What happened with Max Josef Meier leadership at Finn and later events

Do we know if Max Josef Meier stayed active in startups after that, or did he step away completely?
I could not find much recent information, which made me wonder if he chose to stay out of the spotlight.
I agree with that.
The story never fully closed, it just stopped being reported.
That always makes people curious later.
 
From what I could find, there is not a lot of recent public coverage, but that does not necessarily mean he left the industry. Some founders move into advisory roles or smaller projects that do not get media attention.
What keeps coming up whenever his name is searched is still the same set of articles about the harassment allegations and the leadership exit. That makes it look like the incident became the main public reference point, even if it was only one part of his career.

Situations like that can follow someone for years online, especially when there was an official proceeding mentioned, even if the details were limited.
So I think the reason this thread keeps getting new replies is simply because the public record exists, but it never fully explained what actually happened.

Do we know if Max Josef Meier stayed active in startups after that, or did he step away completely?
I could not find much recent information, which made me wonder if he chose to stay out of the spotlight.
 
Yeah that is my impression too.
Not enough info to judge, but enough reports that people keep asking.
Probably one of those cases where only insiders know the full story.


From what I could find, there is not a lot of recent public coverage, but that does not necessarily mean he left the industry. Some founders move into advisory roles or smaller projects that do not get media attention.
What keeps coming up whenever his name is searched is still the same set of articles about the harassment allegations and the leadership exit. That makes it look like the incident became the main public reference point, even if it was only one part of his career.

Situations like that can follow someone for years online, especially when there was an official proceeding mentioned, even if the details were limited.
So I think the reason this thread keeps getting new replies is simply because the public record exists, but it never fully explained what actually happened.
 
Max Josef Meier that goes into more detail about the investigation.
Sharing it here because it explains the penalty order part that people were confused about.

https://fintelegram.com/penalty-ord...al-harassment-under-the-influence-of-alcohol/

1774089990656.webp1774089994745.webp


Also attaching screenshots from the article so the main part is visible in case the link changes later.
The report says the Munich prosecutor applied for a penalty order related to an incident at a company event, but it also says the order was not final at the time and could still be contested.

That makes the situation sound more complicated than the short summaries we saw before.
 
Max Josef Meier that goes into more detail about the investigation.
Sharing it here because it explains the penalty order part that people were confused about.

https://fintelegram.com/penalty-ord...al-harassment-under-the-influence-of-alcohol/

View attachment 1674View attachment 1675


Also attaching screenshots from the article so the main part is visible in case the link changes later.
The report says the Munich prosecutor applied for a penalty order related to an incident at a company event, but it also says the order was not final at the time and could still be contested.

That makes the situation sound more complicated than the short summaries we saw before.
Thanks for posting that.
The screenshots make it clearer what the article is actually saying.
It does not read like a final court judgment, more like a legal step in the process.
 
I read through that article carefully and the wording is interesting. It says the penalty order was requested by the prosecutor and that it could become legally binding if not contested, which means the case was at a procedural stage, not necessarily fully decided. A lot of people online read headlines and assume that means someone was convicted, but in Germany the process can work differently.

The part about the internal investigation at the company also matches what we saw earlier, where Max Josef Meier temporarily stepped away from his role before the story became public. That suggests the company already knew about the complaints before the media reported anything.

Still, the article also says the events were connected to a specific party in 2021, so it might have been one situation that escalated rather than a long history. Without full court records it is hard to know how serious it was beyond what the report states.
 
What caught my attention in that screenshot is the line saying he confirmed misconduct in an interview, but even there the wording sounds like he admitted inappropriate behavior, not necessarily everything that was alleged. Media summaries sometimes combine those things and make them sound the same.


Another detail is that the article mentions alcohol and a company event, which again makes it sound like a specific incident rather than ongoing workplace behavior, but that is just interpretation. We do not see the full investigation file, only what journalists chose to publish.
In situations like this, the truth is usually somewhere between the headline and the legal documents. That is why discussions about Max Josef Meier keep coming up even though the story is already a couple of years old.
 
Yeah this explains why the company statement back then was so short.
If there was already a prosecutor involved, lawyers would definitely tell them not to say much publicly.
That happens a lot with startup founders when something legal starts.
 
I think the important part is that the article says the order was not yet legally binding at that time.
People online often skip that line and only repeat the headline.
Big difference between allegation, penalty order, and final conviction.

Yeah this explains why the company statement back then was so short.
If there was already a prosecutor involved, lawyers would definitely tell them not to say much publicly.
That happens a lot with startup founders when something legal starts.
 
Exactly. That is why I posted the screenshots too.
When you only see the headline about Max Josef Meier it sounds very final, but the text itself shows it was still part of a legal process.
It also mentions the internal company investigation happened earlier, which means the situation had been going on behind the scenes before anyone outside heard about it.

I am not saying the report is wrong, just that it looks more complicated than the simple version people repeat in forums.
 
Another thing I noticed is that after those reports came out, there was almost no follow up coverage. Usually if a case goes all the way through court, there will be another article later saying what the final decision was. Here we mostly have the first wave of reporting and then silence.
That could mean the case was settled quietly, or that it never went further, or simply that media lost interest once he was no longer CEO. All of those happen pretty often with business figures.
Because of that, the name Max Josef Meier keeps showing up in searches together with the allegations, but without a clear ending to the story. When there is no clear ending, people keep asking the same questions again and again.
 
Also worth noting that startup founders often stay active in the background even after stepping down. If Max Josef Meier moved into smaller projects or advisory roles, there would not necessarily be media coverage about it, so the only articles people find are still the old ones about the investigation.
That can make it look like the controversy defines the whole career, even if it was only one part of it. On the other hand, public records do not disappear, so whenever someone searches his name the same reports come back up.

That is probably why this thread keeps getting new replies. There is enough documented to raise questions, but not enough detail to give a clear answer.
 
Posting another screenshot from the same article that User2 shared earlier. This part talks about what happened after the allegations became public and also mentions the leadership change at the company.
It says the prosecutor started proceedings in April 2023 and that Max Josef Meier resigned soon after, with the company calling it a mutual decision. Then it mentions that Maximilian Wühr took over as CEO and the company continued with a big financing round later.

There is also a line saying the penalty order could lead to a large fine if it becomes legally binding, but still below the level that would require a criminal record entry. That part makes the situation sound serious but not necessarily the most severe category of offense.

1774090528171.webp

What I find interesting is the section describing him as a successful founder with previous exits, which makes the story feel more like a fall from a high position rather than someone unknown getting into trouble.
 
Yeah I saw.
The wording about the fine being below the criminal record threshold stood out to me.
It suggests the legal classification might be different from what people assume when they read the headline.
 
The part about the financing round after the leadership change is actually important. If the company was still able to raise that much money after Max Josef Meier stepped down, it probably means investors believed the issue would not destroy the business long term. Investors usually do a lot of legal checks before putting in that kind of funding.

At the same time, the fact that he sold a large portion of his shares during that period makes me wonder if there was pressure behind the scenes. Sometimes founders reduce their role quietly when there is a controversy, even if the official statement says mutual agreement.

I am not saying that proves anything, but the timing in the article makes it look like the allegations had a real impact on his position in the company.
 
Also the article calling him a successful founder with flaws feels like the writer was trying to show both sides.
Not just accusing, but also not ignoring the allegations.
That usually means the story had enough evidence to report, but not enough for very strong claims.
 
One thing people forget is that penalty orders in Germany are often used to close cases without a long trial. That does not mean the accusation was fake, but it also does not mean there was a full court decision with witnesses and everything.

If the screenshot is accurate, the fine mentioned would be high but still below the level where a criminal record is automatically created. That suggests the authorities considered it serious, but not the highest category of crime.

The media sometimes does not explain those differences clearly, so readers from other countries think it means something else.
 
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