The Oklahoman

Former SandRidge CEO claims he’s owed $3 million in shares

Giesler left to pursue other opportunit­ies

- Dale Denwalt The Oklahoman USA TODAY NETWORK

A former CEO for SandRidge Energy is suing the company, claiming he is owed more than a quarter of a million shares as part of his employment contract.

Carl Giesler Jr. filed the lawsuit last week. SandRidge has yet to respond in court.

In July, the company announced it hired the sixth CEO in five years after Giesler stepped down. SandRidge at the

time said Giesler left after 14 months on the job to pursue another career opportunit­y.

Giesler’s lawsuit confirms he resigned from the company. As part of his contract, he claims the company owes him 284,323 shares of SandRidge stock.

During Giesler’s time as CEO, he led an effort to cut the company’s headquarte­rs staff to just dozens of employees, and guided SandRidge through a process last year where it sold its landmark downtown campus to the state of Oklahoma for $35.4 million.

“Giesler made a written demand for the unpaid (shares),” the lawsuit states. “SandRidge has refused to comply with the employment contract, thus necessitat­ing this action.”

Since he left the company, SandRidge shares have more than doubled in price. On July 15, the day he resigned, shares were trading at about $5.29.

The stock price on Monday was hovering around $11, meaning that the value of shares Giesler claims he’s owed is worth more than $3 million.

Chief Operating Officer Grayson Pranin replaced

Giesler as CEO. According to his public LinkedIn profile, Giesler now serves as executive vice president and chief financial officer of Southweste­rn Energy in Houston.

Pranin joined SandRidge Energy a decade ago, serving in various engineerin­g, operationa­l and leadership roles over that time, according to the company. He is the latest CEO for the energy company that has experience­d significant change in the past five years.

When SandRidge Energy Inc. emerged from bankruptcy protection on Oct. 4, 2016, it had shed $3.7 billion of debt under the leadership of then-CEO James Bennett and had about 630 employees.

The next five years saw a carousel of CEOs come and go as the company divested major assets, including the downtown tower that it once called home.

In December, SandRidge announced a new home office in Bricktown, occupying a suite in 1 E Sheridan inside the old Stanford Furniture Co. building.

 ?? DAVE MORRIS ?? A drone image of the former Sandridge Tower, which served as the company’s headquarte­rs before moving to another location in Bricktown.
DAVE MORRIS A drone image of the former Sandridge Tower, which served as the company’s headquarte­rs before moving to another location in Bricktown.

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