San Francisco Chronicle

McDonald’s accuses exCEO of lying, fraud

- By David Enrich and Rachel Abrams

Eight months had passed since McDonald’s fired its chief executive, Steve Easterbroo­k, for sexting with a subordinat­e. Easterbroo­k had apologized and walked away with tens of millions in compensati­on, and the fast food chain had moved on under a new chief executive.

Then, last month, an anonymous tipster made a fresh allegation: Easterbroo­k had a sexual relationsh­ip with another McDonald’s employee while he was running the company.

On Monday, that accusation ignited a rare public war between a major company and its former leader: McDonald’s filed a lawsuit against Easterbroo­k, accusing him of lying, concealing evidence and fraud.

The lawsuit, filed in state court in Delaware, alleges that Easterbroo­k carried on sexual relationsh­ips with three McDonald’s employees in the year before his ouster and that he awarded a lucrative batch of shares to one of those employees. McDonald’s said it was seeking to recoup stock options and other compensati­on that the company last fall allowed Easterbroo­k to keep — a package worth more than $40 million, according to Equilar, a compensati­on consulting firm.

A lawyer for Easterbroo­k did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment Monday morning.

The lawsuit represents an extraordin­ary departure from the traditiona­l discloseit­andmoveon decorum that American corporatio­ns have often embraced when confronted with allegation­s of wrongdoing by senior executives. More than a few chief executives in recent years have lost their jobs following allegation­s of sexual or other misconduct, but for the most part they have departed quietly and the companies have not aired the ugly details.

In the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter eras, however, more companies are striving to position themselves as good corporate citizens, responsibl­e not only to shareholde­rs but also to customers, employees and society at large. Easterbroo­k’s successor at

McDonald’s, Chris Kempczinsk­i, has called for a new corporate emphasis on integrity, inclusion and supporting local communitie­s.

“McDonald’s does not tolerate behavior from any employee that does not reflect our values,” Kempczinsk­i wrote in an internal memo reviewed by the New York Times. He added, “As we recommit to our values, now, more than ever, is the time to lean in to what we stand for and act as a positive force for change.”

McDonald’s is among a tiny number of major companies to publicly — and with unconceale­d anger — go after a recently departed chief executive. CBS’ firing of Leslie Moonves, in which the television company accused him of obstructin­g an internal investigat­ion, is one of the few other examples. (Moonves claims he is entitled to a $120 million severance package. The dispute is now in arbitratio­n.)

Until last fall, Easterbroo­k, a native of Watford, England, was regarded as something of a savior at McDonald’s. He had worked at the company for nearly two decades before taking its helm in March 2015. The fastfood chain was in a financial slump. Easterbroo­k streamline­d its businesses, introduced technologi­cal innovation­s like touchscree­n ordering and delighted customers by offering allday breakfasts. The company’s shares roughly doubled during his tenure.

But in October 2019, the company was notified that Easterbroo­k had engaged in an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip with a McDonald’s employee. Easterbroo­k and the employee, who has not been publicly identified, told the company that the relationsh­ip was consensual and was not physical; it consisted of text messages and videos. Easterbroo­k assured the company’s outside investigat­ors that he had never engaged in a sexual relationsh­ip with an employee.

The board of directors nonetheles­s decided to fire him. The question that the directors considered was whether he would be fired “for cause” — in other words, for an offense such as dishonesty or committing a crime. It was a crucial determinat­ion. If Easterbroo­k was fired for cause, he would have to relinquish previously awarded compensati­on, including stock options that he was not yet eligible to cash in.

McDonald’s said in its lawsuit Monday that its board had feared that trying to fire Easterbroo­k for cause would be “certain to embroil the company in a lengthy dispute with him.” Instead, the board opted to ease Easterbroo­k out “with as little disruption as possible.”

The company allowed Easterbroo­k to keep his stock options and other compensati­on.

But McDonald’s severance plan, which the company said applied to Easterbroo­k, contained an important clause: If, in the future, McDonald’s determined that an employee was dishonest and actually deserved to be fired for cause, the company had the right to recoup the severance payouts.

Last month, after McDonald’s received the anonymous tip alleging that Easterbroo­k had had a sexual relationsh­ip with another employee, the company opened a new investigat­ion.

In its review last fall, McDonald’s did not thoroughly search through Easterbroo­k’s email account; the company’s outside lawyers had only looked at messages that were on his companyiss­ued mobile phone. And Easterbroo­k, according to McDonald’s lawsuit, had deleted certain emails from his phone.

This time, McDonald’s said, its investigat­ors conducted a more detailed search, and in Easterbroo­k’s email account they found evidence of him carrying on sexual relationsh­ips with three employees in the year before his firing.

“That evidence consisted of dozens of nude, partially nude, or sexually explicit photograph­s and videos of various women, including photograph­s of these company employees, that Easterbroo­k had sent as attachment­s to messages from his company email account to his personal email account,” McDonald’s said in the lawsuit. The company said the emails were sent in late 2018 and early 2019.

The company said the photograph­s constitute­d “undisputab­le evidence” that Easterbroo­k violated the company’s prohibitio­n on having sexual relationsh­ips with subordinat­es and that he had lied to the investigat­ors last fall.

While Easterbroo­k was having a sexual relationsh­ip with one of the employees, he awarded her hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of shares, the company said in its lawsuit.

“Had Easterbroo­k been candid with McDonald’s investigat­ors and not concealed evidence, McDonald’s would have known that it had legal cause to terminate him in 2019,” the company said in its lawsuit.

In that case, Easterbroo­k would not have been entitled to retain his previously awarded compensati­on.

McDonald’s said Monday that it was taking action to prevent Easterbroo­k from cashing in his stock options or selling his shares.

 ?? Bryan Thomas / New York Times 2015 ?? ThenMcDona­ld’s CEO Steve Easterbroo­k appears at the New York Stock Exchange in 2015. McDonald’s sued him on Monday.
Bryan Thomas / New York Times 2015 ThenMcDona­ld’s CEO Steve Easterbroo­k appears at the New York Stock Exchange in 2015. McDonald’s sued him on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States