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Photo taken on Sept. 14, 2008 shows the
headquarters of troubled Wall Street investment bank Lehman Brothers in
New York. As the Bank of America and British bank Barclays failed to buy
Lehman on Sunday, the 158-year-old US firm may face a potential
bankruptcy. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Oct. 6 (Xinhuanet)--
Disgraced Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Chief Executive Richard Fuld, who
presided over the Wall Street investment bank during its collapse in September,
will testify at congressional hearing on Monday.
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
wants to question Fuld on who should be blamed for Lehman's collapse and how the
investment bank's failure contributed to the financial crisis that is
threatening the global economy.
In what would be his first public appearance since Lehman
filed for bankruptcy, Fuld is expected to face tough questioning from
lawmakers angry over the government's proposed 700 billion dollar Wall Street
rescue.
"Lax oversight and reckless investments on Wall Street are
causing massive disruption throughout our economy," said Henry A. Waxman,
chairman of the committee in a statement on the committee's website. "Our
hearings will examine what went wrong and who should be held to account."
Waxman has asked Lehman to provide internal documents and
communications transmitted to and from the executive suites during a 180-day
period leading up to Sept. 16, the day after Lehman, the 158-year-old investment
bank and Wall Street fixture, filed for bankruptcy.
Excessive executive pay will be a theme at the hearing.
Fuld received 22 million U.S. dollars in bonuses alone for 2007, although
he is not receiving a golden parachute.
At a second hearing, on Tuesday, three former AIG CEOs --
Robert B. Willumstad, Martin J. Sullivan, and Maurice R. Greenberg -- are
scheduled to testify.
(Agencies)