Firm sues Singapore, Shanghai staff who jumped to McKinsey

DELAWARE (Reuters) - AlixPartners, a leading business turnaround advisory firm, sued two former managing directors for breaching employment contracts and stealing trade secrets after they jumped to consulting firm McKinsey & Co.

Eric Thompson of Singapore and Ivo Naumann of Shanghai allegedly took to McKinsey confidential marketing materials, client information and even contacts of Lisa Donahue, the global leader of Alix's restructuring practice.

The pair violated their employment agreements and their duties to AlixPartners, according to the complaint filed late Wednesday in Delaware's Court of Chancery.

Alix asked the court to bar the pair from using the information they took and from soliciting other Alix employees.

The firm also asked the court to bar Thompson from working for McKinsey for a year.

McKinsey did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The lawsuit said McKinsey's chief executive, Dominic Barton, told Alix he expected Thompson and Naumann to honor their commitments.

A spokesman for AlixPartners declined to comment.

McKinsey is among the most influential consulting firms in the world and specializes in strategic planning. In recent years, it has been expanding into the restructuring of ailing companies.

"McKinsey is using this as a point of entry for its other advisory businesses, such as marketing strategy and supply chain management," said David Pauker of Goldin Associates, which specializes in advising companies in financial distress.

McKinsey has been playing catch-up to the major players in the field, such as FTI Consulting Inc, Alvarez & Marsal and Alix, in part by recruiting their staff.

In the middle of 2013, Thompson and Naumann were recruited by McKinsey director Jon Garcia and were encouraged to leave by McKinsey's Barton, according to the lawsuit. Barton even approved a special arrangement for Naumann, allowing him to serve as a partner of both McKinsey and its Recovery and Transformation Services unit.

Naumann allegedly forwarded numerous documents to his Yahoo! email account in the days prior to his departure. These included salary and bonus information for Alix consultants, client pitches and AlixPartners' revenue parameters for Asia, which was sent to him from the firm's chief executive, Fred Crawford.

Crawford instructed Naumann not to share it with anyone, according to the lawsuit.

Naumann was so busy forwarding information to his personal email account that the lawsuit alleges he lost track of what he had and took some reports more than once.

"Mr. Naumann appeared to be making a frantic effort to steal whatever documents he could before he left AlixPartners," said the lawsuit.

Thompson joined Alix's Hong Kong office in May 2011 after stints with oil producer Rubicon Offshore International, as chief restructuring officer, and the Harmony Capital Partners hedge fund. Naumann joined Alix in 2007 in Shanghai.

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