Bayh Bayh Dendreon

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Has she been named to any new boards now that her husband has been out of the political scene?

Rules need to be changed. If a politician's spouse joins a Board it should have to be proven what skills that person has that separates him/her from others who would take the position. What a joke.

Mrs Bayh, where was your oversight? Do you have a connection to Care to Live?
 












this story is dated a bit. update: mrs. bayh has made millions from dendreon.

"Despite the faltering economy, the job market for spouses of Democrat Senators continues to blossom. Daniel Lee, in an Indianapolis Star investigative report, details how Mrs. Evan Bayh appears to be following the example of Michelle Obama's remunerative affiliation with the University of Chicago Hospital that was the beneficiary of proposed earmarks initiated by her husband.


The lovely Susan Bayh, formerly a mid-level attorney for the Eli Lilly Corporation headquartered in Indianapolis, has seen her income skyrocket since Evan joined the auspicious upper chamber of Congress in 1998.


The Bayhs are embroiled in a controversy over the inordinate number of corporate boards on which Mrs. Bayh serves. She is described by the liberal advocacy group Public Citizen as a "professional board member." The controversy will be certain to generate a closer examination of the couple's finances. Formerly overlooked tidbits like Susan Bayh's Wellpoint stock dumping profit should raise a few eyebrows as well:


On January 7, 2007, Susan Bayh exercised her options to acquire 3,333 shares of Wellpoint for an estimated cost of $147,000 and sold them the same day for an estimated price of $260,000, netting a tidy sum of $113,000. She repeated the process on May 17, 2007 for a net profit of $136,000. On December 11, 2007 she dumped an additional 1,430 shares of Wellpoint for $123,000. Why not? The entire Wellpoint board of directors was doing the same thing.


Bayh's total profits from stock dumping were $372,000. How much health care could the state of Indiana purchase for $372,000?


It appears that since Evan Bayh was elected to the Senate in 1998,


... numerous companies recruited her, and she eventually served on the boards of eight companies. At least one of them asked her to reduce the number of boards she served on, apparently because she was spread too thin to be effective.


And Susan is really hauling in the dough while strolling the medical corporation Board walk. Daniel Lee writes in the Indianapolis Star:


Susan Bayh served on these five boards from 2006 through 2008. All have a stake in health-care reform...

...Bayh's compensation during those years:
•WellPoint $976,000: Indianapolis-based health insurer, includes Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
•Dendreon $370,391: Seattle-based biotech company focused on cancer treatments.
•MDRNA* $388,169: Bothell, Wash., biotech company developing therapeutics to treat liver diseases.
•Curis $184,001: Cambridge, Mass., drug-development company focused on cancer treatments.
•Dyax $221,692: Cambridge, Mass., biopharmaceuticals company developing treatments for use in oncology and inflammation.

Total $2,140,253

Until 2008, Susan Bayh served on 8 corporate boards. Now that Mrs. Bayh's number of board memberships has been reduced to 6, one would think the wife of a U.S. Senator would have the time to discuss her positions and how she and Evan avoid conflicts of interest when health-care legislation comes up for a Senate vote. Not this senator's wife: requests by journalists and watch-dog agencies have been met thus far with stonewalling. As Lee reports,


Adding to speculation about a connection between her board memberships and her husband's office is Susan Bayh's unwillingness to discuss the matter, including for this story. She has declined several requests for comment on her corporate interests, making it difficult to tell where those interests end.


Broc Romanek, the editor of TheCorporateCounsel.com, a board advisory web-site, claims that Mrs. Bayh is "over-boarded" as well:


... most directors are expected to devote 20 to 30 hours a month to each board. That means Susan Bayh's six current board seats could consume up to 180 hours a month. The eight she served on last year could require 60 hours a week.


"Even for retirees, it is difficult to envision them being able to adequately perform their board duties if they serve on more than three or four boards," Romanek wrote in an e-mail.


As for Senator Bayh, his response to questions about potential conflicts of interest seems rather imperious, as though the mere statement of his self-perceived moral certitude is sufficient to allay any doubts about the rather tangled web of his family's financial interests:


"I'm going to do what I've always done . . . vote my conscience and do what's right for the people of the state. Period....Her activities have had zero influence on me in my official capacity..."


With the publication of Daniel Lee's report in the IndyStar, it seems likely that Senator & Mrs. Bayh's tune may change, or at least have a little volume added. While blue-state Senators like Diane Feinstein of California and Chris Dodd of Connecticut might be able to get by with the appearance of conflicts of interest, Hoosiers are a more conservative lot and are much less likely to put up with potential financial turpitude."
 






"Susan Bayh’s position as a director for eight businesses puts her in the league of “professional directors,” a term used to refer to people who sit on multiple corporate boards and are not otherwise employed.

“My view,” said Nell Minnow, president of The Corporate Library, which rates board performance, “is you can have just as many conflicts of interest. If you’re a professional director, the last thing you want to do is rock the boat.”

That’s a dangerous quality for a director, she said, because good directors are not reluctant to challenge the company’s CEO.

Minnow said one of the best qualities a director can have is a sense of independence. The National Association of Directors, which runs training programs for directors, also puts independence at the top of the list of important qualities."

Exactly Nell. There was weak to no oversight over this greed-driven psychopath CEO.
 






"Susan Bayh went from midlevel lawyer at Eli Lilly while Evan Bayh was Indiana governor to serving on the boards of eight companies, beginning the month before he was elected to the Senate. "Mrs. Bayh is what is called 'overboarded,' " says one industry watcher."

Again, maybe if she wasn't so "overboarded" she might have actually had some legitimate oversight at DNDN.
 






Life/Jobs are all about connections and taking care of those with power. It would be great if we had a media that actually investigated what politicians significant others did and how they got those jobs. Here in the most corrupt state in the country,IL. politicians have every family member working for them or for some cushy state job with unbelievable pension benefits. Our politicians also give away scholarships to friends and donors. It's absolutely frightening that nothing is done. And we wonder why we're bankrupt as a country. It's becoming a country of the haves and the have nots. Politicians,D and R, are only looking out for themselves. I guess I'm just jealous of having no political connections?
 






I don't see you as jealous. You probably see it as something that will never change and you're rhetorically saying if you can't stop it you wish you could be a part of it. Ultimately most Americans probably including yourself wish this wasn't part of American culture. Sadly stories like this rarely come to light and usually only come to light when there is a situation like Dendreon where the Board completely failed in its oversight responsibilities. It shows that not only is a politician's spouse on the board but the board she was a part of had little to no oversight over a rogue CEO whose first priority clearly was his own wealth.
 


















Sadly this is the way America works. She would never admit her culpability here and would never admit the system is is so flawed to let her get on boards simply because her husband was powerful. To the OP, if this is your signature issue take up the cause. There would be a simple solution. It would have to go through congress but the situation that happened here may add fuel to your case. The whole board was/is incompetent and she is on this board. Washington banned or is banning insider trading by politicians. They can easily forbid what is clear conflicts of interests by saying that a politicians spouse can not be paid in any way by sitting on a company's BOD. This politicians spouse would never have joined boards for free. Her income was so important that he ended his political career for all the undeserved money she made from sitting on boards basically doing nothing as proven by her work on Dendreon's BOD.