The ongoing Hamilton-Carey feud

milo.jpgThe long-time feud between Stros’ announcer Milo Hamilton and the late Cubs’ announcer Harry Caray boiled over recently with the publication of Hamilton’s autobiography, which includes a chapter lambasting Caray.
The Chronicle’s sports television columnist David Barron reports that Caray’s son, Atlanta Braves announcer Skip, recently passed along his congratulations to former Stros announcer Gene Elston, who was recently named to the broadcaster section of Baseball’s Hall of Fame. In so doing, Caray couldn’t pass up the opportunity to land a jab on Hamilton, who is also a member of the Hall of Fame:

Finally, an Atlanta Braves spokesman called recently to offer congratulations from Skip Caray regarding Gene Elston’s selection for the Ford Frick Award from the Baseball Hall of Fame. The message comes with a twist for Caray’s least favorite Houston broadcaster, Milo Hamilton.

“I’m so happy for Gene. He’s such a nice man,” Caray said. “It’s good to see a Houston broadcaster who deserves to get in the Hall of Fame get there and one who didn’t have to brown-nose in order to do it.”

Lay-Skilling, Week Seven

As the seventh week of the epic corporate criminal trial of former key Enron executives Ken Lay and Jeff Skilling drew to a close, U.S. District Judge Sim Lake gave the lawyers and the jurors an extra day off to prepare for the closing witnesses of a slimmed-down prosecution case and the beginning of what will almost certainly be one of the most interesting defense presentations in a white collar criminal case in recent memory.

In some ways, Week Seven of Lay-Skilling reflected the Enron Task Force’s case to date — long on hype, but short on substance.

The week began with the Task Force’s star witness, Andy Fastow, and closed with the self-promoted Enron media star, Sherron Watkins. However, my sense is that there is a method to the prosecution’s approach to presenting its case.

After the disastrous result in the Enron Broadband trial last year in which the jury was put to sleep during long stretches and a glacial opening pace to the Lay-Skilling trial, the Task Force prosecutors have quickened the pace of their presentation and are now on course to finish their case-in-chief in about another week or so.

If that schedule holds, then not only will the Task Force have presented their case in substantially less time than prosecutors initially predicted, they will have avoided the trap of forcing jurors to endure long stretches of mind-numbingly boring testimony.

In fact, the trial has settled into a fairly standard routine with most witnesses.

Each prosecution witness has gone through a heavily-scripted direct examination in which they confidently accuse Skilling, and to a lesser extent Lay, of making various misleading statements to the investing public and employees.

Then, defense attorneys on cross-examination chip away at the prosecution witnesses’ testimony and the witnesses generally become far less decisive in, or defensive about, their accusations.

Much of the testimony is quite boring and technical, but there are usually enough short bursts of interesting exchanges to keep the jury engaged and Judge Lake moves things along with a steady hand and a dry wit.

So, after filing and publicizing a 66-page indictment (which the Task Force doesn’t want the jury to see (and the Lay-Skilling team does) that asserts a wide array of alleged corporate crimes, the Task Force has slimmed down its case to a plain “pump and dump” case — i.e., Skilling and Lay touted the failing company’s shares while selling their own.

As noted in this earlier post, that theory of the case plays heavily on “the presumption” in corporate criminal cases — Lay and Skilling are rich and Enron collapsed, so they must be guilty of something for failing to announce to the investing public that Enron might collapse if something such as Fastow’s effective embezzlement of funds using Enron’s special purpose entities ever was revealed to the markets.

Although clearly a smart move from an appeal-to-jury standpoint, the Task Force’s slimmed-down case is not without risks.

To a large extent, the case still relies on a complex jumble of innuendo and opinion that requires the jury to connect the dots of amorphous points in finding a crime.

For example, one Task Force theme has been that Enron was so successful in making money in its trading operations that it allowed Lay and Skilling to soft-pedal to the markets the losses that Enron was incurring in a couple of less successful parts of its business.

The Task Force does not contend that either Lay or Skilling was involved in approving fraudulent accounting, but rather that mainly Skilling engineered a reorganization of a poorly-performing Enron business unit in a manner that hid losses of that unit underneath the blanket of high profits of Enron’s trading unit.

According to the Task Force, the hiding of these losses, along with over-reserving to hide excess profits of the trading unit, allowed Skilling and Lay to misrepresent Enron to the investing public as a stable logistics company rather than the more volatile trading company that prosecutors allege that it had become.

Another risk to the Task Force is whether the jury really even recalls much of that after the highly-publicized and sometimes bizarre testimony of Fastow.

Although Fastow implicated Skilling in “secret side deals” and undisclosed “bear hug” guaranties, Fastow is such a despicable character that it remains decidedly unclear whether the prosecution gained much of anything with the jury from his testimony.

Moreover, the prosecution’s emphasis with Fastow on the Global Galactic memo certainly raises the question of why the Task Force is not corroborating Fastow’s testimony on that key issue with the testimony of former Enron chief accountant, Richard Causey, who the Task Force has announced will not be called in its case-in-chief.

Perhaps the Task Force is planning on saving Causey to testify as a rebuttal witness after the defense presents its case, but the Task Force’s emphasis on Global Galactic during Fastow’s testimony creates a huge hole in its case unless the more credible Causey corroborates Fastow’s testimony at some point on that key issue.

Meanwhile, almost forgotten in the mainstream media reports on the trial to date is that virtually none of the testimony from prosecution witnesses and even less documentary evidence over seven weeks of trial has supported the prosecution’s allegation of an alleged huge conspiracy within Enron to cover up wrongdoing at the company.

As a result of the paucity of evidence on that key issue, the Lay-Skilling defense would seem to have a reasonably strong basis for seeking immunity grants from either the prosecution or Judge Lake in regard to the testimony of dozens of former Enron executives who are currently invoking the Fifth Amendment privilege in the face of the Task Force’s designation of them as unindicted co-conspirators. Those executives could provide exculpatory testimony for Lay and Skilling during presentation of the defense’s case-in-chief. Stay tuned on that issue.

As the prosecution’s case winds down, the Task Force will call two former Arthur Andersen accountants as witnesses early next week, and then likely end the week with its final major witness, former Enron treasurer and Fastow confidant, Ben Glisan.

Glisan was arguably the Task Force’s most-effective witness in the 2004 trial of the Nigerian Barge case, which appears to be unraveling somewhat for the Task Force. As a result, Glisan’s testimony in Lay-Skilling could turn out to be very interesting, indeed.