The ousted head of Silicon Valley Bank has fled to his luxurious $3.1million Maui bolthole - leaving the chaos caused by the bank's collapse 3,000 miles behind him.
While his customers worry about when - or even if - they will be able to access their funds, Silicon Valley Bank's disgraced former boss is soaking up the sun at his oceanfront Hawaiian hideaway.
Gregory Becker and his wife Marilyn Bautista took a chauffeur-driven black limo to San Francisco Airport on Monday afternoon and after sprinting through the United Airlines terminal, then flew first-class to Maui, where they were seen Wednesday walking through the streets of Lahaina in shorts and flip flops.
Now the couple are holed up in the two-story townhouse that they rebuilt after tearing the much smaller original down.
DailyMail.com spotted Silicon Valley Bank's failed CEO Gregory Becker in Maui after being fired amid the collapse of the bank. Becker, 55, put the chaos behind him and was seen walking the streets of Lahaina in shorts, EvDEn EvE NaKliYAT a t-shirt and flip flops
Becker was seen stepping out of a convertible Mini Cooper.
The Justice Department has launched a probe into Becker's decision to cash out $3.57million of stock just weeks before the bank folded
Becker and his wife Marilyn Bautista fled to Hawaii and are now holed up in their spacious oceanfront townhome in Maui.
In case you loved this post and you would love to receive more information regarding EVDen eVe nakliYaT generously visit our own web site. They were seen walking through the streets of Lahaina on Wednesday
The couple bought their three-bed, three-bath Hawaiian townhouse in May 2018, then immediately decided to raze it to the ground and build something better on the lot which overlooks a small stretch of golden sand EVdeN eve NAkliYat running behind the property
The island of Lanai is in full view across the ocean from Becker's townhouse on Maui
Becker, 55, has been widely criticized for the way he handled the bank's collapse and now the Justice Department has launched a probe into his decision to cash out $3.57 million of stock just weeks before it folded.
<a style="font-weight: bold;" class="class" rel="nofollow noreferrer noopener" target="_blank" website reported that he sold nearly $30 million of stock over the past two years.