STATEMENT OF ROBERT C. HINKLEY
Corporate lawyer
Virginia Statehouse Capitol
April 23, 2003
I
am here to announce the formation of Licensed to Kill, Inc., a
corporation organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
Last month Licensed to Kill obtained a corporate charter from
the Commonwealth to manufacture and market tobacco products in
a way that generates profits for investors while each year killing
over 400,000 Americans and more than 4.5 million other people
worldwide.
We
are gathered here on the grounds of this historic state house
to expose the Commonwealth for the assistance and continuing cooperation
it is providing to Licensed to Kill. As a corporate lawyer, I
can tell you that without this assistance and cooperation,
Licensed to Kill could not become a corporation,
The investors in Licensed to Kill would not be held harmless
from liabilities the company creates,
Licensed
to Kill's access to capital would dry up and
The ability of Licensed to Kill to achieve its purpose--profits
at the expense of the public health--would be frustrated.
But
our real purpose today is to expose the Commonwealth of Virginia,
not to praise it. In doing so, we raise this question "Why
should the state government of Virginia provide for the formation
and operation of companies whose method of making money involves
killing millions of people?"
In
one sense it is unfair to pick on Virginia. Licensed to Kill could
have been incorporated in any of the 50 states.
But,
in another sense, it is entirely appropriate that we are here
today in Richmond. In addition to being the state where America's
biggest tobacco manufacturer is incorporated, it is also the home
of Thomas Jefferson, America's founding father who best understood
the danger corporations pose to our democracy and the public interest.
His fears have proven to be well founded.
Today,
the pursuit of profit by big corporations does substantial damage
to our environment, human rights, the public health and safety,
the dignity of employees and the welfare of our communities. Just
one example of this is big tobacco ending the lives of millions
of people each year.
But
it is important to recognize that none of this damage would occur
if not for the assistance provided by our state governments. Laws
passed by state governments (i) provide for the formation of corporations,
(ii) license them to operate and (iii) grant their shareholders
immunity from liability.
We
are gathered here to uncover this assistance and to say it is
time it stopped. We are not saying that smoking should be made
illegal. We know that government cannot and should not be so intrusive.
But
something is wrong when the State Corporation Commission has no
choice but to issue a corporate charter to a company which boldly
states it plans to make money by killing people.
Our
state governments should not be giving licenses to operate and
other corporate advantages to companies which kill people, destroy
the public health and each year create billions of dollars in
costs which the public, including state government, must bear.
It
is time to deny the advantages of corporate status to those companies
which use such advantages to make our fellow citizens sick and
die.
It
is time to change the corporation. Today, the corporate law of
Virginia and every other state says that the purpose of the corporation
is to make money.
We
are saying that this purpose should be balanced by adding nine
simple words, "but not at the expense of the public health".
Any company which cannot abide by these nine words in their pursuit
of profit should be denied the benefits of corporate status conferred
by state government. Their "License to Kill" should
be revoked.
Thank
you.
Robert
C. Hinkley is a corporate lawyer and former partner of the law
firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP. He now resides
in Brooklin, Maine. For more information concerning Licensed to
Kill, Inc., please refer to the company's website, www.licensedtokill.biz.
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