Category Archives: News

University of Michigan Suspends Sale of Coca-Cola

Yesterday the University of Michigan announced that beginning January 1, 2006 it will suspend the sale of Coca-Cola products in response to the company’s human rights abuses in Colombia and India. The suspension came after Coca-Cola failed to comply with a timeline mandated by the University to investigate the company. While the Dump Coke at U of M coalition applauded the decision, it expressed concern over the fact that the University still believes the company is acting in “good faith” despite now missing two Dispute Review Board deadlines. As of the 1st, 13 direct and indirect contracts with Coca-Cola will be suspended, although contracts could be renegotiated if the company agrees to a protocol for reviewing human rights abuses in Colombia and environmental concerns in India.

Last month, New York University (NYU), the largest private university in the country, banned Coca-Cola products for similar reasons.

Federal and State Prosecutors Increasingly Offering Major Corporations Deals

According to a new study released yesterday by Corporate Crime Reporter, federal and state prosecutors are increasingly offering major corporations deals known as deferred prosecution or non-prosecution agreements. Under such agreements, prosecutors agree not to prosecute corporations and in exchange for cooperation against culpable executives, implementation of corporate monitors, and fines.

Corporate Crime Reporter’s report found 34 such agreements over the past few years with 17 deferred prosecution agreements and 17 non-prosecution agreements with major corporations including Adelphia, Monsanto, Shell, WorldCom/MCI, and others. The change in prosecution is a result of a new policy implemented by the Department of Justice in 2003 with major corporations committing serious crimes no longer being convicted and sentenced. Consequently, no corporation caught committing securities or accounting fraud has been convicted since Arthur Andersen in June of 2002. Moreover, prosecutors have made twice as many non-prosecution and deferred prosecution agreements with major American corporations in the last four years than in the previous 10 years. According to the U.S. Attorney’s manual, such agreements should only be used in a limited number of cases, such as minor drug and juvenile delinquency cases, in order to “save prosecutive and judicial resources for concentration on major cases.”

Among the 34 cases profiled by Corporate Crime Reporter, many received the aforementioned arguments despite substantial evidence of wrongdoing. The cases include:

Adelphia Communications

Adelphia received a non-prosecution agreement in May 2005, despite engaging in one of the most extensive financial frauds ever. Federal officials alleged that from 1998 through March 2002, Adelphia — the nation’s sixth largest cable-television company — systematically and fraudulently excluded billions of dollars in liabilities from its consolidated financial statements by hiding them on the books of off-balance sheet affiliates. It also allegedly inflated earnings to meet Wall Street’s expectations, falsified operations statistics, and concealed blatant self-dealing by the family that founded and controlled Adelphia, the Rigas Family.

While the founder of the company, John Rigas and his son Timothy were both sentenced to 15 to 20 years in prison, the company continues to operate and will in fact assume ownership of some assets forfeited by the Rigas family.

MCI

In September of this year, federal officials decided not to file criminal charges against MCI, the successor to WorldCom, for perpetrating one of the nation’s largest financial frauds. The US Attorney in New York decided not to prosecute MCI for the $11 billion fraud because the company reported the fraudulent accounting and since then has cooperated with the government in pursuing cases against individual executives. Prosecutors have said that prosecuting the company would have brought a “severe and unintended economic impact upon thousands of innocent MCI employees.”

Monsanto

In January of 2005, Monsanto was charged with violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) in connection with a 2002 payment to a senior Indonesian Ministry of Environment official. The $50,000 payment was marked as “consultant fees” in the company’s books. Instead of pursuing the company, the government entered a deferred prosecution agreement and fined the company $1 million dollars.

Read about more cases in Corporate Crime Reporter’s Report

Noteworthy Articles

The following articles of interest were published elsewhere on the web today:

Previously archived links are available on Media Mouse’s del.icio.us page. To recommend links, tag them with “mediamouserecommended” on del.icio.us.

Wal-Mart Planning New Store in Grand Rapids Area

Wal-Mart is planning to build a new store in the Grand Rapids area. The new store will be located directly behind the existing Wal-Mart on Alpine Avenue. The store will be a “Wal-Mart Supercenter” which means it will offer groceries, a meat market, and other specialty departments such as a vision center and a pharmacy. Wal-Mart has begun emphasizing the “Supercenters” as a way to attract new customers and expand their market share, and indeed the 187,000 square foot stores (of which there were 1,914 in October 31, 2005) have decreased business at locally owned grocery stores while in many cases being funded by taxpayer subsidies.

In order to build the new store, which will replace the current one once construction is completed, Wal-Mart needs to first buy the property behind the current store and get the property rezoned from agricultural to commercial use. Wal-Mart will formally make the request for a zoning change tonight at the Alpine Township Hall. The Alpine Planning Commission meeting will take place at 7:00pm at 5255 Alpine Ave. NW in Comstock Park.

Last month, the first national poll on the public’s view of Wal-Mart found that 38% of United States citizens had an unfavorable opinion of Wal-Mart and that 56% of respondents agreed that while Wal-Mart does provide low prices, it is ultimately bad for America due to the high moral and economic cost associated with the company. Despite substantial holiday sales, there has been a considerable amount of negative press for Wal-Mart over the past few weeks with the company being ordered to pay $172 million for violating California labor laws, a criminal investigation of how it handled merchandise classified as hazardous waste, its destruction of a turtle habitat in south Florida, and a setback to Wal-Mart’s plan to form a bank.

Noteworthy Articles

The following articles of interest were published elsewhere on the web today:

Previously archived links are available on Media Mouse’s del.icio.us page. To recommend links, tag them with “mediamouserecommended” on del.icio.us.

Granholm Vetoes Welfare Reform

Governor Jennifer Granholm vetoed a “welfare reform” bill passed earlier this month by the Michigan House and Senate. The reform bill, enthusiastically supported by Grand Rapids Congressperson Jerry Kooiman, would have added a number of restrictions to the state’s welfare system including a lifetime limit to benefits, removing people from welfare after four years, and adding a “three-strikes” policy where three procedural violations would have eliminated a recipient’s welfare benefits for a two-year period. It is also worth noting that Representative Kooiman’s bill was opposed by many in his district who accused him of ignoring the concerns of African-Americans living in his district while he talked about the need for “tough love” and discussed cutting benefits as “incentives” to move people out of the system.

The Conservative-led effort to “reform” welfare in Michigan comes as a similar effort in Washington is underway with federal welfare policy. As was the case in Michigan, the “reform” being discussed nationally has more to do with the targeting of those struggling in the current economy rather than making any genuine effort to improve people’s conditions. Both the federal and state discussions of changing welfare centered on requiring “able-bodied” people to work more, but such efforts have largely moved welfare recipients into low-income, unskilled jobs while affecting single mothers particularly hard. The proposed federal legislation would enact penalties where if a recipient does not fulfill work requirements for two months, their assistance would be revoked.

Continuing Calls for Impeachment of President Bush

With the introduction by Representative John Conyers last week of a resolution calling for the censure of President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney as well as the release of report documenting potentially impeachable offenses, the possibility of impeachment took a dramatic step forward. Since shortly after President Bush took office there have been various efforts taken by activists to advocate the impeachment of President Bush, most notably the Vote To Impeach campaign, which even went so far as to produce a document containing 18 articles of impeachment. Of course, these efforts were restrict to far left groups, and indeed in the case of Vote To Impeach, the effort was sponsored by the antiwar group International ANSWER. Despite the fact that there still have been no major newspapers calling for impeachment, the possibility is gaining traction with a poll in November finding that 53% of United States citizens support impeachment if it is found that President Bush manipulated intelligence to build a case for invading Iraq. Interestingly, the support of 53% of the population came before the recent disclosures of extensive electronic surveillance of communications by the National Security Agency (NSA).

Impeachment remains unlikely given the current configuration of the Congress, but should it be undertaken, it will likely be rooted in the aforementioned NSA surveillance. Many in Congress view the NSA surveillance as another example of executive power being taken too far with Conservatives seeing it as a questionable, if not illegal, expansion of power. The generally conservative business magazine Barron’s ran an editorial raising the possibility of impeachment last week suggesting that the President greatly overstepped his authority and that his actions risked invalidating the powers of Congress to make laws. The editorial went on to suggest that Congresspersons who investigated President Bill Clinton’s sexual relationships for impeachment would be well served to pursue an investigation of President Bush’s actions.

Noteworthy Articles

The following articles of interest were published elsewhere on the web today:

Previously archived links are available on Media Mouse’s del.icio.us page. To recommend links, tag them with “mediamouserecommended” on del.icio.us.

Smiths Receives another Contract for Components used in Iraq War

A week after receiving a nearly $10 million dollar contract adjustment, local aerospace company Smiths Aerospace has received another contract from the Navy for $12,862,995. The contract is for the manufacturing of 67 AV-8B Warfare Management Computers. The AV-8B Harrier has been used in Iraq and Afghanistan by the Marines and the Navy.

Retrospectives of 2005 Media Coverage

With 2005 rapidly drawing to a close, numerous independent media outlets have released various lists of the most hyped and underreported stories of the year. AlterNet’s list identified the fate of Terri Schiavo, the “war on Christmas,” the Minutemen, and Pat Robertson as some of the most hyped stories while the media ignored President George W. Bush’s growing status as a lame-duck president, the United States shift towards a policy of torture as it becomes a militarized state, Iraq spinning out of control, and President Bush’s environmental policy. In a different take, the Columbia Journalism Review made a list of “the Five Great Stories you didn’t Read in 2005” featuring stories are the oft-ignored suffering from Hurricane Rita, the arrests of five current and former lawmakers in Tennessee charged with accepting bribes, a report on global warming and how despite scientific consensus that it is happening the discussion has been dominated by industry-funded opponents of environmental protections, the ignored sacrifices of the 16,000 soldiers wounded in the Iraq War, and long-term coverage of an accident in Florida that killed two children and its effects on the community. Juan Cole has compiled the “Top Ten Myths about Iraq in 2005” citing myths about the extent of the guerilla war, that Iraqis are grateful for the United States presence, that Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani is close to Iran, an that the United States wanted free elections in Iraq.

Also worth checking out is Project Censored’s list of 2004 to 2005’s most censored stories in the corporate press.