The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced that it has decided to conduct a formal investigation into London-based Royal/Dutch Shell Group‘s surprise announcement on Jan. 9 that it was downgrading 20 percent of its proved reserves and reclassifying them into less certain unproved categories. The SEC had been making an informal inquiry into the matter since Shell’s announcement. A formal investigation usually means that SEC regulators have reason to believe laws may have been broken, but do not have sufficient evidence to make that conclusion. The investigation gives the SEC legal power to subpoena documents and testimony from Shell.
Daily Archives: February 19, 2004
“I blagged my way through . . .”
This London Telegraph story relates the hilarious story of an Oxford engineering student “blagging” his way through a series of lectures on global finance to Chinese business PhD students. The only problem was that the lectures were supposed to be given by a New York economics professor who happened to have the same name as the Oxford student. Ah, the inscrutable nature of economics!
Update on Skilling Indictment
Here is the indictment against ex-Enron CEO Jeff Skilling, which also serves as a supeceding indictment against former Enron chief accountant, Richard Causey.
As noted earlier in an earlier post, the indictment continues a government strategy in the Enron-related criminal cases to allege dozens of criminal counts that would result in the equivalent of a life sentence for Mr. Skilling if he is convicted on all or simply most of the counts. The criminal case against Mr. Skilling landed in federal District Judge Sim Lake‘s court, who is smart and fair, and an outstanding trial judge. This case is shaping up to be a real donneybrook.
2nd Circuit Reverses $132 Million Judgment for Fed. R. Evid. 701 Violation
In Bank of China v. NBM LLC, No. 02-9267 (2d Cir. Feb. 17, 2004), the 2nd Circuit reversed a jury’s $132 million civil RICO verdict in a bank fraud trial, in part because of a Fed. R. Evid. 701 violation. The plaintiffs offered an employee to testify in the form of lay opinion about various aspects of banking practice and custom and the district court admitted the testimony, citing the witness’ years of experience in international banking and “common sense.” Inasmuch as the testimony was based exclusively on the experience of the witness, the 2nd Circuit held that the testimony was subject to Fed. R. Evid. 702’s disclosure requirements for expert evidence, and not properly admissible as lay opinion. Although the 2nd Circuit observed that the Fed. R. Evid. 701 violations are subject to a harmless error analysis, the Court nevertheless concluded that the evidentiary error was not harmless, given that the witness’ testimony comprised nearly a thousand pages of the trial transcript.
Moral to this decision: Disclose your experts!
Crown Castle continues to reel
Houston-based Crown Castle International Corp, which owns and operates a network of 15,500 towers and rooftop sites that hold a variety of communications transmissions equipment, on Wednesday reported a net loss of $171.4 million on fourth-quarter revenue of $253.8 million for the period ending Dec. 31, 2003. For the year ending Dec. 31, 2003, Crown Castle had total revenue of $930.3 million (up from $902 million in 2002), but a net loss for fiscal year 2003 of $420.9 million, which increased from the 2002 net loss of $273 million. This more optimistic analysis of Crown Castle’s prospects appeared in the Houston Business Journal last September.
Kim Jong II cook’s story
One of my favorite magazines is Atlantic Monthly. In the February edition, North Korea dictator Kim Jong II‘s former cook pens an article ($) about the decade he spent cooking for the, might we say, idiosyncratic Mr. Kim. The entire article is well worth reading, but here is a sampling:
Kim Jong Il is an avid equestrian, and has even appeared in a TV movie atop a snow-white horse. (All horses belonging to the Kim family are white.) I often accompanied him on long rides. . .
One day in 1992, as I was riding behind Kim Jong Il at a right-turning path, I noticed that his horse was standing by itself. Kim had fallen off the horse. It had apparently slipped on a bed of pebbles laid over some asphalt being repaired. Kim Jong Il had hit his head and shoulder quite hard and had fallen unconscious. A doctor was called immediately.
I’m not sure when he regained consciousness, but the next day we all returned to Pyongyang by his private train. From that day, every evening at 10:00 P.M. for the next month, five or six of his administrative staff members and I would be injected with the same painkiller that Kim Jong Il was taking. He was afraid he would become addicted to it, and didn’t want to be the only one.
Wal Mart to build huge distribution center near the Port of Houston
The Chronicle reports the Wal-Mart is planning to build a huge distribution center in Chambers County that will boost container tonnage through the Port of Houston and create hundreds of jobs. The 2-million square foot distribution facility, which will be one of the largest import centers in the country, will be at Cedar Crossing Business Park just outside of Baytown. The structure will cover roughly 50 acres of land under one roof.
UH Law Prof: Jurors do your duty
Following an earlier post on last week’s Chronicle article on the impact that tort reform is having on Harris County jurors, Professor Richard Alderman, who holds the Dwight Olds Chair in Law at the University of Houston Law Center, writes this op-ed in which he criticizes the effect of tort reform propaganda on the civil justice system. Professor Alderman notes the following in a part of his op-ed:
The United States does not regulate the marketplace by legislation. We regulate through the civil justice system. Private attorneys represent private citizens injured as the result of negligent, incompetent, careless or even willful conduct. Professionals maintain high standards, corporations follow the law, manufacturers develop safe products, landlords maintain security systems, and newspapers and television stations check and double check stories because of lawsuits. Our civil justice system is often the only recourse you have when you lose your money, your health or even your life. And an essential part of that system is the damages the Legislature and courts have determined may be recovered by an injured individual. Just as jurors must make the hard decision to imprison or even sentence a criminal to death, civil jurors have a duty to follow the law and award damages authorized by the Legislature.
UT-Houston Docs get back to correct research
The Chronicle reports that the FBI has investigated The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and found no evidence that employees regularly accessed child pornography websites. The investigation was commenced after a UT-Houston auditor expressed concern last fall that a number of employees, including physicians, might have violated child predator laws when they visited porn sites on UT Houston computers. An earlier post about this matter is here.