NEW YORK, July 17, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Carl Icahn today issued the following statement to the Board of Directors of Forest Laboratories, Inc., in response to their letter to shareholders issued on July 16, 2012.
Your recent letter has taken things a step further from obfuscation to blatant mischaracterization. Therefore, I would like to clarify the following:
Is Howard Solomon conflicted when you grossly over-compensate him in options and restricted stock with accelerated vesting while he oversees a massive destruction in shareholder value over the past 10 years? Is it a conflict when Howard Solomon was selling stock while the company was repurchasing stock? Is it a conflict when Howard Solomon was part of a board meeting where his potential exclusion by the US government was being considered? I don't believe this Board has the slightest grasp over what constitutes a conflict. In addition, as I am sure you know, just because Mr. Ende was not elected to the Board last year does not mean that stockholders feel the same this year. Under your watch, Forest has underperformed your self-chosen peer companies by 21% since last year's meeting. Given that underperformance, it wouldn't surprise me if many shareholders vote differently this
time around. YOU SHOULD NOT USE LAST YEAR'S VOTE AS AN EXCUSE FOR COMPLACENCY. Perhaps in your zeal to preserve the status quo at Forest you have failed to recognize that a lack of alignment with management is not a conflict of interest.
You express concern regarding the independence and qualifications of my nominees. If only you employed that exacting (albeit incorrect) scrutiny over the company's board members, perhaps Kenneth Goodman, Howard Solomon's "right hand man" at Forest for nearly 20 years, wouldn't be the presiding "independent" director, or perhaps Dan Goldwasser, Howard's old "buddy" on the board for the past 35 years, wouldn't be the Chairman of the Compensation Committee (even after many of the compensation practices of the company have been roundly criticized). And recall shortly after I commenced my proxy contest last year, you replaced two board members, George S. Cohan, 87 years old, and William J. Candee, 84 years old. Prior to that, Mr. Cohen, president of George Cohan Company, Inc., a consultancy, was on the Board for 35 years and Mr. Candee, president of a
local trucking company and "of counsel" at a mid-size law firm, was on the board for over 50 years. It seems to me that you have two sets of standards in assessing director qualifications — an overly lenient standard for incumbent directors and an excessively unforgiving standard for nominees chosen by shareholders.
I also find it almost comical that you superficially assert that you have "carefully reviewed and considered Mr. Icahn's nominees and has determined that his candidates are far less qualified than our slate of experienced directors." All this without the courtesy of a single interview. If this is the extent of deliberation involved in all significant board decisions, then shareholder value may be imperiled to an even greater degree than I imagined.
It is my strong belief that Forest will benefit greatly from a board with a stronger shareholder orientation. You say that having directors that are aligned with me as a large shareholder creates a conflict of interest or will be negative for the company and other holders. But it seems to me that the stock performance of other companies where we have succeeded in electing directors proves you wrong. I believe that my nominees would be a strong force in replicating the stellar results that persons I have nominated to boards have helped to produce in other bio-pharma companies, such as Amylin, Biogen, Genzyme and Imclone. What you disparage as a conflict is in fact the true recipe for success — at Forest and at any business enterprise, the alignment of the board of directors of a company with the interest of its owners — the stockholders
— rather than the interest of non-owner management.
SECURITY HOLDERS ARE ADVISED TO READ THE PROXY STATEMENT AND OTHER DOCUMENTS RELATED TO THE SOLICITATION OF PROXIES BY CARL C. ICAHN AND HIS AFFILIATES FROM THE STOCKHOLDERS OF FOREST LABORATORIES, INC. FOR USE AT ITS 2012 ANNUAL MEETING WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION, INCLUDING INFORMATION RELATING TO THE PARTICIPANTS IN SUCH PROXY SOLICITATION. WHEN COMPLETED, A DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT AND A FORM OF PROXY WILL BE MAILED TO STOCKHOLDERS OF FOREST LABORATORIES, INC. AND WILL ALSO BE AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION'S WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV. INFORMATION RELATING TO THE PARTICIPANTS IN SUCH PROXY SOLICITATION IS CONTAINED IN THE
AMENDED PRELIMINARY PROXY STATEMENT FILED BY MR. ICAHN AND HIS AFFILIATES ON JULY 11, 2012 (THE "PRELIMINARY PROXY"). EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE DISCLOSED HEREIN OR IN THE PRELIMINARY PROXY, THE PARTICIPANTS HAVE NO INTEREST IN FOREST LABORATORIES, INC. OTHER THAN THROUGH THE BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF SHARES OF COMMON STOCK, PAR VALUE $0.10 PER SHARE, OF FOREST LABORATORIES, INC., AS DISCLOSED IN THE PRELIMINARY PROXY. THE PRELIMINARY PROXY IS AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION'S WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV. CONSENT OF THE AUTHOR OR PUBLICATION WAS NEITHER SOUGHT NOR OBTAINED TO USE THE ARTICLES MENTIONED HEREIN AS PROXY SOLICITING MATERIAL.CONTACT: Susan Gordon
(212) 702-4309