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The New Yorker Feb 19 & 26
I was pleased to see a wealth of info in The New Yorker on this case. Its a great read. In the article Perkins is quoted as saying that he never read a bylaws document and was not about to when Dunn confronted him. I seriously doubt Perkins on that statement - or the writer's quote. Certainly Perkins had his people read bylaws and brief him.

The New Yorker article and this one fail to mention that Dunn was caught up in the Enron business herself in her roles at Barclays Global Investors. I think she is still on the board at Barclays Global. This is important because the governor of California is also caught up in the Enron business. (as documented in the film "brightest men in the room". We really need to think about Enron whenever we hear the work pretexting - which was invented with the HP story. California had just implemented laws which made it clear to all who are not negligent in their directorships that identity theft of the kind called pretexting was illegal. Dunn can not be allowed to win at HP, control freak or not. Cancer or not. The crime is one against humanity that really should have fall out on the governator - regardless of his popularity.

How fine it is that the story is never ending.
Posted by: mighetto   Posted on: 03/02/07 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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Examples to remember chairpersons are only that... persons.  MV_z | 02/28/07
The New Yorker Feb 19 & 26  mighetto | 03/02/07

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