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Are America's Top Executives Paid Too Much Money? Episode | KCRW's To The Point

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KCRW's To The Point

Hosted by Warren Olney, "To the Point" is a fast-paced, news based one-hour daily national program that focuses on the hot-button issues of the day, co-produced by KCRW and Public Radio International.

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Are America's Top Executives Paid Too Much Money?


Are America's Top Executives Paid Too Much Money?

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DATE : Thu, 9 Feb 2006 16:00:00 GMT
Entered in Database : 2006-02-09 16:00:00
length : 18513024
Link to the Show / Show Notes

With business leaders on trial and in prison, there's growing concern about executive compensation. American CEO's get more than 300 times the pay of an average worker. Golden parachutes, stock options and free use of company jets are hidden away in proxy statements or not reported at all. Some pay packages encourage decisions that are good for top executives but bad for their companies. We talk to business reporters, legal experts, contract negotiators and union strategists about CEO demands and calls for board accountability, and hear about the first new public disclosure rules in 14 years. Making News: President Bush Describes Foiled Al Qaeda Plot against LA
In a Washington speech today, President Bush gave new details of an incident that he said illustrates multinational cooperation against terrorism. He said that a South East Asian country helped thwart a plot by Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of September 11. Josh Meyer, staff writer for the Los Angeles Times, wrote in October about the plot hijack to fly a plane into Library Tower in Downtown Los Angeles.Reporter's Notebook: Report on Why Guant--namo Detainees Are Being Held
Today's New York Times reports that officials at Guant--namo Bay, Cuba, are using tougher measures to force-feed detainees who go on hunger strikes, apparently with the aim of committing suicide. Yesterday, lawyers for some of the detainees reported that half the 500 prisoners have not been accused of committing hostile acts against the US or its allies. Joshua Denbeaux, whose law-professor father and students at Seton Hall University in New Jersey studied public records to determine what charges have been made against inmates, represents two Tunisian detainees.


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