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Alleged Stripper Price-Fixing in the Land Down Under

April 17th, 2008

More proof that price-fixing can take place in any industry: the owner of Adult Fire, an Australian company that puts on various X-rated strip shows for men and women, sued two of its Sydney rivals, Bombshells and Sex Bomb Promotions, for price-fixing. Sadly for Adult Fire the case was “quickly dismissed” after Bombshells and […]

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Oilman Sues BP and Others Over Alleged FCPA Violations

April 16th, 2008

The CEO of Denver-based Grynberg Productions is trying a new strategy to escape possible FCPA violations: suing a bunch of his rivals. This month Jack Grynberg, the eponymous chairman of the oil company, sued British oil company BP, BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward, Former BP Chief Executive John Browne, Norway’s Statoil and others, accusing […]

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South Africa Cracks Down on Possible Food Industry Cartel

April 9th, 2008

The South African Competition Commission decided that there have been so many reports of price fixing involving producers of bread, milk and other food items that they’re just going to go ahead and probe the entire South African food industry, according to a report by sabcnews.com. The Commission will focus primarily

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Jury Awards Ex-Kelly Employee $6.5 Million for Religious Discrimination

April 7th, 2008

A former Kelly Services employee, Lynn Noyes, was awarded $6.5 million by a Sacramento federal jury on Friday after suing the company for reverse religious discrimination. She argued that a less qualified employee earned the manager position that she was seeking because he was a member of

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Naturalized U.S. Citizen Caught Allegedly Attempting to Give Trade Secrets to China

April 4th, 2008

Who says random airport searches don’t work? United States customs officials discovered that Hanjuan Jin, 37, a China-born U.S. citizen, was allegedly trying to leak confidential trade secrets from her former U.S. employer to a China-based rival when they searched her luggage at

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IBM Banned From New Government Contract Work

April 2nd, 2008

Two weeks ago, in the last edition of Ethisphere Magazine we rated and ranked the ethics programs of some of the largest U.S. government contractors. IBM was

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UK Employees Now Protected From Customer Sexual Harassment

March 31st, 2008

A new law in the United Kingdom will protect employees from sexual harassment beyond just coworkers and bosses, now extending to “customers, suppliers and others they encounter in the course of their work,” according to a story in the UK’s Guardian. Well, technically the punishment still goes to employers if they are aware of […]

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Employee Fined $13,000 for Drunken Hacking

March 25th, 2008

Indiana resident James M. DiBlasio woke up to more than a hangover the morning after a three-day drinking binge. At some point during the 72 hours that he was drunk he managed to hack into the Denver-based server of his employer, Ski.com, and change various data such as flight reservations and contact information. […]

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Starbucks Takes Heat for Tip Sharing Policy

March 13th, 2008

Tipping is an activity so fervently argued and debated in the United States that entire books have been published on tipping etiquette. Those who have worked for tips argue for it, those that haven’t argue against it, and both sides tend to leave the debate unsettled and more angry than when they started. […]

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“I Want to be a Whistleblower When I Grow up”

March 4th, 2008

Becoming a whistle-blower is now a financially sound career move, thanks to the UK’s Office of Fair Trade (OFT). The British watch dog announced last Friday that it will offer as much as £100,000 for information leading to the discovery and dismantling of illegal corporate cartels. The OFT will offer the rewards for […]

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Germans Evade About 30 Billion(Euro) in Taxes Each Year

February 21st, 2008

The large percentage of Germans that regularly avoid taxes isn’t terribly surprising, considering the nation’s top income tax rate is 45 percent and the tax laws are notoriously confusing, according to Bloomberg. Nevertheless, the problem is huge for the country and getting worse. The issue is making a lot of headlines right now, […]

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68 Million Reasons Why You Want to Report Bad Behavior

February 8th, 2008

Seven years ago H. Dean Steinke, a rising employee and former district sales manager for Merck, put his career on hold by blowing the whistle on his former employee’s unethical marketing practices. Today, his conscience finally paid off when Merck agreed to pay $671 million to settle accusations of overcharging government programs such as […]

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Ex-Wellpoint CFO David Colby’s Firing for “Non-Business Nature” Clarified

February 6th, 2008

One day you’re labeled the “best health-insurance chief financial officer for each of the past four years” by Institutional Investor, the next you’re frantically texting “ABORT!!” to one of your many girlfriends/fiancees, hoping that your double life isn’t discovered. Such is the life of ex-Wellpoint CFO David Colby. Colby allegedly carried on relationships […]

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Ocean Plundering Meets the 21st Century

January 23rd, 2008

For several years, Ernesto Tapanes was a simple, ordinary “oceanography survey consultant,” doing contracting work for the treasure-hunting firm Odyssey Marine Exploration Inc. One spring day in 2007, however, his life abruptly changed when he discovered an anomaly off the coast of Gibraltar. Upon further investigation, it turned out to be a sunken

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Green Washing at its Best

January 14th, 2008

Stop the presses! Al Gore, the Sierra Club, and environmentalists everywhere are going to need to find a new hobby because global warming has just been stopped. Limousine Eighteen, the international “ground transportation company,” has purchased one hybrid SUV for their fleet of ground vehicles. This was revealed to the world in the […]

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Former Attorney General John Ashcroft’s Firm Earns No-Bid Deal from New Jersey Federal Prosecutor

January 11th, 2008

Joining private life hasn’t saved former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft from public scrutiny. He’s back in the spotlight after New Jersey top prosecutor Christopher Christie recently gave Mr. Ashcroft’s consulting firm, the Ashcroft Group, the contract to monitor a settlement between Zimmer Holdings, a medical supply company, and the Department of Justice. […]

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What do you Call Taking 1,000 Chinese Government Officials on Vacation?

January 4th, 2008

Bribery, according to the DOJ. Lucent technologies helped wrap up a DOJ investigation on Tuesday by agreeing to pay $1 million for FCPA violations. From 2000 to 2003 the company reportedly spent over $10 million on about 315 various trips for approximately 1,000 Chinese government officials. This included all expense paid trips […]

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The UK Warns of Potential Security Threat from Chinese-Sponsored Hackers

December 12th, 2007

Jonathan Evans, the head of the UK’s MI5, recently sent a letter out to 300 British business leaders warning them to be wary of a possible Chinese espionage attack. Since then, the UK’s Times has reported that both Rolls-Royce and Shell have already been hit by “sustained spying assaults” from Chinese government-backed hackers. […]

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Brit Wins First Ever Discrimination Claim for Being “Too Young”

November 15th, 2007

Yesterday, an Employment Tribunal in the UK ruled on the country’s first employment discrimination case involving a worker fired for being too young. The Tribunal sided with 20-year-old Megan Thomas, a former membership secretary at the Eight Members Club in London.  Ms. Thomas complained that her boss

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USA Today Debunks Enron “Whistleblower”

October 16th, 2007

After investigating a former Enron employee’s high profile whistle-blower story, USA Today discovered she’s not everything she claims to be.

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U.K. Watchdog Finds Companies Guilty of Illegitimate ‘Green’ Claims

October 8th, 2007

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), an independent body created by the U.K.’s advertising industry to self-regulate the rules in the advertising codes, has discovered many companies are advertising unproven claims of environmental sustainability.

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What do Nacchio and his judge have in common? Apparently, lapses in good judgment.

August 20th, 2007

As reported by local Denver media, Colorado’s top federal judge likes to party.
Now the FBI is involved, and so are allegations of violations of the Judicial Code of Conduct.
Without getting into the sordid details, recently filed court documents show Colorado’s top federal judge, Judge Edward Nottingham, was too drunk to remember how he spent […]

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Oops. FTC fails to effectively redact Whole Foods documents before releasing them

August 15th, 2007

It’s really hard to close the barn door AFTER the cow has left, but that is what the FTC is trying to do. The Federal Trade Commission accidentally disclosed confidential trade secrets of Whole Foods yesterday in a court filing.
At issue was that in trying to protect competitive secrets, court officials […]

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Motley Fool features Sun Microsystems’ ethics & Ethisphere Magazine

August 15th, 2007

The extremely popular investment website, the Motley Fool, just ran a large profile about the positive ethics and governance of Sun Microsystems. This piece ran on the heels of a much-better-than-expected earning report. To excerpt…
The company just reported stellar earnings, befitting its astronomical business name, wherein management bragged a little bit about […]

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Newest popular online game in China? Execute the corrupt public official.

August 4th, 2007

The Communist Party Disciplinary Committee of the Haishu district in Ningbo has underwritten the creation of an online multi-player computer game called “The Incorruptible Warrior.”
The game went live last week on July 25th and it has already been downloaded over 100,000 times, with hundreds of players engaging online simultaneously.
Why so popular? Because the […]

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