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Businesses Technology

Best Buy Opens Probe Into CEO's Personal Conduct (wsj.com) 33

The board of Best Buy is investigating allegations that CEO Corie Barry had an inappropriate romantic relationship with a fellow executive (Warning: source paywalled; alternative source), who has since left the electronics retailer. The Wall Street Journal reports: The allegations were sent to the board in an anonymous letter dated Dec. 7. The letter claims Ms. Barry had a romantic relationship for years with former Best Buy Senior Vice President Karl Sanft before she took over as CEO last June.

"Best Buy takes allegations of misconduct very seriously," a spokesman told The Wall Street Journal. The Minneapolis company said its board has hired the law firm Sidley Austin LLP to conduct an independent review that is ongoing. "We encourage the letter's author to come forward and be part of that confidential process," the Best Buy spokesman said. "We will not comment further until the review is concluded." Ms. Barry didn't address the allegations and said she is cooperating with the probe. "The Board has my full cooperation and support as it undertakes this review, and I look forward to its resolution in the near term," she said in a statement.

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Best Buy Opens Probe Into CEO's Personal Conduct

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  • They had Steve Wozniak arrested for buying a car radio with $2.00 bills. Screw them.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Therefore, we must forbid CEO's from having sex, period. This trend of firing CEO's for having sex with consenting co-workers is 100% legit.

    • I just read a scary article on the amount of background checking that companies will do when hiring executives. They interviewed a guy whose company is basically doing this as a service.

      I shed few tears for our bonus-spending overlords, but the stuff they do was kind of scary, like FBI "top secret" level checking involving private investigators, "off the record" interviews with friends, associates, etc.

      Basically they're trawling for this kind of thing, sexual peccadilloes, drinking habits, all kinds of per

      • I think they have to do this to justify to investors that they're doing "due diligence" or whatever. You don't want to see your CEO in a news article about being found in a Vegas high roller suite with a mountain of coke and several not-their-spouses. Not to say that it's a guarantee it won't happen, but they need to at least show that they tried to find out about their past when it does.

        Having done support work for execs in the earlier part of my career, I think these kinds of relationships develop simply

  • No overlap? (Score:4, Informative)

    by llamahunter ( 830343 ) on Friday January 17, 2020 @06:37PM (#59631430)
    The SVP left the company in March 2019 to become COO of 24hr Fitness (https://www.linkedin.com/in/karl-sanft-a7b48031/). The current CEO wasn't promoted until later, in June 2019 (https://www.linkedin.com/in/coriebarry/). Before that, she was EVP and CFO for several years. Seems like a consensual relationship between peers?
    • An EVP and an SVP are not peers.

      If the company's CoC prohibits the relationship, then they shouldn't have started it.

      If the company's CoC doesn't prohibit the relationship, then why were they hiding it?

      • Re: No overlap? (Score:1, Insightful)

        "If the company's CoC prohibits the relationship, then they shouldn't have started it."

        Big corporations, and their reactionary-Progressive toadies, sure do love forcing their CoC down the throats of unconsenting workers.

        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          Nothing was forced upon them...get over it. When you go to work somewhere, you either accept the company's terms, or go someplace else. Don't like it, leave and stop whining about how the evil corporate world is out to get you. There are plenty of places that wouldn't have cared.

  • Hey, here's a suggestion for making the workplace less hostile: Let people love each other.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Let's assume this is true. She was cheating on her spouse with a co-worker. While they probably helped each other out, it doesn't sound like either held a position of supervision or authority or even any real quid pro.

    So besides gossip, there's no harm, no foul to the corporation. Spare me the BS corporate policy details.

    The real smear here is shitting on her marriage in public. Let's even assume all the parties including her husband knew. But now their private lives are made public when there's no und

  • but also a Senior Stupper one.

  • It's a well-known fact that CEOs and other high-level executives have these sorts of relationships going on all the time. This one even sounds consensual. On the whole it's a lot less creepy than other executive behavior. (Example, Google's chief counsel abandoning his wife and the woman he cheated on her with and got pregnant, or Mark Hurd hiring some model at HP as a marketing exec, then constantly stalking and pursuing her until she got him canned.)

    Since this was an "anonymous letter," my assumption is t

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