Kissinger might be a lesser human being than her, but he made a lot of people very rich, and has enormous political clout. (E.g., he was the initial chair of the 9/11 commission, when the Bush administration was still trying to cover it up.)
Not only did she raise a lot of money and good PR without a product, but she also kept the company running for so long that it's almost old enough to drink. I can definitely imagine worse CEOs on a board.
I mean, sure, the truth eventually came out. But I doubt "honesty" is at the top 10 priorities of most big companies.
Yes, but she did so in part by using fraud and deception. When you're an early stage company trying to raise money from investors there's a large component of "trust us to do the right things with your money" that is going to be hard to sell investors with her on the board.
There is no comparison between the two. Martha Stewart was running a real business and made the mistake of talking to police without a lawyer -- that's very different from running a giant sham operation that defrauded many.
The mistake she made was not that she talked to police without a lawyer, but that she lied to investigators. Yes, I'm sure the lawyer would not have let her make up those lies, but it's not like she just behaved well and got railroaded some how. And I never understood why she lied in the first place. If your paid broker gives you a tip that a CEO is dumping his shares, are you not allowed to act on it?
Some interrogators are really good at phrasing and intoning a question making it seem like they're inquiring about something very wrong, worth trying to cover up, e.g., "you didn't have any information about XYZ selling his shares, did you?" It shouldn't work if the target is thinking straight, but the whole point is to trigger a knee-jerk emotional reaction.
Martha Stewart wholesale lied by saying that she and her broker had a pre-set price point of $60 for when to dump ImClone. That part is completely fabricated by Stewart. It's impossible to mess up 'My stock broker told me CEO was dumping his shares' with 'We agreed to sell at $60'
Yeah but insider trading is different than fraud. The line is blurry, but I'm sure everyone at that level has some level of inside knowledge they have traded on at one time or another.
Holmes on the other hand was directly defrauding investors, why would you want her on an executive team/board trying to get investments?
The problem with insider trading is that it creates perverse incentives. It, in itself, does not necessarily defraud.
If I work for Apple, and I sneak a glance at their balance sheet, and short its stock, I did not rob APPL shareholders. It's still illegal, and insider trading (Because otherwise, I'd have an incentive to actively sink the company, while benefiting from a short.)