Greenmail proved lucrative for investors such as
T. Boone Pickens and
Sir James Goldsmith during the 1980s. In the latter example, Goldsmith made $90 million from the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company in the 1980s in this manner. In 1984,
Occidental Petroleum paid $194 million greenmail to David Murdock. The St. Regis Paper Company provides an example of greenmail. When an investor group led by Sir James Goldsmith acquired an 8.6% stake in St. Regis and expressed interest in taking over the paper concern, the company agreed to repurchase the shares at a premium. Goldsmith's group acquired the shares for an average price of $35.50 per share, a total of $109 million. It sold its stake at $52 per share, netting a profit of $51 million. Shortly after the payoff in March 1984, St. Regis became the target of publisher Rupert Murdoch. St Regis turned to Champion International and agreed to a $1.84 billion takeover. Murdoch tendered his 5.6% stake in St. Regis to the Champion offer for a profit. In a fictional context, greenmail tactics are prominently used in the 1987 film
Wall Street. At one point, fellow corporate raider Sir Larry Wildman refers to
Gordon Gekko as "a two-bit pirate and a greenmailer."
2024 Ohio case In 2021, a plaintiff's law firm tried to sue two so-called "activist" investors in a Franklin County, Ohio court, alleging that the investors violated Ohio's law against greenmailing. Law firm
Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP represented the
Corpus Christi Firefighters’ Retirement System and filed the suit against two investment firms. In the suit, the plaintiff alleged that Macellum and Ancora attempted to engage in a greenmail campaign against
Big Lots, a publicly traded discount retailer. Ohio's statute would force the investors to give up any profits it earned from ownership of Big Lots stock if they had engaged in greenmailing. However, the investors did not make any such attempt, according to RealClearMarkets. In March 2024, Ohio Judge Daniel Hawkins - who is running for the Ohio Supreme Court - dismissed the case.
Other cases • ''
Viacom Int'l, Inc. v. Icahn'', 747 F. Supp. 205 (S.D.N.Y. 1990) •
Polk v. Good, 507 A.2d 531 (Del. 1986). A Harvard Business School case study in 1990 pointed to the repeated use of greenmail attempts by the
Walt Disney Company - "a much criticized defensive tactic which Disney uses trying to buy enough time to fix its investment and financial strategies." In 2003,
Michael Ashcroft was criticised by the
High Court judge, Mr Justice
Peter Smith in
Rock (Nominees) Ltd v RCO (Holdings) Plc. Smith condemned Ashcroft's tactics in relation to the takeover of cleaning company RCO by the Danish firm ISS. Smith said, ==History==