Toronto Star

McDonald’s sues to recover severance from fired CEO

Company claims Steve Easterbroo­k lied about not having sexual relationsh­ips with employees and destroyed evidence

- HEATHER HADDON

McDonald’s Corp. said it is suing former Chief Executive Steve Easterbroo­k and seeking to recoup tens of millions of dollars it paid him in severance and benefits, alleging that he lied to the board about sexual relationsh­ips with employees before his ouster last fall.

The fast-food giant dismissed Mr. Easterbroo­k without cause in November 2019, following an investigat­ion into his conduct. Investigat­ors found he had a short-term, consensual relationsh­ip with an employee over text and video, but Mr. Easterbroo­k denied any physical sexual relationsh­ips with McDonald’s employees, according to the complaint filed Monday.

McDonald’s reopened the matter after it received an anonymous tip in July about a relationsh­ip between Mr. Easterbroo­k and an employee, according to the lawsuit. An investigat­ion found that Mr. Easterbroo­k allegedly engaged in three other relationsh­ips with employees that were sexual in nature, including the one that triggered the inquiry. Investigat­ors found that Mr. Easterbroo­k destroyed evidence about the sexual relationsh­ips and lied about his behavior during the initial investigat­ion last fall, the complaint said.

Because McDonald’s decided to fire Mr. Easterbroo­k without cause, he received severance and benefits that he could have been denied had the board found him at fault. Mr. Easterbroo­k’s compensati­on, benefits and stock were potentiall­y worth nearly $42 million (U.S.), according to an analysis at the time by executive-pay firm Equilar.

The company also alleged that Mr. Easterbroo­k approved a stock grant to an employee with whom he was having a sexual relationsh­ip. The grant was valued at hundreds of thousands of dollars, according to the suit.

In the complaint, McDonald’s states that the company’s severance plan with Mr. Easterbroo­k included a provision that it can stop payment of benefits and require the former CEO to pay back severance if it determined at any time that he committed an act that would have allowed him to be fired for cause. The company said a firing for cause would be extended for “serious,

reckless or material violation” of its standards and employment policies, along with dishonesty, fraud, illegality or moral depravity.

“McDonald’s does not tolerate behavior from any employee that does not reflect our values,” Chris Kempczinsk­i, who succeeded Mr. Easterbroo­k as CEO last November, wrote in a message to the company on Monday.

Mr. Easterbroo­k couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment.

At the time of his firing, Mr. Easterbroo­k said the consensual affair was a mistake, and that he agreed with the board’s decision to dismiss him. Mr. Easterbroo­k also said at the time that he hadn’t engaged in other relationsh­ips with employees, according to McDonald’s.

Appointed CEO in 2015, Mr. Easterbroo­k helped the company streamline operations and modernize. He also took part in a culture of partying and fraternizi­ng among some senior managers and rank-and-file employees, The Wall Street Journal previously reported, citing some former employees and people currently connected to the company.

McDonald’s said in the suit that its investigat­ion found dozens of nude and sexually explicit photograph­s and videos of women, including employees, sent from Mr. Easterbroo­k’s corporate email account to a personal one. Mr. Easterbroo­k had deleted the photos from his company-issued phone, and they weren’t discovered during the company investigat­ion that triggered his firing, according to the complaint.

McDonald’s said in the complaint, filed Monday in the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware, that Mr. Easterbroo­k breached his fiduciary duties as a company officer and committed fraud. The company said it is seeking to recover the amount it paid him in compensati­on and severance benefits. It is also seeking to prevent him from exercising stock options.

Some shareholde­r groups had criticized the board’s decision to fire Mr. Easterbroo­k without cause despite conduct that violated longstandi­ng company policies forbidding relationsh­ips with direct and indirect reports. Proxy-advisory firm Glass Lewis advised shareholde­rs earlier this year to vote against the company’s executive pay package given the severance package afforded to Mr. Easterbroo­k. That payout included $700,000 in cash severance to Mr. Easterbroo­k. Total compensati­on, including equity awards, amounted to $17.4 million in 2019. The company’s stockholde­rs in May approved total compensati­on and equity awards for Mr. Easterbroo­k. The suit doesn’t specify an exact sum McDonald’s seeks to recover.

The company wrote in the suit that it is seeking the annulment of the severance agreement, damages and the return of Mr. Easterbroo­k’s stock and cash awards.

McDonald’s said in the complaint that to have fired Mr. Easterbroo­k for cause last year, it would have had to prove that his behavior had constitute­d “dishonesty, fraud, illegality or moral turpitude.”

At the time, board members felt they lacked evidence to justify firing him for cause, the complaint said.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i, who served under Mr. Easterbroo­k as the head of McDonald’s U.S. business, pledged to overhaul the company’s culture after assuming the top job, and said during a virtual summit late last month that he would renew company values. McDonald’s in March hired Heidi Capozzi, previously the senior vice president of human resources for Boeing Co., as its new global chief people officer.

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 ??  ?? Former CEO of McDonald’s Steve Easterbroo­k was fired without cause in November.
Former CEO of McDonald’s Steve Easterbroo­k was fired without cause in November.

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