SCOTUS rules on sentencing guidelines

The Supreme Court ruled today in this decision in U.S. v. Booker that the federal sentencing guidelines must satisfy the standards of the Sixth Amendment as applied in the Court’s earlier ruling in Blakely v. Washington. Accordingly, the Supreme Court has set aside two provisions of the guidelines that made them mandatory.
Here is the initial NY Times article on the Supreme Court’s decision, but for more thorough analysis of the decision, check out Professor Berman’s blog.

PW hammered in Ohio accounting fraud case

In a highly unusual development, a federal magistrate in Ohio is recommending that a U.S. District Court approve a default judgment in an accounting fraud case against Big Four accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers for its alleged failure to turn over evidence sought by a former audit client and its shareholders.

Texas Pacific Group paddling upstream on Portland General Electric acquisition

This post from a couple of weeks ago noted this WSJ profile on Texas Pacific Group, the Fort Worth-based investment fund founded by former bankruptcy lawyer David Bonderman and business whiz Jim Coulter in 1993.
Well, it appears that TPG may be getting more than it bargained for in its proposed $2.35 billion cash and debt acquisition of Portland General Electric, which is Enron’s Pacific Northwest utility, a deal that is still awaiting regulatory approval.
In the meantime, this Williamette Week Online article reports that TGP’s proposed acquisition of Portland General is running into rough waters. Earlier this week, TPG released hundreds of pages of internal documents in response to the Williamette Week article as it tries to allay widespread skepticism among Oregonians about its intentions for the utility.
The documents lay out different scenarios that TPG is considering for for making the utility more profitable, including cuts in a customer-service department. TPG contends that the analysis was preliminary and is not going to be used as the basis of actual changes in utility operations. Despite the assurances, several Oregon officials are opposing TGP’s acquisition of Portland General as the Oregon Public Utility Commission has begun final deliberations over regulatory approval.
TGP has proposed to put day-to-day control of the utility in the hands of a new Oregon company that would have a board comprised mainly of Oregonians. Nevertheless, TPG — the 80% owner of the Oregon company — would retain the right to overrule the Oregon company’s board regarding key decisions. After Enron, Oregonians apparently do not trust anyone from Texas.
The main complaint of Oregonians that oppose the deal is that TPG’s turnaround strategies could degrade utility service in Portland and surrounding communities. Oregon and Washington consumers already have been hammered by sharply higher electric rates as a result of rising natural-gas prices and continued fallout from the California energy crisis of 2000-2001.
Meanwhile, the economic bargaining continues. TPG has offered rate reductions totaling $43 million spread out over five years beginning in 2007 if the deal is approved. However, Commission staff and consumer advocates contend that the rate reductions are inadequate and are pushing for further concessions. To date, TPG is holding firm.

The honest idiot defense

In this article, NY Times business columnist Floyd Norris notes the common defense that the various indicted CEO’s of the business world are using these days to defend themselves against criminal charges — i.e., that the executive was “honestly ignorant” of the wrongdoing that was occurring at his company and that any false statements that he made were the unintentional result of his subordinates misleading him.
Or, as it is sometimes referred to in hard-knuckled legal circles, the “honest idiot defense.”
The honest idiot defense does not attempt to deny that misconduct occurred. Rather, the defense focuses on avoiding liability by contending that the defendant’s good faith ignorance prevents the government from establishing the requisite mens rea (intent) to convict the defendant of a crime. As you might expect, honest ignorance is not the easiest thing to get a jury to believe in defending a high-powered business executive.
Nevertheless, as this Wall Street Journal ($) article reports, the honest idiot defense is going to be front and center in the upcoming criminal trial of former Worldcom CEO, Bernard Ebbers. The Ebbers criminal case has many fascinating aspects, not the least of which is the yin-yang relationship between Mr. Ebbers and the government’s chief accuser against him, former WorldCom CFO Scott Sullivan. But the most interesting aspect of the case surely will be the way in which Mr. Ebbers “good ol’ boy” persona plays with the jury in the presentation of the honest idiot defense. And make no mistake about it, Mr. Ebbers will portray himself as the good-hearted dunce (he used his background as a gym teacher and motivator to apply high school basketball coaching techniques to management issues at WorldCom) in comparison to the sophisticated and well-educated Mr. Sullivan.
Another interesting aspect of the Ebbers criminal trial is that the government does not have the typical paper trail of fraud that it has used in most recent business fraud cases, notably the Arthur Andersen prosecution. Turns out that “country boy” Mr. Ebbers did not like computers and so he eschewed using e-mail to communicate with others at WorldCom. Moreover, iansmuch as Mr. Ebbers did not enjoy either reviewing or preparing written materials, he communicated orally with subordinates almost entirely. He did not even use voice-mail. Consequently, without the usual paper trail, the case may well come down to a swearing match between Messrs. Ebbers and Sullivan, which will also be impacted on how well Mr. Ebbers can present himself to the jury as a lovable dunce who the WorldCom sharpies manipulated.
Finally, it will be interesting to see if the Ebbers defense team raises the fact that Mr. Ebbers did not voluntarily sell much, if any, of his WorldCom stock after the bubble burst in the telecommunications industry in 1999. Ebbers’ defense lawyers may reason with the jury that, if Mr. Ebbers really masterminded an elaborate fraud at WorldCom, then why did he not sell his WorldCom stock before the stock price collapsed? Rather than getting out rich (by way of comparison, Mr. Sullivan dumped almost $30 million of WorldCom stock in 2000), Mr. Ebbers went from being a billionaire to being so deeply in debt that personal bankruptcy appears inevitable. When the price of WorldCom stock began to plummet, margin calls forced Mr. Ebbers to sell one big slug of stock, but then he persuaded WorldCom’s compliant board to stave off further margin calls by having WorldCom guarantee his loans that were secured with WorldCom stock. The financial result of those transactions is that the now insolvent Mr. Ebbers owes WorldCom more than $300 million, but savvy defense attorneys may be able to present the scenario to the jury as further evidence that Mr. Ebbers really thought that WorldCom would rebound and simply did not understand the dire financial condition.
Despite the obvious differences between the two men, that’s why former Enron chairman and CEO Kenneth Lay and his attorneys will be watching the Ebbers criminal trial very closely.