Case 1- The Adelphia Scandal
ETH501: Business Ethics
Dr. Bonnie Adams
4/13/2014
Introduction Aldelphia Communications Corporation was founded in 1952 by John Rigas and two partners. Rigas began to grow the business and by July 1, 1986 Adelphia was ready to go public. The company quickly grew into the sixth largest cable company in the United States. Its annual revenue exceeded $2.9 billion with offices located in 32 states and Puerto Rico (Barlup, Hanne & Stuart, 2009). With more than five million subscribers, it seemed that Adelphia was headed to the top of the food chain. In March of 2002 everything changed. The SEC announced that Adelphia had “systematically and fraudulently excluded billions of dollars in liabilities from its consolidated financial statements by hiding them on the books of off-balance sheet affiliates. It also inflated earnings to meet Wall Street expectations, falsified operations statistics, and concealed blatant self-dealing by the family that founded and controlled Adelphia, the Rigas family” (Barlup, Hanne & Stuart, 2009). The extent to which the Rigas family and their coconspirators had looted the company and ostentatious amount of time and money stolen from investors made this scandal one of the most unbelievable cases the SEC had ever seen. This paper will discuss how Adelphia Communications’ executives violated not just the trust of the company’s shareholders but also the trust of billions of consumers who were financially impacted by the devastating effects it brought to the market. First, the paper will describe what exactly the scandal was and how it came to be. Then it will identify and focus on the two key ethical problems associated with Adelphia Communications. After that the paper will further discuss deontological ethics and Immanuel Kant’s Categorical Imperative (CI). From there the paper will apply a decision making framework of business ethics to the formentioned ethical problems using
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