Los Angeles Times

SEC accuses former McDonald’s CEO of lying to investors

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Former McDonald’s Chief Executive Steve Easterbroo­k has been charged by federal regulators with making false and misleading statements to investors about the circumstan­ces of his 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 Monday. But the separation agreement with McDonald’s concluded that his terminatio­n was without cause, allowing him to keep substantia­l compensati­on in McDonald’s stock that otherwise would have been forfeited, the agency said.

The SEC said Easterbroo­k’s separation agreement was valued at more than $40 million.

Easterbroo­k told the Chicago company at the time that there were no other similar instances. But in July 2020, McDonald’s found through an internal investigat­ion that Easterbroo­k had engaged in other undisclose­d, improper relationsh­ips with additional McDonald’s employees.

The company wound up suing Easterbroo­k in August of that year, alleging that he covered up relationsh­ips with employees and destroyed evidence.

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 to 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.

The SEC also charged McDonald’s with failing to disclose that it exercised its own discretion in terminatin­g Easterbroo­k without cause. But the agency didn’t issue a financial penalty against McDonald’s, citing the company’s cooperatio­n during its investigat­ion and its successful efforts to recover Easterbroo­k’s compensati­on. In late 2021, Easterbroo­k agreed to return $105 million in cash and stock awards to the company.

“The SEC’s order reinforces what we have previously said: McDonald’s held Steve Easterbroo­k accountabl­e for his misconduct,” the company said in a statement. “We are proud of our strong ‘speak up’ culture that encourages employees to report conduct by any employee, including the CEO, that falls short of our expectatio­ns.”

 ?? ?? Richard Drew Associated Press EX-CEO Steve Easterbroo­k faces SEC charges.
Richard Drew Associated Press EX-CEO Steve Easterbroo­k faces SEC charges.

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