More

Court Hears Appeal of Enron's Skilling

JUAN A. LOZANO   04/ 2/08 09:15 PM ET   AP

Enron

NEW ORLEANS — Former Enron Corp. CEO Jeffrey Skilling, convicted for his role in the once might energy giant's collapse, took risks when he ran the company but they were always for its benefit, his attorney told an appeals court Wednesday.

His well-intentioned actions negate his convictions, which rest on a legal theory that Skilling deprived Enron of his "honest services" and put his own interests above those of the company, defense attorney Daniel Petrocelli told a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

But prosecutors argued Skilling's actions were dishonest and contrary to the needs of the company's shareholders and its financial stability.

The appeals court was expected to rule at a later date on Skilling's appeal to have his conviction overturned.

Skilling was convicted in May 2006 on 19 counts of fraud, conspiracy, insider trading and lying to auditors for his role in the collapse of Houston-based Enron, once the nation's seventh-largest company.

Skilling, who is serving a 24-year sentence in a federal prison in Minnesota, was not present during Wednesday's arguments. But his wife and siblings were there.

Company founder Kenneth Lay also was convicted, but he died less than two months later and his convictions were vacated.

Petrocelli made the honest services theory the centerpiece of his arguments. Legal experts say that is Skilling's best chance at overturning some or possibly all of his convictions.

Prosecutors theorized at trial that Enron employees were bound to serve honestly and not put their interests ahead of the company's. If they failed to do so, they deprived the company of "honest services" and committed a crime.

The 5th Circuit has already overturned several Enron-related convictions that were based on the honest services theory, ruling that executives did only what Enron wanted them to do and did not profit at its expense.

Petrocelli characterized Skilling as a loyal employee who at times might have bent the rules, but only for the company's benefit.

Skilling and Lay "may not have done their job appropriately, but that is not a crime," Petrocelli said.

But federal prosecutor J. Douglas Wilson told the judges that Skilling's actions were inconsistent with the short-term or long-term goals of the company's shareholders.

"At Skilling's level, the corporation is the shareholders," Wilson said. "Skilling works for the shareholders and if his actions are contrary to (their) long-term or short-term goals, then that is a violation of honest services."

Skilling is the highest-ranking executive to be punished for the accounting tricks and shady business deals that led to the loss of thousands of jobs, more than $60 billion in Enron stock value and more than $2 billion in employee pension plans after the company imploded in 2001.

Petrocelli told the judges the conspiracy count against Skilling was based on the honest services theory and if that count is thrown out, the 18 other ones should fall as well because they are tied to that count by either flawed jury instructions or because prosecutors made the conspiracy claim the basis of their entire case against Skilling.

Wilson said even if the conspiracy count was dismissed, the rest of the counts should remain because prosecutors proved those charges independently of that conspiracy count.

Petrocelli's other main argument was that prosecutors hid important evidence by not turning over more than 400 pages of notes from FBI interviews with former Enron Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow.

At Lay and Skilling's trial, Fastow testified his bosses were aware of fraudulent financial structures engineered by Fastow and his staff. Fastow, considered the mastermind behind financial schemes that doomed Enron, is serving a six-year sentence.

Prosecutors gave summaries of the notes to Skilling's defense team. The trial judge, U.S. District Judge Sim Lake, denied requests to turn over the full notes to Skilling's lawyers.

After the trial, the 5th Circuit ordered the notes be turned over.

Petrocelli told the judges that after finally getting the notes, he discovered that Fastow's initial statements of whether Skilling knew about secret side deals to manipulate Enron's financial statements differed from his testimony, in which he asserted that Skilling did know.

"That's crucial," Petrocelli said.

But Wilson said the notes Petrocelli was referencing actually referred to another Enron deal that had nothing to do with the trial.

The judges asked Wilson if the trial's jury selection _ which lasted one day _ was sufficient, if the trial should have been held outside of Houston, and if Skilling's 24-year sentence was justified.

Wilson said jury selection was thorough and resulted in Skilling getting a fair trial in Houston and that sentencing guidelines justified the prison term.

After the court hearing, Petrocelli said Skilling has learned Spanish in prison and that he is teaching it to his fellow prisoners.

"Jeff wants to come home. He hopes very much the court sees it our way," he said.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BUSINESS

Filed by Michelle Kung  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 37
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
09:46 AM on 04/04/2008
Skilling's sentence was NOT long enough...
12:11 AM on 04/04/2008
Personally, I hope the bastard dies in jail. He is directly responsible for ruining the lives of thousands of hard working people who lost their entire life's saving due to his criminal activity.
12:10 AM on 04/04/2008
"...His well-intentioned actions negate his convictions..." - defense attorney Daniel Petrocelli

The same could be said for a serial killer who specializes in murdering prostitutes.

When will the American public awaken? How can anyone justify the continued existence of this Armani suited scum?
12:02 AM on 04/04/2008
What a cheapskate! Trying to overturn his conviction through the courts, instead of just buying a pardon like the rest of the corrupt Republican Executives. Poor Georgie's gonna get a really sore wrist signing all those things.
12:02 AM on 04/04/2008
He could always vacate the charges like Lay.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
j0hnwi11iams
Liberal Computer Engineer
11:02 PM on 04/03/2008
I am a Californian and as such have vivid memories of the rolling blackouts that resulted from the market manipulation of Enron from within their air conditioned headquarters. I would have nothing less than his HEAD. He should be thankful this isn't the 18th century.
11:40 PM on 04/03/2008
I live in CA too. Add Arnold;s head to Skilling's and I'm with you, This horrible scheme was calculated to oust Gray Davis, who was milktoast, but today in California we kill money for schools to bail crooks out and wave to the yacht owners.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:50 PM on 04/03/2008
Skillings would already have been done in in prison except none of the former employees could afford to hire a Mexican hit man.
12:22 AM on 04/04/2008
Part of the executive benefit package includes personal or physical security. For many to executives the cost of security amounts to several million dollars per year.

Source: http://www2.csoonline.com/exclusives/column.html?CID=33337

Follow the people. Follow the money. You will be surprised.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
08:49 PM on 04/03/2008
In our time stealing from the innocent citizens of our Republic is considered as equivalent to a speeding ticket. And the more that is stolen the less the penalty. The Wall Street swindlers were invited to appear before Congress today, and asked if the 30 billion of our monies were enough to quench their avarice. And they were asked to advise on the correct response for future bailouts of the the most gigantic fraud committed in the history of the human race.
In these days criminality is seen as patriotism. Our elected leaders see our currency as mantra form heaven that can be used for every crisis and coverup of governmental negligence and Wall Street greed. We are witnessing the end days of responsible governance and a viable economic system.
photo
bikerdude
On the left side of progressive
08:45 PM on 04/03/2008
This guy is a crook who was convicted. End of story. Give him time off for good behavior after he's served about three quarters of his time. This bullshit about "in his position he was working for the board of directors", is all smoke screen. Why should the welfare of the company be at variance with the welfare of the board unless the board or the executive was in variance with the law or the truth. Keep this perp in jail where he belongs.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:51 PM on 04/03/2008
I'm not concerned about "a crook who was convicted."

I'm mightily concerned about a crook named George W. Bush and a crook named Richard Cheney and a crook named Nancy Pelosi and about fifteen other crooks who are right now sitting at the top of the heap of the United States Government and ruthlessly manipulating it to make every one of them (by their reckoning) richer than King Midas.

I'm mightily concerned about "impeachment is off the table" when what is supposed to be "the supreme law of the land" says quite clearly, "any civil officer .. shall be impeached."

I'm mightily concerned because close to one MILLION men and women are either stone-dead or are missing arms, legs, and brains as a direct result of what has been "off the table." And oh yeah, millions more who have no water, no food, no power...

There is no amount of high-finance dollars that is anywhere equal to a million human lives. Or the City of New Orleans. Or a bridge and the people who died in a cold river when it collapsed for lack of basic maintenance. Or any of a thousand other things that were ruthlessly spurned by these men in their god-forsaken sociopathic quest for whatever they consider to be "money" and "power."

I ... deleted the remaining paragraphs. In the name of civility. Good night.
photo
Marlyn
Always wrong, but never in doubt.
07:52 PM on 04/03/2008
He should commit suicide like his boss did.
09:12 PM on 04/03/2008
Suicide????????

Ole' Kenny Boy Lay knew alot about Dick Cheney and Bushie and their "energy policy". I am betting on a government related hit, as once Kenny went to jail, he likely would have started singing like a bird.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
11:16 PM on 04/03/2008
Curare smoke, carex? It's been used before.
11:42 PM on 04/03/2008
OR Kenny boy is on a beach in the tropics holding deck chairs for Dick and George.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:38 PM on 04/03/2008
If he gets out . I'm moving to another country. Sick of this shyte
05:08 PM on 04/03/2008
CEO's don't go to jail these days guys....they have 'heart-attacks'.
photo
bikerdude
On the left side of progressive
08:46 PM on 04/03/2008
A real, serious heart attack might be a form of justice....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
11:19 PM on 04/03/2008
Hmmmm...a horizontal removal perhaps? heh heh
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:24 PM on 04/03/2008
I absolutely agree. Skilling's convictions should be overturned with-prejudice and he should be recompensated $10 million a month for every month of his imprisonment.

Why?

Because he has not vaporized the lives of more than half a million people, as in "literally."

The President of the United States and the Vice-President of the United States and the Attorney General of the United States and ... etcetera ... have done so. And they continue to do so.

The actions of these "civil officers" are not being performed in the interest of the needs of the country; they are being done in quest of their own private fortune.

If these infinitely-worse criminals can continue their crimes and get away with it for six years running, I think we should not only recompense and release Mr. Skilling but also every other white collar criminal now under lock-and-key.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
WIpatriot
I've seen enough to make me Progressive
03:37 PM on 04/03/2008
Hey, Sundial, that reminds me:

IMPEACH!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:41 PM on 04/03/2008
Obviously. Precisely.

I think it is absolutely unconscionable for a gang .. and that's what they are, a Gang .. of elected officials to put business officials in prison for twenty or thirty years when they, who have committed outrageously heinous crimes, go un-punished by the simple expedient of "putting 'off the table'" what they consider to be a 'discretionary' obligation to police themselves.

There's a faded document in Washington, DC that proclaims itself to be "the Supreme Law of the Land." Somewhere on that supposedly-treasured piece of vellum, in Article 2 Section 4 to be precise, is the word "shall" next to the two words "be impeached" and very close to the three words "any civil officer."

But if the "Supreme Law of the Land" has no effect ... if its august provisions can be "put 'off the table'" by a woman who appears to be an authority on Democratic Party politics ... then we have no right to hold Mr. Skilling, nor any man or woman in the country, in Prison for any reason: "what's good for the goose is good for the gander."

You can't have a Republic and have it both ways. If you can "choose to ignore" the Supreme Law of the Land, then there is obviously an unquestionable precedent for Mr. Skilling to have similarly "put off the table" any obviously-lesser law that he chose.

Objection?
photo
bikerdude
On the left side of progressive
08:48 PM on 04/03/2008
Every time the names Bush and/or Cheney come into your mind, they should be accompanied by the word IMPEACH. The crime is that they are still getting away with their crimes.
None of that excuses Skilling or enron though...
03:19 PM on 04/03/2008
LOL! His actions weren't selfish, indeed! Boy, for a former-multi-millionaire executive, Skilling is one stupid motherf*cker. I suggest he have his wife send him a care package loaded with soap on a rope and Astroglide ...
03:11 PM on 04/03/2008
unless his lawyers are working pro bono, skilling ought to just bite down on a rag and spend that money on asslube now because he'll still need it even after his appeals are exhausted.