Causey Exposes Another Dirty Secret of the Enron Task Force

Former Enron chief accountant Richard Causey will be sentenced tomorrow by U.S. District Judge Sim Lake, and Causey’s sentencing hearing highlights another of the Enron Task Force’s dirty secrets that the mainstream media has largely ignored in favor of demonizing former Enron executives.

When Causey entered into his plea deal on the eve of the Lay-Skilling trial, most folks figured that the Task Force would use him as a key witness against his former co-defendant Skilling. The Task Force needed Causey to corroborate former Enron CFO Andrew Fastow’s testimony regarding the Global Galactic agreement, the alleged secret handwritten agreement between Fastow and Causey under which Causey supposedly provided Enron’s assurance — allegedly with Skilling’s blessing — that Fastow’s various special purpose entities would receive a guaranteed rate of return for investing in Enron assets.

Inasmuch as those SPE transactions removed a substantial amount of debt and underperforming assets from Enron’s balance sheet, a key contention in the Task Force’s charges against Skilling and Lay was that Global Galactic proved that Enron’s SPE transactions were shams that helped Skilling and Lay illegally disguise the company’s deteriorating financial condition. So, Global Galactic was a pretty important element in the Task Force’s case against Skilling and Lay.

During his Lay-Skilling testimony, Fastow sang like a canary about the Global Galactic agreement, although the existence of the agreement became more suspect the more Fastow talked about it.

Meanwhile, the Task Force never called Causey to testify during the Lay-Skilling trial, probably because Causey would not corroborate Fastow’s likely false testimony regarding Global Galactic.

Thus, Fastow — who stole millions and then lied to help convict Skilling and Lay — is doing a six-year sentence and will be out in about five.

On the other hand, Causey — who didn’t steal a dime and refused to corroborate Fastow’s lies — will probably serve more time in prison than Fastow.

Is this how we want to go about learning the truth about what really happened at Enron? Ellen Podgor has more here.

Update: Judge Lake sentenced Causey to five and a half years in prison.

The indiscriminate Hammer

DeLay-765296.jpgBen Witherington is a noted New Testament scholar at Asbury Theological Institute in Wilmore, Kentucky near Lexington, which is not the typical place that former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay would normally have been trolling for money during his heyday in Congress. In this post explaining the danger for Evangelical Christians in aligning themselves with either major political party, Dr. Witherington passes along the following anecdote about DeLay:

Several years ago I was contacted by Tom DeLay. He figured since I was a well known white Evangelical I must be on his side on a host of things. I was invited to the White House, and I was named Kentucky Business Man of the Year. I have the plaque sitting in my office framed to prove it. Now, I am no businessman. Just ask my wife. For five years I ran a little coffee shop in Wilmore for our Christian students as a ministry to them– its called Solomon’s Porch, and its still up and running, employing and feeding students and helping them work their way through college and seminary. Its a good ministry, but its not a business that made money. In fact I lost $40,000 helping those students during that time. I was definitely not a Kentucky Businessman of the Year! There were many who did better than I, and I could talk at length about the plight of small businesses which are taxed right out of existence. Several previous restaurants in that spot had not lasted more than about six months. Wilmore is only a town of some 5,000 souls.

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It’s lonely being a Texans fan in Austin

downtown-austin.jpegThe Houston Texans recent improved play is not being noticed yet in Austin, at least according to this letter from a local Austin television programing director to Texans fan Brian over at Longhorn Law:

The last Texans game we aired (last Sunday) was tuned-in by just 21,000 households in Austin (a city with 589,000 households). By comparison, the Titans game we aired on Oct 8th (after Vince Young became quarterback) was watched by over 53,000 households (152% more football fanís homes). At one point during that game there were as many as 68,000 households tuned in. It was the most-watched ìearlyî game weíve aired all season. Actually, that game was watched by more Austin fans than any Texans game weíve aired going all the way back to October of last season – with two notable exceptions. The first is when the Texans played the Cowboys on October 15th (which you could expect to be highly watched) and the other, honestly, was when the Texans played the Titans on October 29th. [. . .]

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