https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/30/world/mckinsey-bribes-boeing-firtash-extradition.html
Can an anon post this, it's behind a paywall.
Post it, not archive.
nm anon is slow
ty anon
‘Exhibit A’: How McKinsey Got Entangled in a Bribery Case
The consultancy’s report became key evidence in a battle over the extradition of a powerful Ukrainian oligarch charged in a scheme to help Boeing.
Dmitry Firtash, a Ukrainian billionaire, was indicted in the United States on charges of directing $18.5 million in bribes to Indian officials on Boeing’s behalf.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/30/world/mckinsey-bribes-boeing-firtash-extradition.html
https://archive.is/qm08V
In Scandal’s Wake, McKinsey Seeks Culture Shift
Dominic Barton is 51 years old, 6 feet 4 and silver-haired, yet he has the countenance of a choirboy. Born in Uganda, he is the son of a missionary and a nurse, both Canadians. But it could be said that the society to which he really belongs is that of McKinsey & Company.
For a quarter of a century, except for a brief stint as a currency analyst at Rothschild, Mr. Barton has worked at McKinsey, the consulting firm with more than 1,400 partners and 18,500 employees around the world. And that is why he is facing the most daunting task of his career: as McKinsey’s global managing director, he is trying to change the culture of the firm that shaped him.
There are two reasons that Mr. Barton is on this mission: Anil Kumar and Rajat K. Gupta. Mr. Kumar was a McKinsey director who, in 2010, pleaded guilty to insider trading charges and publicly acknowledged giving corporate secrets gleaned on the job to Raj Rajaratnam, a founder of the Galleon Group hedge fund, in return for cash. Never in the history of the firm had a partner been charged with violating securities laws.
A year after the Kumar scandal, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil complaint accusing Mr. Gupta, a Goldman Sachs board member and former McKinsey managing director, of telling Mr. Rajaratnam about a $5 billion investment in Goldman by Warren E. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway at the height of the financial crisis. Mr. Gupta, a revered former partner who had been elected managing director three times in a row, serving at the helm for a decade, was ultimately convicted of criminal charges of leaking boardroom business.
moar…. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/12/business/self-help-at-mckinsey.html
https://archive.is/6oguu