Deep Impact Video

Check out NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft’s video of the Moon transiting the Earth from 31 million miles away!

Thoughts on the attacks in Mumbai

Remember — overcoming fascists of all stripes takes a fighting spirit.

Turkey lessons

turky carver One of the most popular videos that I posted on this blog last year was the one of New York butcher Ray Venezia giving instructions on how to carve a turkey. All you fellow turkey carvers will find it highly informative and entertaining.

Also, check out Mark Bittman’s video on how to roast a turkey in 45 minutes, although I’m not sure I’d try that for the first time on Thanksgiving.

Have a joyous Thanksgiving!

He Should Know

 

You just never know what those former Enron Task Force prosecutors are going to say.

Last week, one of them was incongruously advocating limitation of corporate criminal liability.

This week, David Westheimer points out that former Task Force prosecutor John Hueston is opining that the Securities and Exchange Commission’s insider trading case against Mark Cuban is so weak that it should not be pursued.

A weak case that shouldn’t be pursued?

Hueston sure ought to know.

2008 Weekly local football review

Rosenfels throwing (AP Photo/Tony Dejak; previous weekly reviews are here)

Texans 16 Browns 6

A win is a win, right?

Well, maybe. But the reality is that the Texans (4-7) finally found a team in the Browns (4-7) that is more inept than them. The Browns served up five turnovers to the Texans, which allowed the bumbling Texans to win the turnover battle by +3.

Toss in a fairly balanced attack (383 total offense/271 yds passing/112 yds rushing) and a absolutely horrid Browns passing attack (13-32/143 yds/3 INT) and you have the Texans’ first road victory in over a year.

The Texans have an extra day to prepare this week for their first Monday Night game, the Monday after Thanksgiving at Reliant Stadium against the under-performing Jaguars (4-7).

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Do as I Say, Not as I Do

Andrew Weissmann is a rather odd advocate (see here and here) for limiting corporate criminal liability, don’t you think?

Let’s take a look back on Weissmann’s business prosecution scorecard. A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court overturned Weissmann’s dubious prosecution of Arthur Andersen, which was the final blow in putting that hallowed institution of American accounting out of business.

And the Fifth Circuit has largely eviscerated the notorious Nigerian Barge prosecution in which Merrill Lynch served up four executives to Weissmann to avoid an indictment of the firm.

But now, in United States v. Ionia Management, S.A., Weissmann is attempting to persuade the Second Circuit Court of Appeals to limit prosecutors from doing precisely what he did to Arthur Andersen and Merrill Lynch

In view of all this, I wonder whether any of the Second Circuit judges thought to ask Weissmann why he used his stint as a Enron Task Force prosecutor to cause tens of thousands of job losses and enormous wealth destruction?

Or why Weissmann used criminal prosecutions to cause destruction of numerous good business careers of Arthur Andersen partners and Merrill Lynch executives where the only thing that they did wrong was to do business with what became a social pariah, Enron.

Had Weissmann been asked such questions, would he have attempted to defend his conduct at the expense of his current clients?

If so, that would not have been a winning appellate argument.