Chapter 17 The Price of Our Vanities
Jim Sweeney was the last of the group to take his seat. There were seven of them gathered around the table in Alvin's office. Sweeney was the Chairman; he called the meeting to order.
"I want it on the record that I don't like calling this meeting behind Frank's back," he declared after completing the preliminaries.
"Alright, you are on ze record," Herr Mueller snapped back. "Unt now vee get on vit it, ja?"
"Get on with what?" Alvin asked. "This was just to be a discussion session."
"I dit not fly across ze ocean for dees-cussion," Mueller retorted. "I haf call for action."
"What action is that, Detlef?" Lambert asked.
"Feerst, I vant it unterstood zat if ze Wertheim merger vas not lost, zis vood haf not bin necessary."
"So, this is sour grapes over Wertheim?" Sweeney said with an exasperated sigh. "It wasn't the right time. There'll be other opportunities. We have to be patient."
"Patient? I vas patient. Ze deal vas set—un-teel Frank Bennett broke it apart."
"You were patient to a fault, Detlef," Lambert agreed.
"Now, just a minute," Sweeney insisted. He turned to Alvin. "You approved the shelving of the registration. It was for good reasons."
"Well, I did," Alvin confirmed, "on Frank's say-so. It seemed like the logical thing to do at the time. Hindsight is always twenty-twenty."
"Look where we are now," Lambert pointed out. "I'm not saying that Frank was all wrong, but no one can say that we're not at a standstill. We can't go on like this much longer. We've got to think of the shareholders."
"The major players are holding firm," Sweeney said. "I've spoken with Frank about this several times. He has a plan; he's putting it in place; he'll have us back on track very soon once Al, here, gets the SEC off our back."
"Plan! Acch!" Mueller scoffed and waved his hand at Sweeney in disgust.
"We were supposed to have a hearing on Wednesday. The judge postponed until Monday," Al Crossman told them. "The SEC lawyers couldn't make it down until then."
"That seems like a big favor to them from the judge," Alvin said.
"Never mind zat!" Mueller thundered over them. "I haf deef-rent plan."
"Different plan?" Alvin asked. "What kind of plan?"
"I haf —how do you say?—consortium," Mueller told them. "My bank vill provide finance. Vee haf four persons to buy surplus shares of Vestern in ze market. Zee de-mand vill increase ze share price, ja. Zen SEC can go to hell."
"Just who are these four persons?" Sweeney demanded.
"We have to check the regulations on that," Crossman warned. "You can't take control of a company without registering with the SEC. It could be considered market manipulation."
"Zeese peoples vill be known only to me until ze proper moment," Mueller replied. "Let me assure all zat no one person vill own more zen five percent. Vee haf checked dis."
"It might be deemed a conspiracy," Crossman insisted. "The government could treat all four as a single person.
"Perhaps in America, but vee are in Germany. Undt, as I said, ze problems of ze stock price vill be solved."
Crossman looked at the others and shrugged.
"This is nothing but strong-arm through the back door," Sweeney protested. "I think we should adjourn this meeting right now." He crossed his arms and shot a glance Alvin's way in search of support.
"I think we should, at least hear him out," one of the directors said. It was one of those who had been silent. He was A. Bartlett Dodge, head of a large private foundation. "We have to think of the shareholders and this would prop up the price and solve a lot of problems."
"That could only be a temporary..." Sweeney began to say.
"Wait a minute," Alvin interrupted. "Where would we enter in the course of this scheme, Detlef?"
"A good question," another Finance Committee Director added. It was Randall Trainor, a retired insurance company chairman. "I think we haven't heard everything, yet."
"So right, Herr Trainor," Mueller confessed. "Z'ere is no deal unless vee replace Frank Bennett."
"This is blackmail!" Sweeney shouted.
"I repeat; Bennett is out," Mueller said, ignoring Sweeney. He sat back, his arms crossed over his chest.
"But why?" Alvin asked.
"It was Frank's fault that we lost the stock issue," Lambert reminded them.
"He was always against the Wertheim deal," Dodge added.
"He was doing his job," Sweeney retorted, "and doing it well, too."
"Bennett is out," Mueller confirmed, "undt zen vee move into ze EU."
"We need a better presence in the EU," Lambert argued. "It was our strategy all along."
The meeting began breaking down. Several private conversations erupted.
"Let's have order," Sweeney yelled out. The room went silent. "First of all, Al's got something to say."
Crossman cleared his throat. "I have doubts about the legality of this whole thing. I have to advise everyone here to keep silent on this until the proper legal research can be done. Any action taken now would be extremely risky."
"We'd have to bring it to the whole Board," Alvin cautioned. "It would have to be explained to them."
Legal research performed by your firm, no doubt," Dodge said.
Crossman raised his eyebrows, but didn't say anything.
Sweeney seized the opportunity. "Well then, we'll adjourn; and let the record show that there was discussion only with no agreement, and no action was taken, on advice of counsel."
"Let me state vone zing," Mueller declared. "Z'ere is little time. Bennett must go, and zen we move into Urope!"
"Well, if you want Bennett gone, I suppose you want me out, too?" Sweeney said.