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SEC charges former McDonald’s CEO with misleading investors

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                McDonald’s CEO Steve Easterbrook is interviewed at the New York Stock Exchange, in July 2017. The former CEO has been charged by federal regulators with making false and misleading statements to investors about the circumstances leading to his firing in November 2019.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

McDonald’s CEO Steve Easterbrook is interviewed at the New York Stock Exchange, in July 2017. The former CEO has been charged by federal regulators with making false and misleading statements to investors about the circumstances leading to his firing in November 2019.

Former McDonald’s CEO Stephen Easterbrook has been charged by federal regulators with making false and misleading statements to investors about the circumstances of firing by the burger giant in November 2019.

Easterbrook was ousted for engaging in an inappropriate personal relationship with a McDonald’s employee in violation of company policy, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in its order today, but the separation agreement with McDonald’s concluded that his termination was without cause, which allowed him to keep substantial equity compensation that otherwise would have been forfeited.

McDonald’s found through an internal investigation that Easterbrook had engaged in other undisclosed, improper relationships with additional McDonald’s employees in July 2020. The company wound up suing Easterbrook in August of that year, claiming he covered up relationships with employees and destroyed evidence.

McDonald had fired Easterbrook in November 2019 after he acknowledged exchanging videos and text messages in a non-physical, consensual relationship with an employee. Easterbrook told the Chicago company at the time that there were no other similar instances.

The SEC said that Easterbrook knew or was reckless in not knowing that his failure to disclose additional violations of company policy before his firing would influence McDonald’s disclosures to investors related to his exit and compensation.

“When corporate officers corrupt internal processes to manage their personal reputations or line their own pockets, they breach their fundamental duties to shareholders, who are entitled to transparency and fair dealing from executives,” said Gurbir Grewal, the SEC director of the Division of Enforcement. “By allegedly concealing the extent of his misconduct during the company’s internal investigation, Easterbrook broke that trust with — and ultimately misled — shareholders.”

Easterbrook, who has not admitted or denied the SEC’s findings, has agreed to the agency’s cease-and-desist order, which imposes a five-year officer and director ban and a $400,000 civil penalty.

McDonald’s Corp. was also charged by the SEC in the incident, the agency said today, but due to the company’s cooperation during the ensuing investigation, there is no financial penalty.

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