U.S. District Judge Sim Lake has released less than $225,000 of former Enron chief accountant Richard Causey‘s money that is subject to the court’s previous order freezing substantially all of Mr. Causey’s assets and $55 million of former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling‘s assets. Judge Lake released the funds to Mr. Causey on the condition that he not spend any of the funds on country club fees. Mr. Causey is a member of the exclusive Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, which contains a Jack Nicklaus Signature Golf Course, one of the best tracts in the Houston metropolitan area.
Daily Archives: March 31, 2004
Southern District of Texas leads federal districts in percentage increase of personal bankruptcies
My old friend Judge Marvin Isgur handles the Harlingen, Texas courtroom as a part of his duties as a bankruptcy judge in the Southern District of Texas. I suspect that Judge Isgur already knows this, but this recently released Texas A&M University study reports that the Southern District of Texas leads all 94 United States federal judicial districts with the highest percentage increase in personal bankruptcy filings in 2003. Personal bankruptcy filings increased 5.3 percent in the United States, but they increased 23.2 in the Southern District of Texas.
The economics of oil and gasoline prices
During the political season, my demagogue antenna becomes more sensitive, and John Kerry’s recent public remarks blaming the Bush Administration for high gasoline prices rattled my antenna. Arthur Kling provides this timely post on the economics of oil and the poorly-named “Strategic” Oil Reserve. Pay special attention to Fred Singer’s piece on the ill-advised policies implemented during the Nixon and Carter Administrations in response to perceived shortages of oil.
David Warren on the Arab League
David Warren’s newest piece comments on the news this week that the Arab League summit has been called off because of the desire of several participants to discuss further realignment of Arab states with the United States. Mr. Warren is his usual insightful self, and discusses George Shultz’s excellent op-ed from earlier this week. In concluding, Mr. Warren observes:
The issue is more fundamental than democracy, and glib rhetoric about democracy (from Bush and Blair, among others) has helped to obscure it. In the present circumstances of the world, where a suitcase nuclear bomb or vial of anthrax can open the gates of hell, we cannot afford to ignore breeding grounds for terrorists. Failed or rogue states — states unable or unwilling to deal with international threats as they form within their own territories — must be replaced with states that are able and willing. Hence regime change in e.g. Afghanistan and Iraq.
Seven companies apply for new nuke plant license
This NY Times article reports on a consortium of seven major nuclear energy-related companies applying for a license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to build a new nuclear power plant. The most recent nuclear power plant that was actually built received its license in 1973. Prospects for new reactor construction have recently become more encouraging because of persistently high natural gas prices stiff environmental requirements for coal power stations.
Holman Jenkins on the sad case of Jamie Olis
As noted on this blog before, Holman Jenkins is one of America’s most insightful commentators on business issues. In his Wall Street Journal ($) column today, Mr. Jenkins addresses the injustice that occurred recently in the 24 year sentence given to former mid-level Dynegy executive, Jamie Olis, whose sad case was previously discussed here and here. Mr. Jenkins decries the sledgehammer approach that the Justice Department now takes in white collar criminal prosecutions:
Mr. Olis did wrong, but it’s hard not to see his sentence as punishment for insisting on his right to a jury trial. He didn’t loot the company for his own enrichment. The deal at the heart of the conspiracy may have involved deceptive accounting but it apparently yielded a real gain to the company in the form of $79 million in tax benefits. More to the point, whether or not the sentence was just, the metric that produced it was downright fishy.
A year ago Mr. Olis would have done five-to-six, but in a post-Enron mood, Congress insisted on double-digit penalties in cases associated with large stock-market losses. Rolled forth during the trial, therefore, was a government expert witness who — in exactly the kind of calculation that provokes eye-rolling when put forward by Wall Street analysts to “explain” stock prices — determined that Mr. Olis had caused between $500 million and $1.4 billion in damage to Dynegy’s 200,000 shareholders.
Mr. Jenkins’ column contains a graph that shows how Mr. Olis’ conduct had nothing to do with Dynegy’s stock price, followed by an “unspeakable” observation:
The deal for which Mr. Olis was prosecuted had nothing to do with the run-up in Dynegy’s stock price. Project Alpha wasn’t born until March 2001, and was exposed only in April 2002, by which time investors had already given up the fantasy of riskless profits from trading energy on the Internet.
Indeed, it’s a fine judgment whether such frauds were actually occasioned by pressure to protect unrealistic valuations awarded in the bubble market. What’s more, an unspeakable but unavoidable thought is that, somewhere, thousands of investors who picked the right moment to sell have no beef now with any of this scofflaw behavior — they benefited from it, to the tune of millions of dollars in some cases.
Then, Mr. Jenkins concludes by pointing out the injustice of forcing businessmen to choose between defending themselves and a life sentence:
Certainly in a system so addicted to plea-bargaining, some sort of safeguard is needed against extorted guilty pleas. Forget about white-collar convicts: One of these days, when reformers are done springing death row inmates with DNA evidence, they’ll start scouring the jails for people who pleaded guilty to crimes they didn’t commit because they feared the death penalty.
At this point, the only protection from the government’s sledgehammer approach to white collar criminal prosecutions is the judiciary. Unless the trial judges balance the playing field by forcing the government to drop duplicative charges and resist putting on far-fetched damage calculations, injustices such as the Olis case will continue.
Calvin Murphy P.R. campaign in full gear
As this Chronicle article reports, the public relations campaigns in the Calvin Murphy sexual molestation case are in full swing.
Murphy was interviewed live on Monday on KILT Radio’s afternoon drive time sports talk show, in which he claimed that the charges are false and financially motivated. Meanwhile, Assistant Harris County District Attorney Lance Long weighed in with a public statement that the accusers were not attempting to shake Murphy down, and that many of Murphy’s 14 children (from three different mothers) did not even know each other very well, confirming that Murphy’s extended family will never be compared the Brady Bunch.
Finally, in this Chronicle piece, Murphy’s attire while posting bond (a baggy, double-breasted white suit) is compared to the fashion displayed by other recent high-profile criminal defendants during their trials. Best line comes from long-time Houston defense attorney David Berg, who made the following comment on the clothes that Murphy wore while beeing booked:
“He looked like he was selling ice cream or more like an ice cream cone himself.”