Lay, Skilling convicted in Enron collapse
By KRISTEN HAYS, AP Business Writer

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060525/ap_on_bi_ge/enron_trial_61

HOUSTON - Former Enron Corp. chiefs Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling 
were convicted Thursday of conspiracy and securities and wire fraud in 
one of the biggest business scandals in U.S. history.

The verdict put the blame for the 2001 demise of the high-profile energy 
trader, once the nation's seventh-largest company, squarely on its top 
two executives. It came in the sixth day of deliberations following a 
federal criminal trial that lasted nearly four months.

Lay was also convicted of bank fraud and making false statements to 
banks in a separate, non-jury trial before U.S. District Judge Sim Lake 
related to Lay's personal finances.

The conspiracy conviction was a major win for the government, serving 
almost as a bookend to an era that has seen prosecutors win convictions 
against executives from WorldCom Inc. to Adelphia Communications Corp. 
and homemaking maven
Martha Stewart. The public outrage over the string of corporate scandals 
led Congress to pass the Sarbanes-Oxley act, designed to make company 
executives more accountable.

Enron's collapse alone took with it more than $60 billion in market 
value, almost $2.1 billion in pension plans and 5,600 jobs.

"The jury's verdicts help to close a notorious chapter in the history of 
America's publicly traded companies" said Rep. Michael Oxley (news, bio, 
voting record), R-Ohio, co-author of the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation. 
"Appeals aside, the end of the trial will mark the end of a dark era."

Enron founder Lay was convicted on all six counts against him in the 
corporate trial. Former Chief Executive Skilling was convicted on 19 of 
the 28 counts, including one count of insider trading, and acquitted on 
the remaining nine.

Lake set sentencing for Sept. 11. Lay's charges carry a maximum penalty 
in prison of 45 years for the corporate trial and 120 years in the 
personal banking trial. Skilling's charges carry a maximum penalty of 
185 years in prison.

The sentencing will come five years almost to the day after Skilling 
sold 500,000 shares of Enron stock for $15.5 million, for which he was 
convicted of insider trading.

As Lake read the verdict from the bench, Lay tossed his head at hearing 
the first "guilty" on the conspiracy count. He clutched his wife's hand 
as he heard that word over and over again.

Lay sat with his wife, Linda; his daughter, Elizabeth Vittor, a member 
of his defense team; and Linda Lay's daughter, Robyn. As Lay clutched 
Linda Lay's hand, the three women leaned forward and began to sob quietly.

After Lake left the courtroom, Lay's family and some friends gathered 
around him as the ex-chairman, red-faced and fighting back tears, hugged 
them and thanked them for their support.

Skilling, sitting with his brother, Mark, showed no emotion when the 
verdict was read.

"Obviously, I'm disappointed," Skilling told reporters outside the 
courthouse. "But that's the way the system works."

"We're going to stand behind him," his lawyer, Daniel Petrocelli, said. 
"As I told him, we've just begun to fight."

Skilling's $5 million bond, which restricts him to the continental U.S., 
remains in effect. Lay, who surrendered his passport, posted a $5 
million bond secured with family-owned properties at a hearing following 
the verdict.

The Enron founder was also ordered to stay in the Southern District of 
Texas or Colorado, avoid contact with any victim of the offense charged, 
report to pre-trial services regularly and must not own a gun or use 
alcohol excessively or drugs.

Asked if he understood the conditions, Lay said, "I do, Your Honor."

Jurors found through their verdict that both men had repeatedly lied to 
cover a vast web of unsustainable accounting tricks and failing ventures 
at Enron.

The panel rejected Skilling's insistence that no fraud occurred at Enron 
other than that committed by a few executives skimming millions in 
secret side deals, and that bad press and poor market confidence 
combined to sink the company.

"I wanted very, very badly to believe what they were saying, very much 
so, and there were pieces in the testimony where I felt their character 
was questioned," juror Wendy Vaughan said after the verdict was announced.

Both men testified in their own defense.

The government's victory caps a 4 1/2 year investigation that garnered 
16 guilty pleas from ex-Enron executives, including former Chief 
Financial Officer Andrew Fastow and former Chief Accounting Officer 
Richard Causey.

All are awaiting sentencing later this year except for two, who either 
finished or are still serving prison terms.

"You can't lie to shareholders, you can't put yourselves in front of 
your employees' interests. No matter how rich and powerful you are, you 
have to play by the rules," prosecutor Sean Berkowitz told reporters 
outside the courthouse.

He expressed sympathy for the Enron employees who lost their life 
savings when the company collapsed.

"Nothing that happened today is going to bring that back for them. ... 
What we do hope is that today's verdict lets them know that the 
government will not let corporate leaders violate their trust and get 
away with it."

Prosecutor John Hueston, who sparred with Lay on the stand, said the 
founder had missed "a golden opportunity to save Enron.

"He made that choice to put his own interests ahead of that of the 
shareholders and investors. And he did that by choosing not to tell the 
unvarnished truth and he did it by choosing not to ask the hard questions."

Asked what was next, Berkowitz joked, "We're probably going to step 
aside and go get a well deserved drink and an afternoon off."

The Enron case tested the government's ability to prove complicated 
corporate skullduggery. Its implosion and the subsequent scandals scared 
off investors, increased regulatory scrutiny over publicly traded 
companies and prompted Congress to stiffen white collar penalties.

"This verdict encourages us ... to continue to combat corruption 
wherever we find it," said Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty, at the 
Justice Department in Washington. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales was 
recused from the Enron case because he once was a partner at Houston law 
firm Vinson & Elkins LLP, which represented Enron.

The government's vast investigation seemed to stall until Fastow pleaded 
guilty in January 2004 to two counts of conspiracy and paved the way for 
prosecutors to secure indictments against his bosses. Fastow also led 
investigators to Causey, who was bound for trial alongside Lay and 
Skilling until he broke ranks with their unified defense and pleaded 
guilty to securities fraud just weeks before the trial began.


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