I need some company names that have had scandals...

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Procter and Gamble



Read this book called "Soap Opera".



Wall Street Journal reporter Swasy was, she tell us, spied upon, followed, and bugged while writing this admirable--if ultimately somewhat disappointing--history of the dark side of Ivory-soap and Tide manufacturer Proctor & Gamble. According to hundreds of interviews Swasy conducted with current and former P&G managers, contractors, and company watchdogs, P&G--a founder of the national brand name and a pillar of Cincinnati civic life since 1837--turns out to be a paranoid corporate strongman obsessed with controlling the lives of its employees and preserving the sacrosanct reputation of its brands. In chapters devoted, respectively, to the single-minded career of CEO Ed Artzt, to racism and sexism at headquarters, to totalitarian demands for worker loyalty, to hushed-up environmental debacles in P&G plants around the nation, and, finally, to the ruthless marketing here and abroad of brands--including Crest, Pampers, Tide, and, most notoriously, Rely tampons (which were responsible for a number of deaths in the toxic-shock syndrome scandal of the 1970's), Swasy thoroughly dismantles P&G's wholesome image. The documentation of various kinds of corporate malfeasance--including the well-publicized but still shocking episode in which P&G persuaded friendly local county law-enforcement officials secretly to search the private phone records of hundreds of P&G employees, looking for calls to Swasy's Pittsburgh phone after an unfavorable story by her appeared in The Wall Street Journal--is heroic. But the cumulative tale isn't shapely enough to stand on its own as a cautionary story, and Swasy is too close to it to ask what it tells us about corporate America today. For all Swasy's careful work, the book finally has a little ring of an author's rant. Must reading, however, for company watchers, P&G shareholders, curious consumers, and citizens of Cincinnati. (Sixteen pages of b&w photographs) -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

 
CJ - do a search on phrase "Caught in Email". When I worked in software one of the products I was responsible in marketing was an email management app. I used examples of all the companies that got caught discussing issues in an email and the companies either lost the emails or destroyed even though they have to be retained as records management. Microsoft, Bank America, Enron Arthur Andersen are some that come to mind.
 
PG&E (Erin Brokovich story)



GPU (Three Mile Island)



Morton Thiokol (space shuttle o-ring failure)



Perkin-Elmer (Hubble telescope mirror flaw)



J&J (tainted Tylenol...an example of avoiding scandal with good/fast public relations)



Arthur Andersen (Enron accounting)



WR Grace (well water pollution in Woburn, MA)



Occidental Petroleum (Love Canal)

 
Don - I worked for a gold mining company during the scandal of Bre-X. If I recall some high ranking officials from Bre-X died in a helicopter crash in Indonesia. An "Accident" some peeps from Barrick said it wasn't an accident.
 
All, thanks for the info and the links. Having the links provided great info as well as gave me a reference to list the source of the info.



I appreciate it...
 
I am suprised no one said Qwest. Nochio's trial just went to jury deliberations for insider tradingin 2001 and the trouble he got in for the hostile take over of US West in 2000 that had anti-trust violation. Another big on that noe one mentioned is Martha Stewart.
 
Nobody said Adelphia, either.



*edit* Nevermind. TJR did. I'm stupid.
 
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