In this scathing 43-page decision, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals set aside the convictions of former Westar Energy executives David Wittig and Douglas Lake on every count and ruled that most of the counts could not be retried. The convictions, which were based primarily on the executives’ alleged failure to report their use of corporate jets for personal travel, ìhung by a thin legal thread.î
Although largely overshadowed in the national media by the Lay-Skilling trial, Wittig and his corporate right hand man Lake were sentenced to 18 and 15 years in prison in April 2006 after being convicted of looting the utility of millions of dollars in unapproved compensation. An earlier contentious trial of the two former executives had ended in a mistrial in late 2004 after another federal jury in 2003 convicted Mr. Wittig of bank fraud charges in a case that was not directly related to Westar. Federal prosecutors had sought effective life sentences against the 50 year-old Wittig and the 55 year-old Lake.
Wittig and Lake left Westar late in 2002 amidst allegations of misuse of corporate funds. Subsequently, Westar under Mr. Wittig was implicated in the scandal surrounding efforts to fund Houston Congressman Tom DeLay’s political action committee. Westar’s contributions of funds during 2002 to DeLay’s PAC were among the allegations of wrongdoing that led to DeLay’s indictment in Travis County (Austin), Texas last year.
Wittig, who was a former star deal maker at Salomon Brothers, became Westar’s CEO in 1998 and immediately turned the sleepy Midwestern utility into a deal machine. Wittig was paid compensation of more than $25 million in his seven years with Westar, and had no reservations about showing it in the staid Westar home of Topeka. He bought the largest home in town, which is a 17,000-square-foot mansion that former Kansas governor and one-time presidential candidate Alf Landon built. Wittig then spent over $2 million in art and interior decoration on the pad while driving around Kansas in a $230,000 Ferrari 550 Maranello. After some early success, Mr. Wittig’s fast deal plan at Westar faltered and the company’s stock price fell from $44 to $9 as Westar came under increasing pressure from shareholders and investigators, including the Travis County grand jury.
The first trial of Wittig and Lake was particularly wild. U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson, who is a former prosecutor, battled constantly with Wittig’s defense attorneys — Adam Hoffinger and Edward Little — as the defense accused the judge of favoring the prosecution in her rulings. At several points during that trial, Judge Robinson angrily lectured the attorneys for their courtroom demeanor, which included rolling their eyes during witness testimony. Finally, a day before closing statements, the friction between the judge and the defense attorneys boiled over as Judge Robinson took the extraordinary measure of barring one of Mr. Lake’s lawyers from the courtroom for the remainder of the trial.
Judge Robinson’s judgment has also been questioned in regard to her sentencing of Wittig on the bank fraud charges. The judge originally sentenced Wittig to 51 months in prison in that case, but the 10th Circuit threw out that sentence. After she resentenced him to 60 months, the appellate court in November also threw out that sentence as far exceeding federal sentencing guidelines. Wittig is awaiting another sentencing in that case.
After this four-year ordeal of waste, is there really any question that responsibility for the alleged wrongdoing at Westar would have been more efficiently and justly allocated through civil rather than criminal proceedings?
The go-to duo for analysis of white collar criminal cases in the blawgosphere — Ellen Podgor and Peter Henning — analyze the 10th Circuit’s decision overturning the Wittig and Lake convictions here, here and here.
Monthly Archives: January 2007
The Houston connection to the Alabama-Saban deal
The college football world is abuzz this week with the lucrative deal that the University of Alabama rolled out to attract Miami Dolphins head coach Nick Saban to Tuscaloosa, which is yet another example of the market distortions that result from the NCAA’s excessive regulation of big-time college football. But that’s an issue for another day. Turns out that, as usual, there is a Houston business connection to the Saban hiring at Alabama.
You see, Alabama fans were highly interested in the University’s behind-the-scenes courtship of Saban, so Houston-based FlightAware.com — a web-based company that allows users to track flight activity — became one of the favorite sources of information for Alabama fans following the Saban saga:
Before Nick Saban announced Wednesday that he was leaving the Miami Dolphins to take over at Alabama, fans had flocked to FlightAware.com, a Web site that allows users to track flight activity. Was South Carolina Coach Steve Spurrier flying into Tuscaloosa Regional Airport? Was a plane owned by the University of Alabama departing for Norman, Okla., perhaps with university officials on their way to court Sooners Coach Bob Stoops?
ìWhen you set out a vision for how you can help people, you can envision a whole lot of things,î said Daniel Baker, the founder and chief executive of FlightAware.com. ìWeíd like to claim we had unlimited foresight into how our service would be used, but this certainly is an unusual use for FlightAware.î
Coaching searches at other prominent college programs have also sent fans scurrying to glean information from online flight data. Internet message boards revealed that fans from Michigan State, Cincinnati and North Carolina State turned to the Web site. [. . .]
Baker and his staff could not have anticipated those uses by fans. Neither could Wayne Cameron, manager of the Tuscaloosa airport. He said that after Mike Shula was fired, he fielded dozens of inquiries about activity at the airport.
ìEverybody in the country has been tracking the universityís plane and Paul Bryant Jr.ís plane,î Cameron said. Bryant, the son of the renowned Alabama football coach Bear Bryant, is a member of Alabamaís Board of Trustees and the boardís athletics committee.
ìThey would ask who Iíd seen get off planes, or if Iíd seen Spurrier, or if I knew where the university plane was going,î Cameron added. ìIt was kind of like a feeding frenzy there for a few days.î
John Howard, a 25-year-old Crimson Tide fan, created the blog hirebobstoops.blogspot.com after he determined that flight activity he traced on FlightAware.com indicated that Alabama may be interested in hiring Stoops from Oklahoma.
ìYou have a lot of activity between Norman and Tuscaloosa,î Howard said in an interview in early December. ìI have no clue if itís all connected, and Iím not saying it is.
ìI just think itís real interesting that all these planes and these cities are connecting.î
By this week, however, signals were pointing elsewhere. Flight data turned Alabama fansí attention to Saban when reports emerged that Mal Moore, the athletic director, had flown to Miami.
Doug Walker, the universityís associate athletic director for media relations, said Moore and others involved in the search knew that flights were being tracked.
ìWeíre aware of it, but itís not affecting the way weíre conducting our business,î Walker said. ìWeíre not trying to conduct a world war here, weíre just trying to hire a football coach.î
And Baker is only trying to operate a flight-tracking service. If fans visit his site, so be it.
ìIf itís all in good fun and everyoneís happy, itís always a good thing,î Baker said.
ìBut I wouldnít be surprised if people are losing sleep by hitting refresh on the page.î
Texas’ best golf course designer
The PGA Tour kicks off its season this week with the Mercedes Championship at one of the most beautiful places in the world, Kapalua on the island of Maui, Hawaii. This Lorne Rubenstein/Golf Observer article examines the work on Kapulua’s Plantation Course of the golf design team of Austin’s Ben Crenshaw and Bill Coore, who have steadily become the best design team in the golf business over the past two decades:
Coore and Crenshaw are at the top of their games. Compared to some of the big names in course architecture, they’ve designed relatively few courses. That’s by choice. They keep their staff small, seven people just now, but, to appropriate a line often used about the late James Brown, the hardest-working man in show business until he died the end of December at 73, they might be the hardest-working men in the architecture business. Their projects are few, their commitment to each is huge, and personal.
Just about every one of the courses they’ve done since they met in the early 1980s is a must-play for architecture aficionados. . . . These are courses that almost uniformly are without affectation. They tend to sit low to the ground, offer multiple options for shots, include short, driveable par-fours, room to drive the ball, angles, and above all, they’re fun to play. Crenshaw’s two Masters wins came on an Augusta National course that hadn’t yet undergone the recent revisions that added length and rough and compromised the vision that Bobby Jones and Alister MacKenzie laid down on the property. It’s fair to say that the course provided his philosophical grounding.
By the way, Crenshaw is also an expert on golf history, which assisted him in becoming quite a good story-teller, too.
Meanwhile, the Chronicle’s excellent golf writer, Steve Campbell, previews the PGA Tour season here, and uses that article to pass along the following Tiger Woods crack about the always-entertaining John Daly:
What’s the career prognosis from here for fan favorite John Daly?
Bleak. Daly was 193rd on the money list last year, never cracking the top 25 in a stroke-play event. He has been down before, but now back problems are part of the equation. Given Daly’s distaste for work and fitness, don’t look for his talent to get him out of this mess. As Woods cracked last month at his offseason event, “Well, his back is bothering him because he’s got that front to deal with.”
Lou Dobbs’ misunderstanding of the trade deficit
CNN’s financial news anchor Lou Dobbs is arguably the highest-profile critic of the U.S. trade deficit, which demagogues often use as justification for increased regulation of free trade. Cafe Hayek’s Don Boudreaux has written extensively on how the U.S. trade deficit is really no big deal, and in this Christian Science Monitor op-ed, he takes on Dobbs over his complaints about the trade deficit. It’s not a fair fight:
Perhaps you miss this fact because you are misled by familiar trade jargon. In your book, “Exporting America,” in your columns, and on your television show you complain vigorously and often about America’s trade deficit. You call it “staggering,” and wonder how long America can continue to run such deficits.
Admittedly, the word “deficit” sounds ominous. In fact, though, America’s trade deficit is evidence of its economic vigor and promise. Here’s why:
When Americans buy foreign-made goods and services, foreigners earn dollars. The only way America would run no trade deficit is if foreigners spent all of these dollars buying goods and services from Americans. Instead, though, foreigners invest some of their dollars in America. They buy American corporate stock, they build their own factories and retail outlets in the US, they lend dollars to Uncle Sam, and they hold some dollars in reserve as cash.
Aren’t you proud that so many people the world over eagerly invest their hard-earned wealth in America?
As an American, I’m proud and optimistic. Foreigners invest in the US so readily because its economy is so strong. And even better, these investments strengthen the economy by creating more capital for American workers. These investments raise workers’ productivity and wages.
Remember: A trade deficit is not synonymous with debt.
I’m writing this letter on a new Sony computer that I bought with cash. I owe Sony nothing. If Sony holds the dollars it earned from this sale, or if it uses these dollars to buy stock in General Electric or land in Arizona – that is, as long as Sony invests its dollars in America in ways other than lending it to Americans – the US trade deficit rises without raising Americans’ indebtedness.
Americans go more deeply into debt to foreigners only when Americans borrow money from foreigners. Uncle Sam, of course, borrows a lot of money, from both Americans and from non-Americans. I share your concern about the reckless spending and borrowing practiced by politicians in Washington.
Foreigners, however, are not to blame for this recklessness. Indeed, I’m grateful that foreigners stand ready to help us pay the cost of our overblown government. Fortunately, Washington’s spending binges are not serious enough to cripple America’s entrepreneurial economy. If they were, foreigners would refuse to invest here.
If you’re still skeptical that America’s trade deficit is no cause for concern, perhaps you’ll be persuaded by Adam Smith, who wrote that “Nothing, however, can be more absurd than this whole doctrine of the balance of trade.”
Smith correctly understood that with free trade, the economy becomes larger than any one nation – a fact that brings more human creativity, more savings, more capital, more specialization, more opportunity, more competition, and a higher standard of living to all those who can freely trade.
The unintended consequences of the anti-steroids crusade
As noted in this earlier post, I have long had reservations regarding the anti-steroids campaign that is promoted by various regulatory bodies and the media. As Peter Henning noted over the holiday season in this extensive post, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals recently issued an important decision in the Balco case in which the appellate court overturned three lower court orders that had declared government searches unconstitutional and directed the government to return the drug tests to the businesses that were searched. In United States v. Comprehensive Drug Testing, Inc., a divided Ninth Circuit panel reversed the lower court rulings and upheld the search warrants, including seizure of computer records, and ordered the lower courts to segregate records that fall outside the scope of the warrants so that they can be reviewed by a federal magistrate. The appellate decision also reversed the district judge’s order quashing the subpoena issued after the search, and went on to declare that the government may issue a subpoena for documents held by a third party even after a search for the same records.
In this lucid ReasonOnline op-ed, Jacob Sullum sums up why all of this is quite troubling:
The 9th Circuit’s loose treatment of “intermingled” data allows investigators to peruse the confidential electronic records of people who are not suspects, hoping to pull up something incriminating. It replaces a particularized warrant based on probable cause with a fishing license.
The mob believes that the athletes who use steroids are cheating criminals who should be punished. Let’s just hope that the laws that protect us from government’s overwhelming prosecutorial power aren’t trampled in the process of upholding the myth of fair play in professional sports.
The most valuable college football programs
This post from awhile back addressed the widespread insolvency in big-time college football. However, as this Forbes article on the 15 most valuable college football programs points out, a few big-time programs do quite well, thank you. Notre Dame’s program tops the list at a value of $97 million, while the University of Texas’ program slides in at second at $88 million and Texas A&M’s program checks in at no. 15 with a value of $53 million. By the way, Notre Dame remains the most valuable program despite being consistently the most overrated program on the big-time college scene these days. With last night’s loss to LSU in the Sugar Bowl, the Irish have now lost nine straight bowl games since beating Texas A&M 24-21 in the 1994 Cotton Bowl.
A couple of surprises: Ohio State is only sixth on the list at $71 million, while the USC on the list is not the University of Southern California. Rather, it’s the University of South Carolina at no. 14 with a value of $57 million. As you might expect, only teams from the Southeastern Conference, Big Ten Conference and Big 12 Conference made the Forbes list because those conferences have the most lucrative television deals with CBS, ESPN and ABC.
Finally, despite the value of these big-time programs, it is still decidedly minor league — most NFL franchises are worth at least 10 times more than the most valuable college program.
The epidemic of diagnosis
Following on the strong NY Times medical-related stories of Lawrence K. Altman (here, here and here) over the holiday season, Drs. H. Gilbert Welch, Lisa Schwartz and Steven Woloshin contribute this op-ed to the Times in which they make the salient point that the American health care system is a hypochondriac’s dream:
For most Americans, the biggest health threat is not avian flu, West Nile or mad cow disease. Itís our health-care system.
. . . The larger threat posed by American medicine is that more and more of us are being drawn into the system not because of an epidemic of disease, but because of an epidemic of diagnoses.
Americans live longer than ever, yet more of us are told we are sick.
How can this be? One reason is that we devote more resources to medical care than any other country. Some of this investment is productive, curing disease and alleviating suffering. But it also leads to more diagnoses, a trend that has become an epidemic.[ . . .]
. . . the real problem with the epidemic of diagnoses is that it leads to an epidemic of treatments. Not all treatments have important benefits, but almost all can have harms. Sometimes the harms are known, but often the harms of new therapies take years to emerge ó after many have been exposed. For the severely ill, these harms generally pale relative to the potential benefits. But for those experiencing mild symptoms, the harms become much more relevant. And for the many labeled as having predisease or as being ìat riskî but destined to remain healthy, treatment can only cause harm.
Read the entire article. Then take a chill pill! ;^)
Some of the reasons why Crane is taking EGL private
Channeling one of the dynamics involved in the increasing cost of public equity, Henry G. Manne provides this excellent Wall Street Journal ($) op-ed (available free here for the next 7 days) in which he systematically disassembles the myth of corporate democracy and the current media fascination with the supposed panacea of shareholder activism. The following are just a few of Professor Manne’s insights:
“They’re back! Every 20 or 30 years shareholder democracy ideas come back in vogue, and their time seems to have arrived again — with a vengeance.”
“The SEC is huddling on whether to facilitate direct shareholder nomination of directors through a new interpretation of its shareholder proposal rule. A prominent professor at Harvard Law School, Lucian Bebchuk, proposes, among other democratizing moves, amending state corporation laws to encourage contested elections for board members. . . . There is absolutely nothing new in any of this discussion. The real world has not changed in any significant way, and our knowledge of corporate governance has not been revolutionized by some intellectual breakthrough. Furthermore, the provenance of the “corporate democracy” oxymoron has long been understood. The idea results from the inappropriate conflation of political ideals with market institutions. Its persistence can only be attributed to the intelligentsia’s far greater comfort and familiarity with political models and events than with knowledge and appreciation of how markets function.”
“It ill behooves corporate democrats like Professor Bebchuk to deride this system as not satisfactorily monitoring managers when he knows full well that regulatory interferences are mainly responsible for poor performance in the market for corporate control and, for that matter, for much of the steep escalation in executive compensation in recent years. That they would then propose intricate regulatory provisions for more shareholder democracy is evidence of the mindset that causes the problems.”
“Perhaps many of the advocates of shareholder democracy actually have a hidden agenda, most usually either a greater degree of government control over private enterprises, or more power to unions via their control of pension funds. Neither has proved beneficial to the investing public or is consistent with a vigorous and innovative public economy.”
“We need corporate activists today more than ever, but we need them to lobby and argue for repeal of our many costly and ill-serving bits of corporate regulation.”
And I’ll leave it to the always-insightful Larry Ribstein to connect the myth to the process involved in the proposed EGL private equity buyout:
Shareholder democracy is just one of the burdens that public corporations have to bear these days (e.g., SOX). All of this is pushing more firms into the hands of private equity. Of course the shareholder democrats donít like that, any more than they liked Mike Milken and the LBO boom of a previous generation.
Finally, in this timely NY Times Select ($) op-ed, William A. Niskanen, chairman of the Cato Institute, makes the following cogent observations regarding the impact of the most well-known regulatory reaction to the Enron scandal:
Sarbanes-Oxley has seriously harmed American corporations and financial markets without increasing investor confidence. The section of the law requiring companies to perform internal audits has turned out to be far more costly than proponents projected, especially for smaller firms. These costs have led some small companies to go private, hardly a victory for public oversight, and some foreign firms to withdraw their stocks from American exchanges.
In addition, the average ìlisting premiumî ó the benefit that companies receive by listing their stocks on American exchanges ó has declined by 19 percentage points since 2002. This explains why the percentage of worldwide initial public offerings on our exchanges dropped to 5 percent last year, from 50 percent in 2000.
Other costs associated with the act may turn out to be more important. For example, more stringent financial regulations and increased penalties for accounting errors may make senior managers too risk-averse. Most chief executives are not accountants, so the requirement that they personally affirm tax reports ó at the risk of jail time should anything be amiss ó may make them reluctant to partake in perfectly legitimate activities.
Paradoxically, Sarbanes-Oxleyís strict rules on oversight by boards of directors would have been insufficient to prevent the collapse of Enron. By the actís standards, Enron had a model board; most members were distinguished professionals. The chairman of the audit committee was a former accounting professor and dean of the Stanford Business School.
Nor would the actís provisions to create a stronger Securities and Exchange Commission have made a difference. The commission had been aware of Enronís accounting techniques since 1992 and had never thought to question them. [. . .]
The negative repercussions of the act on businesses might have been worth it if the act had achieved its primary goal: substantially increasing the confidence of investors in the accuracy of the accounts of firms listed on the exchanges. But that does not seem to have happened.
The best measure of investor confidence is the price-earnings ratio ó the price that investors are willing to pay for each dollar of a companyís reported earnings. The overall price-earnings ratio for the Standard & Poorís 500-stock index, however, has declined continuously since the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was being drafted in the spring of 2002. [. . .]
Tinkering is not enough. Sarbanes-Oxley continues to discourage smaller companies from trading publicly and foreign companies from listing their stocks on American exchanges. In the eyes of investors, it hasnít cleaned up any corruption, it has only forced companies to jump through hoops. As Senator Sarbanes and Representative Oxley drift into retirement, their act should retire with them.
Any surprise that Crane is willing to assume the risk of taking EGL private?
Jim Crane proposes to take EGL private
Last year, the Houston business community saw Kinder Morgan bail out of the increasing headache of operating as a public company. With the coming of the new year, Houston-based EGL announced that it is going private in a $1.2 billion deal led by its CEO, Jim Crane, and private equity firm General Atlantic.
EGL stands for EGL Eagle Global Logistics, which provides services such as supply-chain management, warehousing and freight forwarding for business and government air and marine shipments. The company earned $58.2 million in 2005 and had net income of $45.4 million through the first nine months of 2006. Crane founded EGL about 20 years ago in Houston, took it public over a decade ago, and remains its largest shareholder with 18%. General Atlantic has proposed to pay $36 a share for the rest of the stock, which would generate a 21% premium over the companyís $29.78 closing price as of Dec. 29. Crane and General Atlantic have secured $1.13 billion in financing, and the balance of the proposed purchase price would consist of equity contributed by General Atlantic, Crane and other senior EGL executives. EGL’s board has formed a committee to study the offer.
As noted here in regard to the Kinder Morgan deal (also noted here in regard to New York City), the EGL deal is a direct result of the increased cost of public equity resulting from the ill-advised regulatory maze that government has imposed on public companies in the post-Enron era. As Professor Bainbridge says, “legislate in haste, repent at leisure.” As is all too common, the governmental solution to business scandals is more harmful to its investor-citizens than the business scandals themselves.
The legacy of great Colts quarterbacks
Although I have long had my doubts that Texans’ QB David Carr is a top flight NFL quarterback, I must concede that the deficiencies in the Texans’ offensive line have really not given him a fair chance to develop his skills here. Along those same lines, the Colts’ masterful QB, Peyton Manning, is often unfairly criticized for not being among the top NFL QB’s of all time because his team has never qualified for the Super Bowl.
As Allen Barra explains in this lucid OpinionJournal op-ed, Manning truly is one of the NFL’s all-time best QB’s regardless of whether his team’s limitations in other areas have prevented him from playing in a Super Bowl. Meanwhile, in another OpinionJournal piece on a Colts quarterback, Geoffrey Norman reviews Tom Callahan’s biography of legendary Colts QB, Johnny Unitas, in the appropriately named Johnny U (Crown 2006). Just to give you an idea on how much the nature of the NFL has changed over the past 60 years, Norman reminds us of an anecdote that Callahan passes along about Unitas:
[W]hen [Unitas’] teammate [and star running back] Alan Ameche and his wife bought their first house for $8,000, it was former construction worker Unitas who laid the floor.