2nd UPDATE: Horace Mann CEO On Leave After Entering Jail On DUI
September 13 2010 - 6:39PM
Dow Jones News
Insurance executive Louis Lower, the longtime chief executive at
Horace Mann Educators Corp. (HMN), was placed on leave by the
insurer's board of directors after they learned he was in jail.
The board suspended Lower this weekend, at least three days
after he began serving time in a Florida county jail. He was given
a 60-day sentence on Sept. 8 after being charged over Memorial Day
weekend in late May with a misdemeanor count of driving under the
influence that caused property damage or personal injury, according
to records on the website of the Indian River County Sheriff's
Office.
Lower alerted fellow executives at Horace Mann to the charge in
mid-July, said Richard Madden, a spokesman for the insurer. It
wasn't until Sept. 9 that the board was alerted to Lower's
imprisonment and a weekend board session arranged.
The insurer, which sells car, home and life insurance to
primary- and secondary-school teachers, said Lower was involved in
a traffic accident with another vehicle. The accident, in Vero
Beach, Fla., led to the DUI charge. The company said the crash
didn't require hospitalization of any of the parties involved.
Lower is scheduled to be released on Oct. 26, according to the
Indian River County website. The insurer said he is expected to
return to his job in late October or November. Chief Financial
Officer Peter Heckman will serve as interim chief executive.
"There are no excuses to offer other than a lapse of personal
character for which I take full responsibility," Lower said in a
statement released Monday. The statement said it was Lower's first
offense.
Chairman Gabriel Shaheen said in the statement that the board
will consider whether to impose other disciplinary actions. But he
added that the board continues to have "full confidence in the
company's direction, its strategic initiatives and the progress
being made on those initiatives," which were developed under
Lower's leadership.
Robert Robins, a retired professor at Tulane University and an
expert on executive disability and illness, said Horace Mann
executives who knew of the charges had an "ethical obligation" to
report to the board what they knew of the charge when they first
learned of the incident. But, he said, they delay in informing the
board probably wasn't illegal under U.S. securities law.
Lower has been chief executive since 2000. He was previously
chief executive of Allstate Corp's (ALL) life insurance operation,
and serves as a board member of mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc.
(PMI). Bill Horning, a spokesman for PMI, didn't respond to
messages seeking comment.
Horace Mann shares closed at $17.78 and were inactive after
hours. The stock was up 42% this year as of the close of trading
Monday.
-By Erik Holm and Leslie Scism, Dow Jones Newswires;
212-416-2892; erik.holm@dowjones.com
(Kathy Shwiff contributed to this article.)
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