HomeBiography & MemoirsTaking Down the Lion: The Triumphant Rise and Tragic Fall of Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Taking Down the Lion: The Triumphant Rise and Tragic Fall of Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski

hardcoverJanuary 7, 2014
Regular price $38.86 USD
Regular price Sale price $38.86 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9781137278913 ISBN-10: 1137278919
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Binding
hardcover
Published
January 7, 2014
Weight
1.0 lbs
Dimensions
24.00×2.80×16.30 cm

About this book

Taking Down the Lion: The Triumphant Rise and Tragic Fall of Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski by Neal, Catherine S.. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9781137278913.

As the widely-admired CEO of Tyco International, Dennis Kozlowski grew a little-known New Hampshire conglomerate into a global giant. In a stunning series of events, Kozlowski suddenly lost his job along with his favored public status when he was indicted by legendary Manhattan DA Robert Morgenthau―it was an inglorious end to an otherwise brilliant career. Kozlowski was the face of corporate excess in the turbulent post-Enron environment; he was pictured under headlines that read "Oink Oink," and publicly castigated for his extravagant lifestyle. "Deal-a-Day Dennis" was transformed into the "poster child for corporate greed." Kozlowski was ultimately convicted of grand larceny and other crimes that, in sum, found the former CEO guilty of wrongfully taking $100 million from Tyco. Taking Down the Lion shines a bright light on former CEO Dennis Kozlowski and the Tyco corporate scandal―it is the definitive telling of a largely misunderstood episode in U.S. business history. In an unfiltered view of corporate America, Catherine Neal pulls back the curtain to reveal a world of big business, ambition, money, and an epidemic of questionable ethics that infected not only business dealings but extended to attorneys, journalists, politicians, and the criminal justice system. When the ugly truth is told, its clear the "good guys" were not all good and the "bad guys" not all bad. And there were absolutely no heroes.