People Disappear in Texas

I am sitting in my room at the Embassy Suites Hotel in San Antonio, Texas. It is a Thursday evening in July 1998. I am coming to the end of a telephone call with a corporate lawyer in Washington, giving her a progress report on my assignment. I am in the US working for a UK FTSE 100 company that had bought an American group a couple of years previously. Following changes in the board and the senior management team in the UK, I have been asked to review the activities of one of the American group's subsidiary companies that operates primarily in Texas but also all along the Mexican border through a series of retail outlets. This company had been a family-owned business in the past, with a reputation for being both profitable and also aggressive risk-takers. I am tasked with reporting back to the UK board at the end of the assignment.

I have been talking to the American lawyer for about 20 minutes now, updating her on progress. I tell her that the assignment is going well overall and that I am receiving most of the assistance that I need from the managers and staff. However, I do have concerns. It is already clear to me that the company is still dominated by the founding family and, from everything that I have heard, the family remain a powerful force all along the border. I say to the lawyer that it seems to me to be operating as a separate fiefdom, with little regard for its UK parent company. I mention my unease at some of the activities that are going ...

Get Managing Fraud Risk: A Practical Guide for Directors and Managers now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.