COHAN: “You know, Stephanie. Obviously, in the end, that’s pretty much what she decided. And David Solomon, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, accepted her resignation. You know, yesterday, late yesterday. Look, Stephanie, there’s 2.7 million emails and documents released by the Justice Department thrown out into the public realm. Without context, pretty much anybody you can think of Stephanie, and you want to put their name in that search box. You can probably find something about them in there, as you said. Does that mean they if does that mean they’re there’s wrongdoing involved? No it doesn’t. but when you are the general counsel of Goldman Sachs, you are and you’re on the committee that you just described. You are going to be under additional scrutiny more than anybody you could possibly imagine. And when these emails get tossed out there and get thrown out there and can be taken out of context and you don’t know what the what, why or how, she said the things that she did or wrote, the things that she did, it just looks horrible, to be honest. And without that context, you know, it’s almost more than Goldman Sachs is, you know, able to bear. And she understood that, I think, on some level and was willing to”
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William Cohan on Kathryn Ruemmler’s Resignation: ‘David Solomon, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, Accepted Her Resignation’‘The things that she did, it just looks horrible, to be honest‘News & PoliticsRUSH EXCERPT:COHAN: “You know, Stephanie. Obviously, in the end, that’s pretty much what she decided. And David Solomon, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, accepted her resignation. You know, yesterday, late yesterday. Look, Stephanie, there’s 2.7 million emails and documents released by the Justice Department thrown out into the public realm. Without context, pretty much anybody you can think of Stephanie, and you want to put their name in that search box. You can probably find something about them in there, as you said. Does that mean they if does that mean they’re there’s wrongdoing involved? No it doesn’t. but when you are the general counsel of Goldman Sachs, you are and you’re on the committee that you just described. You are going to be under additional scrutiny more than anybody you could possibly imagine. And when these emails get tossed out there and get thrown out there and can be taken out of context and you don’t know what the what, why or how, she said the things that she did or wrote, the things that she did, it just looks horrible, to be honest. And without that context, you know, it’s almost more than Goldman Sachs is, you know, able to bear. And she understood that, I think, on some level and was willing to”Video filesFullCompactSort byDateSummaryRelevancePopularityPer page81216Audio filesFullCompactSort byDateSummaryRelevancePopularityPer page81216Recipient e-mailMessage (optional)Preview
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