August 2006

According to August 10, 2006 press reports, Brocade Communications settled the derivative lawsuit that shareholders had filed in federal court in San Francisco in connection with Brocade’s options-award timing miscues, in exchange for an agreement to adopt certain therapeutic governance measures and the payment of $525,000 in legal fees. The settlement also involves contributions

In this prior post, the D & O Diary noted the recent resurgence of the 70’s vintage statute, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Recent developments in the Comverse Technology options timing investigation underscore the increasing importance of the FCPA, particularly as the options backdating scandal continues to unfold.

On August 9, 2006, the

Molex Execs Repay Pay: In one of the more interesting (and speediest) resolutions by a company of options timing concerns, 12 executives of Molex, Inc. agreed to repay the company a total of $685,000 to cover gains they realized on misdated options. The executives also agreed to have the prices raised on their unexercised

The Wall Street Journal’s recent series on "Private Money" describes the "new financial order" arising from "the new rules of private equity game." According to the July 25, 2006 Journal article (subscription required) entitled "Cash Machine: In Today’s Buyouts, Payday is Never Far Away," the new power players are private financiers – hedge funds, buyout

An August 4, 2006 Reuters article provides numeric support for the proposition, advanced in this prior D & O Diary post, that the declining number of securities fraud lawsuits is a consequence of the Milberg Weiss indictment. The article states that the indictment is "having a big impact on [the firm’s] ability to bring