Excerpts: former Global Crossing CEO Leo Hindery (August 07, 2001) Southwick: And did you have the advantage of being under the TCI umbrella in terms of programming deals… Hindery: Right. Southwick: And hardware deals as well? Hindery: Yes, we were a full affiliate of TCI. John, bless his heart, you know, how many of us […]
TCI InterMedia
Excerpts: Global Crossing Ltd Def14A (May 08, 2000) The Executive Committee consists of Messrs. Winnick (chairman), Bloom, Conway, Cook, Hindery and McCorkindale. The Executive Committee held no meetings in 1999. With certain exceptions, the Executive Committee may exercise all the powers of the Board of Directors when the Board is not in session. In December
Excerpts: “AT&T and TCI to Merge.” “This merger is a tremendous growth opportunity for TCI’s shareowners and employees,” said John C. Malone, chairman and CEO of TCI. “As TCI continues the largescale deployment of advanced digital settop devices, AT&T’s extraordinary brand and resources are ideal complements to TCI’s broadband cable distribution and operations. AT&T Consumer
Excepts: “Cable execs slam Leo Hindery, YES.” Cox Communications Inc. president Jim Robbins told an National Show closing-session crowd in New Orleans that he sided with Cablevision and its chairman, Charles Dolan. “I called Chuck two weeks ago and said ‘hang in there. You’re doing the right thing,’” Robbins said. AT&T Broadband chairman Bill Schleyer
Excerpts: “Global Crossing Explained.” The next CEO was Leo Hindery, another AT&T executive, who had joined the company a few months earlier as head of its webhosting division, GlobalCenter. In March 2000, the month Hindery took over, Global Crossing’s stock had reached a high of $61 per share. A month later, it had fallen to
Excerpts: GT Group Telecom, Form F-1. We used substantial capital to fund our acquisitions of the businesses of Shaw FiberLink and Videon FiberLink, our acquisition of the Cable Atlantic competitive local exchange carrier and commercial telecommunications operations and our acquisitions from 360networks, and will have significant capital expenditures, working capital, debt service and cash flow
Excerpts: Global Crossing’s 10-K. In January 2001, we sold our GlobalCenter web hosting business to Exodus Communications, Inc. for 108.2 million Exodus common shares, representing approximately 20.0% of its outstanding shares at the effective time of the merger. As of that date, the value of the transaction was approximately $1.95 billion. As part of the
Excerpts: Global Crossing’s 8-K. On October 11, 2000, the Board of Directors of the Registrant named Thomas J. Casey as Chief Executive Officer. Mr. Casey is also a director of the Registrant and a member of its Office of the Chairman, and had been Vice Chairman of the Registrant prior to his appointment as CEO.
Excerpts: “Global Crossing’s Leo Hindery for Hire: Quits After Just 10 Mos.” A year later, he repeated the fix-and-flip process at Global Crossing by packaging its fiber optic Internet pipelines and selling them to Exodus Communications for $6.1 billion. That gave Hindery a profit of $205 million for his 10 months of work there. Global
Excerpt: “Global Crossing: CEO Leo Hindery is Out, Thomas Casey is In” Leo Hindery, former head of AT&T Corp.’s cable television operations, had only been at the job seven months. He joined Global Crossing last December and succeeded former CEO Bob Annunziata in March. But in the past few months, Global Crossing stock has tumbled