’s track-record, his resignation, reports the editorial board, was a foregone conclusion. Fiduciary duty to Berkshire shareholders required Buffet to avoid a criminal indictment of Gen Re at any cost. And U.S. Attorneys can pressure companies to fire executives as a show of cooperation. Georgetown Law prof John Hasnas says prosecutors rarely if ever tell corporations to fire their target. But all they have to do is to suggest that they are considering whether to indict the corporation, and that the extent of their cooperation will be considered in the decision, and “the message gets across.”
Is anybody surprised? When merely bringing charges can destroy a company — hello, Arthur Anderson — who is safe from “prosecutorial discretion”?