Venture capital’s clubby culture has protected serial harassers. As VCs run for cover, some are starting to ask tougher questions
Silicon Valley has a communication problem, and the story of Justin Caldbeck shows why. He resigned as a managing partner at San Francisco venture firm Binary Capital LLC a month ago after a half-dozen women told the Information, a tech news site, that he pressured them for sex when they sought business advice or funding. The behaviour they describe dates to his days at Bain Capital Ventures, which he joined in 2005; continued into his time at Light speed Venture Partners, where he started in 2011; and on to Binary, which he co-founded in 2014.
One Binary backer remembers making more than three dozen calls about Caldbeck and co-founder Jonathan Teo to friends, college roommates, company founders, and co-investors in the companies they’d backed, and says the reference checks were the most enthusiastic ever. Since Caldbeck’s behaviour became public, Light speed has acknowledged it should have done more to prevent his leaving unpunished, given that at least one of the women complained to the firm about him. When the Binary investor asked Light speed why it didn’t mention this during reference calls, the firm said it had signed nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) and couldn’t discuss the situation, according to the investor. Light speed declined to comment. Caldbeck resigned from Binary and apologised in a statement for using “a position of power in exchange for sexual gain.”
This story is from the August 16, 2017 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East.
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This story is from the August 16, 2017 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East.
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