WSJ: Smith & Wesson Chairman Resigns, as Past Resurfaces

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sendtoscott

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Smith & Wesson Chairman Resigns, as Past Resurfaces

Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. -- The new chairman of the board of Smith & Wesson's parent company resigned after a newspaper dredged up the fact that he had spent more than 10 years in prison in the 1950s and 1960s for a string of armed robberies.

James Joseph Minder, who had been an outside director of Smith & Wesson Holding Corp., said he submitted his resignation voluntarily at a directors meeting this week.

"I felt it was the best thing for the company, given the circumstances," Mr. Minder, 74 years old, told the Republican, a newspaper in Springfield, for Thursday's editions.

Company officials didn't immediately return telephone calls seeking comment. The newspaper said the gun maker was expected to name a replacement on Friday.

The resignation by Mr. Minder, who lives in Scottsdale, Ariz., came three weeks after the Arizona Republic reported that he had spent more than 10 years in Michigan prisons in the 1950s and 1960s for a string of armed robberies and an attempted prison escape.

Mr. Minder said he didn't disclose his criminal past to the other directors of the 150-year-old gun company prior to his election as chairman in mid-January. "Nobody asked," he said, adding he had turned his life around in the 30 years since his release from prison.

Mr. Minder was named to Smith & Wesson's board after serving on the board of Saf-T-Hammer, the Scottsdale company that acquired Smith & Wesson in 2001.

After his release from prison, Mr. Minder founded Spectrum Human Services, a nonprofit agency serving delinquent and disabled Michigan youths, and ran it for 20 years before retiring to Arizona in 1997. In Scottsdale, he was president and chief operating officer of Amherst Consulting Co., a management consulting firm.
 
If he had been involved in a company which catered to liberals he would have been touted nation-wide as a man who overcame his criminal past and made a success of himself. And he would have been defended in the media and on the floor of the senate.
 
FPrice, you are correct, but complaining about it doesn't change reality.

I agree that it sounds like this man learned from his mistakes and became a much better human being for that, but in today's climate, in which we have adopted a nanny-state mentality about everything from motorcycles to guns to drug usage to a bared teat on the Superbowl (can you tell that I'm a bit of a Libertarian?) gun companies have to be extra careful about their Ps and Qs. It is unfair that this guy had to resign, but it was also necessary.
 
I do admire the man...

for what he did with his life after getting out of the slam. And he did the right thing by standing down, although the "righter" thing would have been to be up front about his past- because NO firearms maker needs this kind of negative attention.

"We make handguns, and our Chairman has a long career connection with our product. Huh? Oh, he used them to rob banks..."

Bet Colt can't match THAT one.

Hey- at least he ain't Marion Berry!
 
Smith & Wesson Chairman a Criminal

http://money.cnn.com/2004/02/27/news/smith_wesson/index.htm?cnn=yes

Smith & Wesson chief quits over crime

Chairman of the nation's No. 2 gun maker resigns over past armed robbery, a newspaper report says.
February 27, 2004: 2:22 PM EST

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - James Joseph Minder, chairman of handgun maker Smith & Wesson Holding Corp., resigned after a published report revealed he'd spent as much as 15 years in prison decades ago for armed robberies and a bank heist.

The Republican, a daily newspaper in Springfield, Mass., reported Thursday that Minder confirmed his resignation without realizing that the company had not made an official announcement.

Smith & Wesson (SWB: up $0.07 to $1.61, Research, Estimates), the nation's second-largest gun manufacturer after Sturm, Ruger, told CNN/Money that it plans to release a statement later Friday but did not wish to comment on the newspaper report or confirm Minder's resignation at this time.

Minder's convictions were unknown to Smith & Wesson until the Arizona Republic newspaper chronicled Minder's criminal past earlier this month. Smith & Wesson is based in Scottsdale, Ariz.

The Republic article reported that Minder maintains he had never tried to cover up his past, and that the reason he failed to disclose his criminal past to Smith & Wesson earlier was because nobody had asked the question.

Minder, 74, had spent time in prison in the 1950s and 1960s for a string of armed robberies and an attempted prison escape, according to the Republic. During that time, the Detroit News said he was known for carrying a 16-gauge, sawed-off shotgun.

Minder was sentenced to 3-1/2 to 10 years in state prison for robbing a store while attending University of Michigan as a journalism student, he told the Republic.

Minder also told the paper that he turned his life around after finishing his prison sentence in 1969. He said he has spent his professional career trying to help kids after receiving a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering, a bachelor of arts in sociology and a master of arts in social work, all earned from the University of Michigan.

Minder, who served on Smith & Wesson's board since 2001, had run a successful non-profit agency serving delinquent and disabled Michigan youths for 20 years before retiring to Scottsdale in 1997, the Republic said.

Shortly before the Republic article was published, Smith & Wesson had named Minder as chairman, taking over the position from Roy Cuny, who remains on the board and continues to work as CEO and president of the company.

Cuny had been named to the top three posts in December, after Mitchell Saltz resigned as chairman and CEO. Colt Melby stepped down as president amid a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into the late filing of earnings statements.
 
Or it can be said that he WAS a criminal who has since served his time and gone on to become a productive member of society.

Still it doesn't cast a good light on S&W. Especially considering the recent albeit misguided attitudes that gun manufacturers are patrially to blame for gun violence.
 
I would not say he took one for the team. He screwed over S&W knowing that his Felony convictions could come back to haunt the company. He only stepped down when it was obviuos that he was caught. Robbing a store while a college student shows serious lack of morals and judgement. I do find it interesting that he was a journalism student. Seems he would be right at home in the new media as he is a good liar.
 
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