Aubrey Kerr McClendon (July 14, 1959 – March 2, 2016) was an American businessman primarily engaged in natural gas exploration. He was the co-founder, CEO and chairman of Chesapeake Energy (now Expand Energy), and, after being forced from the company due to a possible conflict of interest, he was the founder and chief executive officer of American Energy Partners, LP. He was an outspoken advocate for natural gas as an alternative to oil and coal fuels, and a pioneer in employing hydraulic fracturing.
McClendon owned 19% of Professional Basketball Club, which owns the Oklahoma City Thunder and was instrumental in the Seattle SuperSonics relocation to Oklahoma City in 2008.
On March 1, 2016, McClendon was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring "to Bid rigging for the purchase of oil and natural gas leases in northwest Oklahoma". He died the following day in a single-vehicle collision.
McClendon spent his childhood in Belle Isle, a neighborhood in Oklahoma City and attended Belle Isle Elementary School, a public school. He graduated from Heritage Hall School in 1977, where he was senior class president and co-valedictorian. As a teenager, McClendon started a lawn mowing business.
McClendon graduated from Duke University in 1981 with a B.A. in history. His favorite area of study was the post-Civil War Reconstruction Era. McClendon minored in accounting and was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. He also met his wife, Kathleen Upton Byrns, while at Duke.
McClendon's first job after Duke was as an accountant. He was inspired to move from accounting to the energy business after reading an article in The Wall Street Journal about two men selling their Anadarko Basin well stake for $100 million. McClendon worked as a landman at Jaytex Oil and Gas, a public company in Oklahoma City founded by his uncle, Aubrey M. Kerr Jr. McClendon left Jaytex in November 1982 to start his own oil business.
McClendon focused on drilling wells into unconventional reservoirs such as fractured carbonate rock and and was an early adopter of directional drilling and hydraulic fracturing techniques, which helped accelerate the company's fast early growth. His focus on these new and unconventional techniques later led to him being called a "visionary leader" in the oil and natural gas industry.
The firm became a public company via an initial public offering in 1993, and its stock price rose 274% in value from 1994 to 1997.
In 2005, Forbes named McClendon one of the country's top-performing executives for his role at Chesapeake.
During the 2008 financial crisis, Chesapeake's stock price fell 75% in a few months and McClendon was forced to sell 94% of his 31.5 million shares, equal to 6% of the company, to repay a margin loan. The following year, Chesapeake offered McClendon a five-year retention contract, including a $75 million cash bonus.
In 2011, Forbes called McClendon "America's most reckless billionaire", noting his high risk tolerance and cited the leveraging and forced sale of his shares in 2008 as a reckless move. The same year, the magazine named McClendon to its 20-20 Club, comprising the eight CEOs of public companies who had delivered annualized returns of more than 20% over a 20-year period.
Chesapeake grew its gas production under McClendon from 5 million to 2.5 billion cubic feet per day from 2009 to 2013. Chesapeake's discovery of large reserves of natural gas was reported to have helped reduce natural gas prices to consumers in the U.S.
In June 2012, Chesapeake shareholders voted to reject two board members and approve increased proxy access. McClendon relinquished his chairman title in June 2012, remaining in his role as CEO. In February 2013, an internal review by the board of directors of Chesapeake, assisted by Locke Lord and WilmerHale, found no improper conduct, no improper benefit to McClendon and no increased cost to the company. McClendon resigned from his position as CEO at Chesapeake on April 1, 2013.
Following his departure from the company, McClendon retained the option to continue investing in wells drilled by Chesapeake through July 2014. The interests in the wells were held by three companies, two of which were transferred to banks as part of possible and one of which was transferred to Clay Bennett.
In February 2015, Chesapeake filed a lawsuit against McClendon, accusing him of misappropriating company data on available land during his departure, using at Chesapeake for American Energy Partners, LP, a new company that he founded. McClendon and American Energy Partners responded that he had the right to all information in his possession under his various separation agreements with Chesapeake. In April 2015, American Energy – Utica, LLC reached a settlement with Chesapeake, giving Chesapeake of land and $25 million. The lawsuit with Chesapeake was settled with McClendon's estate in February 2017; the estate agreed to pay legal fees of $3.25 million.
After his indictment McClendon released a statement denying all charges, arguing that for 35 years he has worked to create jobs and help Oklahoma's economy while providing plentiful energy for the entire country.
McClendon maintained his innocence, but died the next day, March 2, 2016, in a single-occupant single-vehicle crash when he drove his SUV at 88 mph into a concrete bridge embankment.
From 2004 to 2008, McClendon ran a $200 million hedge fund, Heritage Management Company LLC, with Tom Ward.
He invested $35 million in ProCure Treatment Centers Inc., a company with three proton therapy based cancer treatment centers, in 2008.
From 2008 to 2013, McClendon was one of the U.S.'s largest landowners, owning more than .
Prior to the move, in 2007, McClendon was quoted in The Journal Record, an Oklahoma City newspaper, as saying "we (the ownership group) didn't buy the Seattle SuperSonics to keep them in Seattle". The NBA fined McClendon $250,000 in response, as his statement contradicted the organization's publicized intentions at the time. In April 2014, he purchased more shares in the Oklahoma City Thunder franchise from G. Jeffrey Records Jr.
From 2011 on, McClendon hosted an annual event for local Boy Scouts of America at his Arcadia Farm property. He donated approximately $15 million to Duke University and $12.5 million to the University of Oklahoma.
In 2010, U.S. Steel Tubular Products, a subsidiary of U.S. Steel, gave McClendon the Chief Roughneck Award, which honors the lifetime achievements of petroleum industry leaders.
In 2011, McClendon was awarded the Ernst & Young National Entrepreneur of the Year in Energy, Cleantech and Natural Resources. In 2013, the Heritage Hall School Alumni Association named McClendon, who graduated in 1977, the recipient of its Distinguished Alumni Award.
In 2008, then CEO McClendon formed American Clean Skies Foundation, a non-profit foundation focused on selling the virtues of natural gas. The foundation was funded by the company and by McClendon. The foundation was criticized for doing nothing but pushing Congress to pass policies that benefited the company and McClendon's business interests.
McClendon was a founding member of America's Natural Gas Alliance (ANGA), a trade association and lobbying group for independent natural gas producers, based in Washington, D.C. He was an advocate for the greater use of natural gas in the United States and he funded a campaign in 2007 to draw clean-energy activists' attention to a Texas utility's plan to build 11 new coal plants. He also made a donation to the Sierra Club to fund its "Beyond Coal" campaign, which had blocked more than 150 new coal plants in the United States, as of October 2013.
In an appearance on 60 Minutes in 2010, McClendon argued a case for natural gas as a clean fuel and a significant job-creating industry. He defended the natural gas and oil industry's use of hydraulic fracturing techniques for well completion, claiming it could reduce the impact of OPEC, create jobs for Americans, and reduce costs.
McClendon had a personal wine collection that he estimated at one time to include more than the equivalent of 100,000 bottles. He sold much of the collection when he needed cash and after it appreciated; the remainder was sold after his death. He also held an extensive collection of antique maps of Oklahoma and collected vintage motor boats.
McClendon, an Episcopalian, would sometimes quote scripture in workplace emails. He also employed while CEO of Chesapeake.
McClendon was the main investor in Magnises, a credit card-based venture of convicted fraudster Billy McFarland, co-founder of the Fyre Festival, later described as a scam.
McClendon was regarded as an optimistic person, with an appetite for risk beyond most people's comfort level, by several people who knew him well.
McClendon's body was badly burned, making identification difficult. A forensic odontologist positively identified McClendon by his teeth on March 4, 2016. The medical examiner's office reported McClendon died from multiple blunt force trauma. On March 3, 2016, less than 48 hours after McClendon was charged, the Justice Department filed motions and dismissed McClendon's indictment. On June 8, 2016, the Oklahoma medical examiner officially ruled the crash which killed McClendon was an accident. According to the autopsy report, no alcohol was involved in the accident, but an unspecified amount of the over-the-counter first-generation antihistamine and short-term sedative drug Doxylamine (which is used as an antihistamine or to treat insomnia) was found in McClendon's system. He was not wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash but this was not unusual for McClendon.
Oklahoma City Police spokesman Paco Balderrama said of McClendon's actions, "He pretty much drove straight into the wall. The information out there at the scene is that he went left of center, went through a grassy area right before colliding into the embankment. There was plenty of opportunity for him to correct and get back on the roadway, and that didn't occur." There was no evidence of suicide, although there was the possibility of a medical event.
Early life and education
Business career
Chesapeake Energy
Possible conflicts of interest as CEO of Cheseapeake Energy
American Energy Partners, LP
Federal indictment for violating antitrust laws
Other business ventures and investments
Land ownership
Oklahoma City Thunder
Philanthropy and community involvement
Honors and awards
Lobbying and natural gas advocacy
Personal life and interests
Death
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