HP’s Patricia Dunn to step down in January
George Keyworth, who was singled out in press leak probe, also quits
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Dunn done as HP chairman Sept. 12: Chairman Patricia Dunn will step down in January because of the corporate spying scandal. “On the Money’s” Dylan Ratigan conducts a roundtable discussion on the moves. CNBC |
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SAN JOSE, Calif. - Hewlett-Packard Co. said Tuesday that Patricia Dunn will step down as chairwoman of the computer and printer maker in January amid a widening scandal involving a possibly illegal probe into media leaks. She will be succeeded by CEO Mark Hurd.
Hurd will retain his existing positions as chief executive and president and Dunn will remain as a director after she relinquishes the chair on Jan. 18.
“I am taking action to ensure that inappropriate investigative techniques will not be employed again. They have no place in HP,” Hurd said in a statement.
Dunn apologized for the techniques used in the company’s probe, which included “pretexting,” in which private investigators impersonated board members and journalists to acquire their phone records.
“Unfortunately, the investigation, which was conducted with third parties, included certain inappropriate techniques. These went beyond what we understood them to be, and I apologize that they were employed,” Dunn said in a statement.
Also Tuesday, George Keyworth II, the HP director singled out for leaking information to the press, resigned from the company’s board effective immediately.
The pressure on Dunn to step down began rising sharply Monday when Congress and federal investigators entered the fray surrounding HP’s possibly illegal probe of media leaks. The FBI, the U.S. Attorney for Northern California and the House Energy and Commerce Committee all joined the California attorney general and Securities and Exchange Commission in probing the scandal swirling around HP’s Board of Directors.
California Attorney General Bill Lockyer said his office has enough evidence to obtain indictments of people within Hewlett-Packard Co. and of hired contractors, after the company disclosed questionable tactics in a boardroom leak investigation.
“We currently have sufficient evidence to indict people both within HP as well as contractors on the outside,” Lockyer said in an interview aired Tuesday on the Public Broadcasting Service’s NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.
“Crimes have been committed,” Lockyer said. “People’s identities being taken falsely is a crime. People gaining access to computer records that have personal information, in California, that’s a crime.”
Dunn, a former freelance journalist, was angry about the media leaks and commissioned an unnamed outside firm to identify their source. They used Social Security numbers and other personal information to get phone companies to turn over detailed logs of home phone calls of reporters and board members.
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HP’s board met for a second time Monday night to discuss whether Dunn should remain chairwoman of the Silicon Valley giant.
Richard Hackborn, who has served on the board since 1992, will become lead independent director in January.
Dunn’s entanglement in the pretexting scandal marks a rare stumble for one of the most powerful women in corporate America.
Dunn, then CEO of Barclays Global Investors, joined HP’s board in 1998 and became chairwoman in 2005, taking an active role in running the 11th largest company on the Fortune 500.
She oversaw the ouster of former HP CEO and Chairwoman Carleton Fiorina in February 2005, and two months later introduced Hurd as Fiorina’s successor.
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He was previously chief executive at Dayton, Ohio-based NCR Corp., a computer services company best known for its ATM machines.
At HP he orchestrated a cost-cutting campaign that, when it winds down later this quarter, will have resulted in as many as 15,000 layoffs. But morale had been noticeably higher under Hurd than Fiorina — until details of the company’s leak investigation were disclosed last week.
Although it marks a dark chapter in the company’s history, HP could benefit from having Hurd consolidate his power, said Roger Kay, president of the market research firm Endpoint Technologies Associates.
“It makes perfect sense to give (Hurd) the chairmanship,” he said. “He has the character, personality and chops to do it. I can’t think of anyone else you would want to run the company at this point.”
The leak investigation at HP began with a January article on CNET Network Inc.’s News.com that included a quotation from an anonymous HP source who described a gathering of HP directors at a posh spa in Southern California.
At a board meeting in May, Dunn identified director George Keyworth II as CNET’s source, as well as the source of other leaks dating to early 2005. The board asked Keyworth, 66, to resign, but he refused. HP then barred him from seeking re-election.
His ouster riled another board member, longtime Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tom Perkins, 74, who resigned and stormed out of the May 18 meeting.
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