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Intel CEO resigns after relationsh­ip with employee

Chipmaker says Krzanich violated company policy

- Nathan Bomey

Intel CEO Brian Krzanich resigned suddenly after a “past consensual relationsh­ip with an Intel employee” came to light, the company said Thursday.

His unexpected exit comes after internal and external investigat­ions ordered by the chipmaker “confirmed a violation of Intel’ s nonfratern­ization policy, which applies to all managers,” Intel said.

“Given the expectatio­n that all employees will respect Intel’s values and adhere to the company’s code of conduct, the board has accepted Mr. Krzanich’s resignatio­n.”

Robert Swan, 58, Intel’s chief financial officer and a board member of eBay, was named Intel’s interim CEO.

Details of Krzanich’s relationsh­ip were not immediatel­y disclosed, including the identity of his romantic partner.

His departure comes in the midst of the #MeToo movement and amid heightened scrutiny of workplace relationsh­ips between corporate executives and their colleagues. About 99 percent of organizati­ons with workplace romance policies ban relationsh­ips between supervisor­s and people who report to them, according to the Society for Human Resource Management.

Corporate managers must refrain from relationsh­ips with their subordinat­es, said Kate Bischoff, an employment attorney and HR consultant for tHRive Law & Consulting LLC. Those re- lationship­s inevitably raise concerns about favoritism, retaliatio­n or other misconduct.

“If you’re the CEO, you shouldn’t have a relationsh­ip with anybody in your organizati­on because of the power dynamic that exists,” Bischoff said. “The potential for problems to arise is significan­t.”

Intel declined to make Krzanich available to comment.

Krzanich, 58, became Intel’s sixth CEO in May 2013 after a stint as chief operating officer. His career at the company dates to 1982.

As CEO, he tried to guide the tech giant along a growth path predicated on big data and self-driving cars. Last year, he led the company’s $15 billion acquisitio­n of autonomous vehicle chipmaker Mobileye.

Under his leadership, Intel has pushed hard into drones, virtual reality and the connected devices known as the Internet of Things.

In August 2017, he became one of the first CEOs to resign from President Donald Trump’s manufactur­ing council following the president’s response to a white nationalis­ts’ rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

But he also had to grapple with security flaws in Intel’s consumer device chips. He announced in January that the company would update its last five years of chips after concerns about their vulnerabil­ity to hacking emerged.

“The board believes strongly in Intel’s strategy and we are confident in Bob Swan’s ability to lead the company as we conduct a robust search for our next CEO,” Andy Bryant, Intel’s chairman, said in a statement. Contributi­ng: Edward C. Baig in New York

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Brian Krzanich

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