Endron International
- Greater Sudbury -x- Houston -x- Rio de Janeiro -x- Seattle
Contents
Corporate Motto
Printed in neat block lettering on white paper, the following motto is found in nearly every high-level Endron executive's workspace: "The cost of the fine is always less than the cost of compliance."
Introduction
Endron is big business at its finest -- and at its worst. Hundreds of thousands of people, if not more, draw their paychecks from Endron or one of its direct subsidiaries. Within their ranks are saints and frightening sinners (albeit more and more of the latter every day), and thousands upon thousands of absolutely, utterly normal people. But mixed within the serried ranks of Endron employees are a few who, regardless of their relative position, are somehow a bit more effective at doing the Wyrm's work than others. They are just a bit more in tune with their inner corruption, a bit more adept at getting the firm to do their bidding, a bit less human than even their peers.
History -- The Kennedy Files
In the beginning there was Premium Oil. Founded, like the American oil industry as a whole, in the state of Pennsylvania, Premium rapidly metamorphosed into the corporate giant called Pentex. Along the way, however, it lost focus. With assets to snap up, competitors to crush and politicians to buy -- not to mention inhuman agendas to address -- the oil business began to suffer. Even worse, operations had been focused exclusively on the Pennsylvania oil fields, which while accessible, were also accessible to a great deal of Premium's competition, and which where thus getting tapped out at an alarming rate.
In 1916, the moment of truth arrived. Pentex' oil dealings were at a crisis level, and unless something were done, the entire operation could conceivably go under. Faced with the prospect of losing its cornerstone business, Pentex did the smart thing. Recognizing that the parent corporation could no longer do the business justice or give it the attention it needed. Pentex spun Premium's original assets off into a new, publicly owned corporation. The public offering of stock in Endron gave the struggling firm the shot of capital it needed, and the danger passed.
Needless to say, Pentex maintained a majority interest in the firm. As the years have passed and additional capital crises have forced additional stock sales, Pentex' shares in Endron have dropped below a majority, but it still owns the largest single voting block. Furthermore, with Endron stock performing well, the Board has quietly begun a buyback.
The next year, new alliances (corporate and otherwise) that Pentex made finally allowed Endron to expand its operations, and the company was well on its way to re-establishing itself as a major player in the petroleum field.
Hiram Bollingsworth: Endron's first president
Board of Directors {13}
- -- Enzo Giovanni -- Giovanni Elder of Houston and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Endron. {Houston}
- -- Xiang Wu -- CEO (chief executive officer). {Houston}
- -- Francesco Abandonato -- Director of South American Operations. He is Werewolf elder and opponent of Enzo Giovanni. {Rio de Janeiro}
- -- Kathryn Mollett -- A shrewd mortal business woman, now in her sixties; primarily she keeps the peace between Enzo and Francesco. She was among the wounded in the attack on the theater and is currently recuperating in the hospital. {Seattle}
- -- Cecilia Essert -- CFO (chief financial officer). {Berlin}
- -- Roza Maksimov -- Director of Russian operations. {Moscow}
- -- Theunis Adi -- Director of Indonesian operations. {Jakarta}
- -- Gwladus Vaughan -- Director of Australian Operations. {Perth}
- -- Pierrick Delacroix -- Director of EU Operations. {Paris}
- -- Vigdís Hilmarsson -- Director of North Atlantic Operations. {Reykjavík - The Capitol of Iceland}
- -- Anaru Moana -- Director of Pacific Operations. {Honolulu}
- -- Kirstine Pallesen -- Director of Canadian Operations. {Greater Sudbury}
- -- Hafiz Abdulrashid -- Director of African / Middle-Eastern Operations. {Cairo}
Upper Management
Middle Management
Management Candidates
White Collar Employees
Blue Collar Employees
Temporary Employees
Mercenaries
Fomori
Subsidiaries
- -- R.A.V.E. -- Recreational Automotive Vehicle Engineering,Inc.
- -- F.D.A.W.G. -- Former Detroit Automotive Workers Group -- Labor Union.
- -- G.S.R. Greater Sudbury Refineries,Inc.