< Positively 4th Street | Main | Tales of Two Lives >

January 28, 2010

The DOJ’s Merits Brief in the Skilling Appeal

Skilling6 On the heels of last month’s filing with the U.S. Supreme Court of Jeff Skilling’s brief on the merits of his appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, the Department of Justice filed its brief on the merits of Skilling’s appeal earlier this week.

A copy of the brief is below, but I recommend downloading it so that you will have the version bookmarked in Adobe Acrobat that facilitates review of the brief.

The DOJ’s brief is surprising in a couple of key respects.

First, the DOJ’s case against Skilling has shrunk dramatically. The DOJ now bases its entire case on Skilling’s involvement in alleged misrepresentations that were made to the market regarding two Enron divisions, Enron Broadband Services and Enron Energy Services. Nothing in regard to the dubious Nigerian Barge transaction. No mention of the theory that Enron’s earnings were lagging in 1999 and that’s why the reason why Skilling supposedly had former CFO Andrew Fastow engineer the allegedly corrupt LJM special purpose entity. Heck, there is not even a mention of the supposedly key Global Galactic Agreement. I mean really – is the DOJ even talking about the same case that it tried?

Stated simply, has the DOJ’s entire case against Skilling now been reduced to his optimistic statements about those two divisions?

The other surprising aspect of the brief is the DOJ’s apparent surrender on the lack of private gain issue in regard to Skilling’s conviction on honest services wire fraud. Check out this reasoning from p. 50 of the brief:

Petitioner had, and acted upon, his personal financial interests, which conflicted with those of the shareholders to whom he owed a fiduciary duty. The company and its shareholders attempted to align their long-term interests with petitioner’s by linking his compensation to stock price. But the obvious premise of that arrangement was that petitioner would act to maximize shareholder wealth. Petitioner subverted that premise, and placed his interests in conflict with that of the shareholders,when, for his own financial benefit, he engaged in an undisclosed scheme to artificially inflate the stock’s price by deceiving the shareholders and others about the company’s true financial condition. That conduct constituted fraud. The only question here is whether the public nature of petitioner’s compensation scheme prevents his conduct from constituting honest services fraud. It does not. Although petitioner’s basic compensation scheme was public, his scheme to artificially inflate the company’s stock price by misrepresenting its financial condition, in order to derive additional personal benefits at the expense of shareholders, was not. Petitioner’s deception deprived shareholders of the information they needed to make informed decisions and thereby defrauded them of his honest services.

So, what about the shareholders who sold stock at the allegedly inflated price resulting from Skilling’s supposed deceptions? Did Skilling defraud them, too? If so, I can think of quite a few investors who wouldn’t mind being defrauded like that.

And what about Skilling himself, who continued to acquire large amounts of Enron stock right up to the time he resigned from the company several months before its collapse. Did Skilling’s alleged “deception deprive [Skilling] of the information [he] needed to make informed decisions and thereby defrauded [himself] of his honest services.”

I’ll bet that reasoning will raise a few questions during oral argument, which is currently scheduled for the afternoon of March 1st.

DOJ Merits Brief in Skilling Appeal

Posted by Tom at January 28, 2010 12:01 AM

Comments

The Department of Injustice has defined fraud in such a broad way that nearly any action in the business arena can be caught under such a net. Fraud goes to intent.

By the way, when the government withholds evidence or when it engages in rather tortured definitions of the law, is it not engaging in fraud as well? Inquiring minds want to know.

By the way, when a journalist is sleeping (secretly) with the lead prosecutor in a case and she then serves as a propaganda mouthpiece for the prosecution, are she and the prosecutor also engaging in fraud? Just wondering.

Posted by: William Anderson [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 30, 2010 4:49 PM

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?