Vince McMahon agreed to pay $1.7 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission charges over settlements he made on behalf of himself and World Wrestling Entertainment without properly disclosing them to the company’s board of directors,
Vince McMahon, the co-founder and former CEO of WWE, has been charged by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for violating federal securities laws by failing to disclose two settlement agreements totaling $10.5 million.
Vince McMahon, who left his longtime perch at WWE under a cloud last year, is paying more than $1.7 million to settle charges from the SEC alleging he failed to disclose hush money payments to two women https://t.co/wkDcf0xA1C
Vince McMahon, former WWE Chairman and CEO, settled with the SEC over charges related to minor accounting errors. Although this resolves criminal issu
It was one key moment and conversation with Vince McMahon that made Shelton Benjamin realize he didn't have a future in WWE. During an interview with Chris Jeri
Vince McMahon had several right-hand men alongside him behind the scenes in the 1990s, including Bruce Prichard and Pat Patterson.
Former WWE Chairman and CEO Vince McMahon has settled the lawsuit with the SEC. Former WWE star Al Snow recently commented on the matter.
The SEC settled charges against Vince McMahon, former CEO of WWE, that he made personal hush-money payments violating securities laws.
The Undertaker on commentary Unlikely, as he enjoys watching with Vince McMahon. #TheUndertaker #WWE #Commentary
Vince McMahon, the former executive chairman and CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment, has agreed to pay $1.7 million in fines and restitution for violating U.S. securities laws, authorities said Friday.
The Securities and Exchange Commission said it reached a settlement agreement with WWE co-founder Vince McMahon, which requires he pay a civil penalty and reimburse the WWE $1.33 million following a yearslong probe over administrative charges.
Vince McMahon, the former World Wrestling Entertainment chief executive, settled U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charges he concealed from the company's board two settlement agreements worth $10.