Roy O aggravated his sore ribcage but pitched seven strong innings, Mike Lamb hit a seventh inning go-ahead yak off of Stros-killer Ben Sheets, and Brad Lidge pitched two innings of brilliant relief to lead the Stros to a dramatic 2-1 victory over the Brew Crew at the Juice Box on Friday night.
The game ended on an incredible play. The Brewers’ Chad Magruder led off the ninth with a pinch hit single off of Lidge and was on second with two outs when Scott Podesednik lined a single to right on a 3-2 count. With the near capacity Juice Box going nuts, Bags cut off Lance Berkman‘s throw from right field as Magruder stopped at third. On an absolutely magnificent play, Bags flipped the ball to Jeff Kent, who had snuck behind Podesednik, who had rounded too far at first base. Kent got Podesednik in a run down toward second base, but alertly stopped and started crossing the infield toward Magruder when Magruder started toward home plate while Kent was running at Podesednik. When Magruder took off for home, Kent threw to catcher Chavez, who ran Magruder back toward Lamb, who finally made the the tag on Magruder for the third out and the win. The Juice Box crowd was going bonkers.
The win was the Stros fourth in the past eight games following their 12-game winning streak. The Stros ended their night one and a half games behind the Giants in the NL wild-card race, who are playing the Padres in a late game. The Cubs also won on Friday night to remain in between the Giants and the Stros in that race, and the Marlins lost on Friday night to fall 4.5 games behind the Giants in the wild card playoff race.
Oswalt (18-9) now who leads the National League in wins and improved to 9-1 in 13 starts since July 17. He allowed one run and eight hits in seven innings, but his ribcage ribcage injury — which has been bothering him for most of the season — flared up again in the eighth. Lidge replaced Oswalt with a man on second and no outs, and worked out of the jam, and then participated in the wonderful chaos described above in the ninth. It was Lidge’s 23rd save in 27 chances.
Sheets (11-12) was brilliant in the loss, striking out nine and not walking a batter as he hurled his fourth complete game of the season. Other than Lamb’s yak, Berkman’s run scoring double in the fourth was the only other major hit that Sheets allowed.
Pete Munro (4-6) takes the hill for the Stros on Saturday night against the Brewers’ journeyman Gary Glover (1-0) as the Stros try to keep pace with the Giants and Cubs.
Daily Archives: September 17, 2004
By the way, don’t forget this!
High school senior picture day
On Saturday, one of my assignments for the day is to accompany one of my daughters to the appointment with a photographer in which her high school senior pictures will be taken.
I am not going to show her these high school senior pictures before we go.
San Diego public financing emulates Enron
This post from earlier this year pointed out the similarity between the federal government’s accounting and financing of Medicare and Social Security benefits with Enron’s accounting and financing of its infamous off-balance sheet partnerships.
This NY Times article reports that San Diego’s municipal government is now facing a municipal reorganization under chapter 9 of the Bankruptcy Code because of its dubious accounting and financing of public pension fund earnings.
Consistent with the government’s prosecution of former Enron executives involved in such questionable accounting and financing schemes, can we now expect criminal prosecutions of San Diego public officials who condoned the same type of accounting and financing practices that have caused San Diego’s current dance with municipal insolvency?
Are you ready to rumble? — First Enron criminal trial begins Monday
After three years from Enron Corp.’s demise into bankruptcy, dozens of indictments and plea bargains, and an unprecendented government and media campaign to demonize former Enron executives, the first criminal trial against former Enron executives will begin Monday in Houston before U.S. District Judge Ewing Werlein in the case that has been dubbed “the Nigerian Barge case.” Here are earlier posts about this case.
The trial is about a relatively small Enron deal with Merrill Lynch & Co. involving three electricity-producing barges off Nigeria’s coast. But the outcome of the trial is likely to have much larger implications on the government’s other Enron-related criminal prosecutions and future prosecutions of investment bankers and corporate executives generally.
Two former midlevel Enron executives and four former Merrill executives face conspiracy and fraud charges. One of those charged is Merrill’s former head of investment banking, Daniel Bayly, the highest-ranking securities industry figure to be criminally charged in the corporate scandals that emerged after the stock market bubble burst earlier this decade.
The government contends that Enron’s 1999 sale to Merrill Lynch of an interest in the barges was a sham that and that the energy company improperly booked about $12 million in pretax profit as a result of the deal.
Merrill Lynch got into the barge deal because it was trying accomodate Enron, with which it wanted to do more business. As 1999 came to a close, Enron wanted to sell an interest quickly in the barges and book the profit in the fourth quarter. Such end-of-the-quarter deals are routine at big companies. So, Enron turned to Merrill, which concedes that it invested $7 million in the deal as a favor to Enron. As an inducement to make an investment that it would not make but for accomodating a valued corporate custormer, former Enron CFO Andrew Fastow orally represented to the Merrill executives that Enron would either buy or broker a sale of the barge interest the following year for a nice profit to Merrill.
Mr. Fastow’s oral inducement is the key fact in the case. If that promise was truly a part of the deal, then Merrill’s investment was never truly at risk, the transaction was not a “true sale,” and Enron’s booking of the $12 million in profit from the transaction was illegal. On the other hand, if Mr. Fastow’s oral representation was simply encouragement to a relunctant investor to do the deal and Enron had no legally enforceable obligation to repurchase or broker a deal for the interest in the barges the following year, then Enron’s booking of the transaction was entirely proper and no crime occurred.
So, Merrill decided to buy the interest in the barges and the deal closed in the fourth quarter of 1999. The parties entered into typical deal documents for such a transaction that specifically provide that neither party relied on any prior oral representations in entering into the transaction, that any such prior oral representations are void, and that the parties are relying solely on the written representations contained in the deal documents in entering into the deal. Mr. Fastow’s oral inducement to Merrill during the prior negotiations was not included in the deal documents, which were approved by both Merrill and Enron’s lawyers.
Nevertheless, in mid-2000, Mr. Fastow followed through on his oral promise by arranging for Merrill to sell its barge interest at a profit to one of the off-balance partnerships that Mr. Fastow operated and partly owned. As a result, the government contends that the Merrill purchase was never a legitimate transaction because of Mr. Fastow’s oral guarantee that Merrill would not lose any money. With Merrill never at risk, the government argues that no true sale actually occurred and, thus, Enron’s booking of the earnings from the deal was fraudulent.
After Mr. Fastow pleaded guilty to committing crimes at Enron and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors earlier this year, you would expect that the government would make him their star witness in the barge trial. However, the government has indicated that it does not even plan to call Mr. Fastow to testify in the upcoming trial. Rather, the government’s primary evidence of the alleged sham nature of the deal appears to be the “nervousness” that Merrill executives openly expressed about the deal in emails both before and after the transaction was consummated. The government interprets that nervousness as evidence that the Merrill executives knew that the deal was a sham and that they could be caught participating in a fraud with Enron.
However, there is a much more reasonable interpretation of Merrill’s nervousness regarding the deal — that is, that they really were nervous about the business risk of the deal, not because they thought it was a sham and a fraud, but because they knew that they could not rely on Mr. Fastow’s unenforceable oral assurance that Enron would broker a sale of the barges the following year. Accordingly, they were understandably concerned they might be making a bad investment that would result in Merrill having to hold the barges for a long time rather than the short term they preferred.
Stated another way, the Merrill executives were nervous because they knew that this was a real deal in which the deal documents controlled the rights of the parties, and that Mr. Fastow’s oral assurances to get them out of the investment could not be enforced if Enron failed to live up to them.
Under normal circumstances, it is highly unlikely that the government would have even pursued an indictment in a case of such marginal criminal liability. Inasmuch as the written deal documents would have dispostively undermined any attempt by Merrill Lynch to enforce through the civil justice system Mr. Fastow’s oral promise for Enron to repurchase or broker a deal for the barges, how does the government expect to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that such an unenforceable promise was really a part of the deal?
But Enron has become such a corporate pariah in American culture that nothing is normal that has anything to do with Enron. The barge trial will test the extent to which the pool of potential jurors in Houston has been tainted by Enron’s collapse. Given the extraordinary media coverage — much of which has been fueled by governmental officials’ public statements — private polls that the barge defendants’ defense attorneys have conducted reflect that over 75% of the jury pool would not be impartial in deciding a criminal case against a former Enron executive.
Thus, rather than using prosecutorial discretion to pass on prosecuting a case of dubious merit, the government in the barge case continues to pursue convictions because it knows that the public bias against Enron — partly stoked by the governmental officials’ derogatory public statements about Enron — gives it a good chance of obtaining convictions, anyway.
Moreover, the barge case took another twist recently after the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Blakely v. Washington (prior posts here), which held that the state of Washington’s sentencing laws were unconstitutional because they only allowed judges, not juries, to consider factors that increased sentences. Some legal experts have speculated that the decision calls the Constitutionality of federal sentencing guidelines into question for the same reason.
As a result of the Blakely decision, Enron prosecutors re-indicted the barge defendants to include new allegations that the barge deal caused market loss of more than $80 million, an allegation that can add years to a sentence under existing federal guidelines.
Not explained in the new indictment is how the Nigerian Barge deal — which was a relatively small transaction involving about $12 million in allegedly illegal profit for Merrill Lynch — could have caused $80 million in market loss. In fact, neither Enron nor Merrill Lynch lost a dime on the transaction, and the allegedly questionable accounting on the deal was not even discovered until well after Enron had filed bankruptcy and its equity value had already become worthless. During his distinguished legal career as a defense attorney before becoming a federal judge, Judge Werlein often defended corporate clients against dubious damage claims. It will be interesting to watch how he deals with the government’s equally questionable market loss allegations in this case.
Thus, watch this trial closely. If the criminal justice system works properly and the trial results in either a judge-directed or jury acquittal, then hopefully such a result will prompt the government to concentrate on its clearer cases of fraudulent conduct against former Enron officials and wrap up the investigation in reasonably short order. But if the government obtains convictions in this remarkably weak case, then the government will understandably believe that it can obtain a conviction against virtually any person having anything to do with Enron, and many others will come into the government’s sights for indictment.
Although it’s hard to emphathize with former Enron executives, Martha Stewart or Frank Quattrone, we should all be concerned about the increasingly common abuse of the criminal justice system that is disguised in popular prosecutions of unpopular corporate executives. For if we allow the government to abuse its power against unpopular defendants, it is a small step for the government to use that same power against you and me.
Meanwhile, here are the Houston Chronicleand NY Times stories on the barge trial and this Washington Post article speculates that recent plea bargains of former Enron executives have improved the government’s chances of obtaining convictions agaisnt former Enron chairman and CEO Kenneth Lay and former COO and CEO Jeffrey Skilling.
More on the bizarre tale of C. Tom Zaratti
This earlier post passed along this Houston Press story on the bizarre story of C. Tom Zaratti, a fringe player in the local criminal defense bar.
This Chronicle story reports that a Harris County jury assessed the maximum 10 year sentence to Mr. Zaratti after convicting him yesterday of downloading and maintaining child pornography on his home computer in violation of child predator laws. Mr. Zaratti’s legal team was not able to mount much of a defense, as the jury deliberated for less than an hour before convicting Zaratti and less than two hours before agreeing on the sentence.