I'm normally a free market guy...a company is free to pay its people whatever at their own peril if they make a sh*tty product. But paying a guy severance after committing a fireable offense just to avoid the public scrutiny of a trial that would likely hurt shareholder value is patently unfair. You and I would be canned with prejudice, as others here have indicated. The CEO's employment contract + the desire of the company to minimize its public relations problem trump fairness and concepts of justice in most peoples eyes.
Very well said. I think the bottom line is that in Corporate America once you are in the 'executives club' you are in the club. Its obvious and very well known that the 'club' plays by much different rules than everyone else.
I mean look at the CEO of Home Depot with his massive parachute a few years back, who then went to Chrysler. He will never ever ever have a non-executive job, because he's 'in the club'.
