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Beleaguered Bristow Pays Millions in Executive Bonuses
Financially
beleaguered helicopter services company Bristow Group disclosed this week that
it paid $2.125 million in “retention bonuses” on May 3 to a quartet of top
executives, including $945,000 to newly promoted CEO L. Don Miller. Other
top Bristow executives receiving the payments included CFO Brian Allman
($400,000) and senior vice presidents Robert Phillips and Alan Corbett ($390,000
each).
Bristow
disclosed the payments in a new Form 8-K filed with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission. The company said it made the payments “for the purpose of
attracting, retaining, and incentivizing employees to perform at a high level”
while concurrently saying that new financial statements would express
“uncertainty as to the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.”
Bristow
also revealed that it faces a delisting action from the New York Stock
Exchange, has deferred the delivery of 22 new Airbus H175 super-medium twin
helicopters, remains unable to file its quarterly financial statement for the
period ending Dec. 31, 2018 due to “material weaknesses” in its internal
controls over financial reporting, and plans to amend financial statements that
it had filed in 2018.
On
April 15 Bristow announced that it had skipped a $12.5 million interest payment
to bondholders and had new hired financial and legal advisors. One of those
financial advisors, Alvarez & Marsal, recommended the executive retention
bonuses, according to Bristow.
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