Word: freeman
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Bulldogs' point total remained stagnant over the next four matches, as Crimson grapplers John Freeman, Peter Holmes, Kevin McGinty, and Steve Farrell notched consecutive victories to built up a 20-10 Harvard lead...
...firm and who had previously worked in a similar department of Kidder, Peabody. Known in investigators' documents by the code name CS-1, Siegel had confessed that while at Kidder, Peabody from June 1984 to January 1986, he had been part of an insider-trading ring that included Wigton, Freeman and Tabor. Last week Siegel pleaded guilty to tax evasion and criminal conspiracy to violate U.S. securities laws, and agreed to a demand by the Securities and Exchange Commission that he give up $9 million in illegal profits. He had become a target of the investigation because of his position...
...quick buck. Wigton had been a member of the Kidder, Peabody firm for more than 30 years. He was elected last year to the board of governors of the National Association of Securities Dealers, the respected regulating arm of the over-the-counter stock industry. Freeman was a 22-year Goldman, Sachs veteran. Only the youthful Tabor could be described in fast-track terms. A Rhodes scholar, he held down the No. 2 job in Kidder's arbitrage department under Wigton. In 1986 he hopped to Chemical Bank to head a new arbitrage unit. When his views clashed with those...
...Corporate Raider T. Boone Pickens. (At no point last week was Pickens alleged to have taken part in any wrongdoing.) Unocal, which was advised by Goldman, Sachs, eventually beat off the raider's advances, at a cost of $4.4 billion. But according to the charges, Goldman, Sachs Partner Freeman, who was privy to Unocal strategy, disclosed inside information about an important defensive move to Siegel at Kidder, Peabody. The move was a so-called exclusionary stock tender, which meant that Unocal would purchase stock from shareholders other than Pickens in a move to isolate the raider...
...federal authorities also charged that at roughly the same time, Siegel passed illegal insider information back to Goldman, Sachs' Freeman. Siegel allegedly told Freeman of secret plans by a Kidder, Peabody client, the Manhattan investment firm Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts, to launch a takeover bid for Miami-based Storer Communications. That put Freeman in a position to profit from trading in Storer stock...