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Jeffrey Skilling Ex-Enron CEO, Heads To The Supreme Court To Overturn His Conviction

MARK SHERMAN   03/ 1/10 03:39 PM ET   AP

Jeffrey Skilling Appeal
Jeffrey Skilling Ex-Enron CEO: Appeals Convictions as Unfair

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appeared troubled Monday by the selection of the jury that convicted former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling as well as the use of a federal fraud law against him.

Several justices appeared receptive to arguments by Skilling's lawyer that he did not have a fair trial in Houston, Enron's hometown, following the energy company's 2001 collapse that cost thousands of jobs and billions of dollars.

Amid concern that the trial judge spent too little time questioning prospective jurors, Justice Stephen Breyer said, "I'm worried about a fair trial in this instance."

Skilling was convicted in 2006 on 19 counts of conspiracy, securities fraud, insider trading and lying to auditors. His lawyers are hoping for a new trial.

He also is contesting his conviction under the federal fraud law making it a crime to deprive shareholders or the public of "the intangible right to honest services."

Critics say the law is vague and unfair.

Justice Antonin Scalia, the court's most vocal critic of the law, said it sounds to him as though the law says, "It's a crime to do any bad thing."

But Justice Department lawyer Michael Dreeben said that Skilling betrayed the trust of Enron shareholders by lying about the health of the company and also selling a half-million shares and netting $15 million just a few months before Enron fell into bankruptcy.

Skilling "misused his official position," Dreeben said.

Skilling's case is one of three before the court that raise questions about the "honest services" fraud law. The other defendants are former newspaper magnate Conrad Black and former Alaska state lawmaker Bruce Weyhrauch.

Sri Srinivasan, Skilling's Washington-based lawyer, focused much of his argument on the jury issue. Skilling sought to have the trial moved out of Houston, but the judge turned him down, and a federal appeals court backed that decision.

Three-fifths of those initially questioned as potential jurors reported they could not set aside their prejudice or anger against Enron, or were unsure if they could, Srinivasan said.

The other key factor, he said, is that jurors would feel pressure to convict Skilling because they knew their neighbors and colleagues were expecting it.

He said the trial of Skilling and former Enron chairman Kenneth Lay, who has since died, was a rare case that needed to be moved out of Houston "because of the degree of passion and prejudice in the community."

The judge in the trial spent five hours assembling a jury and questioned each juror for an average of 4 1/2 minutes, he said. He noted that in the death penalty trial of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, the case moved to Denver, and even then, putting together a jury took 18 days.

Breyer and Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the only member of the court with experience as a federal trial judge, seemed especially bothered by the questioning of one potential juror who reported that she herself lost $50,000 to $60,000 in the Enron debacle.

The judge did not immediately disqualify her. Indeed, Skilling's lawyers used one of their limited challenges to make sure she did not become a juror.

"How can we be satisfied that a fair and impartial jury was picked when the judge doesn't follow up when the witness said, 'I'm a victim of this crime,'" Sotomayor asked.

Dreeben insisted the trial was fair, pointing out the judge had more than 15 years of experience picking juries and trying cases. He also rejected comparisons to McVeigh's trial, a capital case stemming from the death of 168 people in the bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City.

Thirteen media companies, including The Associated Press, joined in the filing of a brief urging the high court not to rule so broadly on the jury issue that judges would take steps to restrict press coverage.

The court is expected to issue an opinion by late June.

The case is Skilling v. U.S., 08-1394.

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12:02 PM on 03/03/2010
he should be thankful his head isn't on a stick.
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Birdman
09:03 PM on 03/02/2010
I'm almost certain the Supreme "even corporations are people" Court will certainly say he is innocent because after all it was the business that did it with the candlestick in the library. Skilling was an innocent bystander that he could not do anything, the corporation had a mind of its own, and it gets to vote too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Artemis34
Women can vote against the GOP or against their ow
07:45 PM on 03/02/2010
"I know a place where the constitutions doesn't mean squat --- the Supreme Court!"

Nixon's Head in Futurama

As true today as in the year 3000
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GoDogGo
A fiscally realistic, socially progressive citizen
06:34 PM on 03/02/2010
The mere fact the Supreme Court is hearing an appeal by a wealthy crook, and not protecting the less-fortunate of convicts, is a testament to how far this court has sunk.

Besides, what part of "honest" don't they get? Honest means, "don't lie" which he did and was thus convicted. Overturning that is an insult to all honest Americans.
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littlepuffycloud
I propose a toast to my self control...
11:29 AM on 03/02/2010
If only they would've acted on what William Shakespeare said about lawyers...but it's too late now.
11:49 AM on 03/02/2010
Don't forget the character in Henry VI who said that was called "Dick" and he was referring to how they could CIRCUMVENT justice. Guess"Dick" got his way. In any case, he said "the first thing we do..." so you're right: It's too late now.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mdlawyer2
11:00 AM on 03/02/2010
Steal a loaf of bread, get ten years in prison. Scam billions of dollars of people's retirement funds, steal their futures, their nest eggs, their dreams and hopes and get out of jail free (or most never go to jail in the first place). It looks as though petty criminals just aren't thinking large enough. Given our guilt-free culture, it's even surprising Bernie Madoff went to jail.
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
11:50 AM on 03/02/2010
"Steal a little and they throw you in jail, steal a lot and they make you king." Bob Dylan
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Artemis34
Women can vote against the GOP or against their ow
07:47 PM on 03/02/2010
Between this and Wall Street bonuses, it is clear performance and reward are disconnected.
09:37 AM on 03/02/2010
Look at the Goldman Sachs/ Greece deal and you'll see Skilling is relatively small potatoes. As such, if he is exonerated it will be curtains for our Justice System. I've got 9 to 1 on the Supreme Court rolling over like a circus dog.
10:17 AM on 03/02/2010
Most people I know share your cynicism.
What if it is now the majority perception in America that the U.S. Supreme Court is controlled by big money?
For how many years did jurists fight for an independent judiciary? Wasn't that a cornerstone of the entire American experiment?
What happens when even the top legal scholars let their comfortable academic silence speak their tacit approval of the dissolution of an independent judiciary?
If the nation's most prestigious law schools don't object to the new 'pragmatic' theory of law, who will?
11:03 AM on 03/02/2010
Well it certainly won't be the lawyer/politicians. They made it "such". It'll have to be your Average Jose.
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04:55 AM on 03/02/2010
of the 10,000 cases that want to be heard
they have to choose to hear 100 ,
and this is deemed a deserving one ?
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10:02 AM on 03/02/2010
Yes, all the poor suckers on death row that had wantonly poor legal representation will have to wait while we ponder on Jeffrey Skilling.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
03:43 AM on 03/02/2010
AMAZINGLY, A WHITE-COLLAR CR1MINAL MIGHT GO FREE ON A TECHNICALITY IN AMERICA!

While a HIGHER PERCENTAGE of Average and P00R Americans sit in Prison than in any industrialized country in the WORLD!

SUPREMES are TROUBLED by jury selection that put the CR00K Skilling away on all these findings:

1. 19 Counts of CONSPIRACY
2. Securities FRAUD RUINING CALIFORNIA - Still has NOT recovered from the LOSS!
3. LY1NG to Auditors
4. Conviction of federal fraud depriving shareholders/public "intangible right to honest services."
5. Skilling betrayed trust of Enron shareholders-1ying about health of company and selling ½ Million Shares a few months before Enron went bankrupt.

It is actually amazing he had to serve TIME in “!!WHITE-COLLAR CRIME IS GREAT!!” America!

Same CR00KED JUDGE worried = Scalia
But NOW = Sotomayor?
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08:05 AM on 03/02/2010
These people have jobs for life- ostensibly the highest ethical and moral positions. What- they don't like the pay? What is up with the court!!!!! How many more cases will be so egregiously decided (and yes, it does matter when they can cherry pick the cases they hear)??
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NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
03:37 AM on 03/02/2010
Gee I wonder what will happen. ;-)
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
11:51 AM on 03/02/2010
:((
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polishlogician
No sugar tonight in my tea..
03:36 AM on 03/02/2010
...I have this macabre dream of a two cars crashing, each driver a fatality, on the streets of DC as Roberts rams into Scalia....
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polishlogician
No sugar tonight in my tea..
03:33 AM on 03/02/2010
all he has to do is pay congress to write legislation that overturns his conviction, or get a pardon from the prez....he's got $$$ stashed away, he can claim it as 'free speech' funds....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
03:24 AM on 03/02/2010
The 5 SUPREMES will probably do it! I hope they do!

Justification to NA1L ALL 5 of THEM with IMPEACHMENT!
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03:05 AM on 03/02/2010
Into an alternative universe we now find ourselves where those that created the black hole that has sucked the secure futures from the middle class and from future-future generations are elevated into positions of prominence and given the keys to the kingdom.

The scotus may say one thing, and The People have the right to disagree, in what manner they will.
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
02:11 AM on 03/02/2010
If Cass Sunstein gets a nomination it will indeed be time to hit the streets.
That man is an off the hook anti-constitutionalist