David Gerger, appellate counsel for former Dynegy finance employee Jamie Olis filed Mr. Olis’ appellant’s brief with the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals this week in which Mr. Gerger contends that Mr. Olis’ conviction and 24-year prison sentence should be overturned because of insufficient evidence and U.S. District Judge Sim Lake‘s alleged misapplication of federal sentencing guidelines.
Interestingly, Mr. Gerger also represents former Enron CFO Andrew Fastow in connection with his plea bargain with the Enron Task Force, and Judge Lake is also overseeing the pending high profile criminal cases of former Enron executives Kenneth Lay, Jeffrey Skilling, and Richard Causey.
One of Mr. Gerger’s main arguments is that Mr. Olis’ sentence should be subject to the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Blakely v. Washington that suggests that federal judges should be prohibited from increasing a sentence using factors not proved before a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. Previous posts are here on the Blakely decision.
Stros edge Phils in wild one
Roger Clemens hurt his right calf running the bases (he does everything for the Stros, you know) and watched as his teammates beat the Phils 9-8 on Wednesday night in the type of game that just might be the straw that breaks the camel’s back in the Phils’ decision on when to fire the Boa Constrictor.
Carlos Beltran‘s two-run double in the eighth inning was the game winner on a day in which — as predicted here — the Stros learned that Andy Pettitte will have season-ending elbow surgery next week. Pettitte and the Stros are telling the media that he expects to be ready to pitch again by spring training in 2005, but don’t bet on that. Best case is that he pitches again sometime next season, more likely by around June or so.
Clemens is day to day after straining his right calf running to first base on his two-run single in the fourth, but doesn’t expect to miss his next start. Before he left the game, the Rocket gave up four runs in three innings in this unusually wild affair. Beltran finished with two hits and three RBI for the Stros, who somehow remain just are six games behind the Giants in the race for the NL wild-card playoff spot. The Stros hitters uncharacteristically cranked out 13 hits, including at least one by every starter. Just to make sure that this see-saw game ended on an appropriate note, Brad Lidge retired a pinch-hitter on a shallow fly ball with the bases loaded to end the game. The loss means that the Phils are now 1-8 on their current homestand, which is not going over well with the Philly locals
The Stros have moved Carlos Hernandez up in the rotation to pitch today’s businessman’s special in Philly before the club returns home to battle the Cubbies in a weekend series at the Juice Box.
H’mm . . .
As if there wasn’t enough gossip being generated in the Texas Medical Center these days, this Chronicle article reports as follows:
Texas Children’s Hospital’s longtime chief financial officer, Sally Nelson, has resigned from her job as executive vice president and CFO after 18 years with the hospital.
Nelson left the positions she’s held since 1987 a week ago, the hospital said. On Tuesday it released a brief statement thanking Nelson for her years of service without offering an explanation for her sudden exit.
Reached at her Houston home, Nelson directed all inquiries about the reason for her abrupt resignation to Texas Children’s, the nation’s largest pediatric hospital.“You’ll have to call the marketing department at the hospital about that,” she said. “They’ll tell you all about it.”
The hospital, however, would not comment beyond saying that Randall Wright, senior vice president and chief information officer at Texas Children’s, will serve as the acting executive vice president and CFO.
“It’s our policy and our practice to respect the privacy of our current and former employes, so the statement includes only the information that we can release,” Texas Children’s spokeswoman Jennifer Hart said.
WSJ on KPMG tax shelter investigation
This Wall Street Journal ($) article follows up on the status of the government’s investigation into KPMG‘s tax shelter practice and emphasizes the involvement of lawyers (from the Wall Street firm, Brown & Wood) in the promotion of that practice. Here are the previous posts on this investigation and KPMG.
Suffice it to say that this saga is not likely to end well for either KPMG or Brown & Wood (now merged with Sidley, Austin).
Stros cruise by Phils
Roy O, Mike Gallo, and Dan Miceli combined on a five-hitter, and Raul Chavez hit an improbable three-run double as the Stros won their second straight 5-0 victory over the free-falling Phillies on Tuesday night in Philly.
Staked to an unusual big lead, Oswalt (13-8) was dominant, allowing five hits, striking out seven and walking two in 7 2-3 innings to win his fifth straight decision. Gallo got the final out in the eighth, and Miceli pitched a perfect ninth to gain only the Stros’ third win in their last nine games. It was the club’s 10th shutout this season.
The Phillies were shut out for the fourth time and fell to 1-7 on their current homestand. The loss did not go over well with the Philly faithful, who let the Phils know about their acute displeasure after each futile at bat.
By the way, just to show how bad the Stros are at the catcher position this season, Chavez’s big night now gives him 15 RBIs in 111 at-bats this season and he is still a better hitter statistically than the Stros’ regular catcher, the impotent Brad Ausmus. Ugh!
The Rocket takes the hill in the second game of the Phils series as Andy Pettitte goes to have his sore left elbow examined by Dr. Andrews in Birmingham. That is usually a precursor to surgery, so don’t expect to see Pettitte pitch again for a long while.
In case you are not updating your virus, spyware, and adware protection regularly . . .
and maybe even if you are, read this.
American Olympic basketball prospects improve
On the heels of the United States Olympic Basketball team’s loss to Puerto Rico in the first round of the Olympic Basketball Tournament, Sportspickle.com reports the following:
“U.S. Grants Puerto Rico Statehood in Hopes of Winning Basketball Gold”
Hat tip to Will Veber for the link.
Arlington and the Cowboys have a deal
The Arlington City Council and the Dallas Cowboys apparently have struck a deal on a new stadium for the Cowboys, subject to voter approval.
Professor Depken over at Heavy Lifting provides an objective analysis of the proposed deal.
Beethoven’s “Stairway to Heaven”
Check out the Stairway Suite, in which University of New South Wales Orchestra plays Led Zeppelin’s “classic” rock tune “Stairway to Heaven” as if it had been composed by composers Franz Schubert, Gustav Holst, Glen Miller, Gustav Mahler, Georges Bizet, and Ludwig von Beethoven. My favorites: Ludwig Von, with Glen Miller coming in a close second.
Hat tip to Newmark’s Door for the link to this hilarious site.
Is Ken Lay a Criminal?
William Anderson is an economics professor at Frostburg State University and an adjunct scholar at the Mises Institute. Here is an earlier post in which Professor Anderson challenged the reasoning behind an indictment earlier this year of several former executives of Houston-based Reliant Resources.
In this article that he co-authored with California attorney Candice E. Jackson, Professor Anderson challenges the conventional wisdom that the indictment of former Enron chairman and CEO Kenneth Lay is justified:
The “prosecutor as hero” theme reverberates in the media. What follows (from the July 19, 2004, edition of U.S. News) is typical of the state-worshiping press in the wake of the Lay indictments:
The federal prosecutors mopping up after corporate scandals can remember the summer of 2004 as their season of sweet victory. Last week a jury convicted Adelphia Communications founder John Rigas and his son Timothy Rigas of conspiracy, bank fraud, and securities fraud. A judge denied Martha Stewart’s bid for a retrial and will deliver her sentence this week. And charges finally reached the top in the biggest case of all when a grand jury indicted former Enron CEO Kenneth Lay on 11 criminal counts, including bank fraud, securities fraud, and making misleading statements.
One would remind people that the supposed pursuit of “justice” is not a game in which we have “victory.” These are legal procedures that destroy families, incarcerate talented people, and eviscerate legitimate business firms, apparently so that U.S. attorneys can bask in the glory that only the news media can provide.
Indeed, in Professor Anderson’s view, Mr. Lay is a political prisoner:
Ken Lay is a political prisoner. To put it another way, the charges against him are political, not criminal in nature. He was in charge of a company that had a spectacular fall, which is not a surprise, given that Enron was riding the crest of a speculative bubble that almost certainly was going to burst.
And such criminalization of ordinary business behavior likely would not change under a Kerry Administration:
The problem with the Lay indictment, according to Kerry, whose campaign advertisements tout his experience as a prosecutor, is that it did not come soon enough; Bush’s friendship with Lay delayed what Kerry claimed should have been done three years ago.
This is disconcerting, to say the least. It took a long time for the DOJ to put together a case against Lay that even is presentable, and the indictment itself presents a weak (but politically charged) legal case. Kerry’s response makes one wonder if he even believes that Lay should receive a fair trial at all — or, for that matter, even a trial, as opposed to summary judgment or the infamous military tribunals.
Professor Anderson is particularly unimpressed with the substance of the indictment:
Indictments are written for maximum effect, and Lay’s is no exception. . . Yet, after one slogs through the 65 pages or so (another ploy by the government to imply guilt — the longer the document, the more guilty someone must be) in the federal indictment, one is struck by the lack of criminality.
The most “damning” charges stem from stock sales Lay made after it became clear that Enron was headed for trouble. Yet, his behavior during this whole episode does not square with the criminality that the government is alleging. For the most part, Lay held the bulk of his investments in Enron stock. When some of his financial advisors told him to diversify, he insisted on borrowing against his Enron stock to purchase other securities.
However, at times he received margin calls, which means that the borrower must produce cash immediately; the only thing he could sell quickly was his Enron stock, but then he also continued to purchase that stock even in the face of company problems. At the same time, he urged employees to purchase the stock, as he was doing.
Or, as the Wall Street Journal’s Holman Jenkins put it shortly after Enron filed its chapter 11 case, “if Mr. Lay was committing securities fraud, he was shooting himself in the foot while doing it.”
Professor Anderson then decries the media and the government’s unwillingness to confront the weakness of the criminal case against Mr. Lay and the fact that he really does not have — under the inflamed circumstances surrounding Enron’s demise — any realistic chance of receiving a fair trial:
These matters are public record, yet news accounts have made statements like “he was quietly dumping his Enron stock at the same time that he was urging employees to buy more,” which says more about the integrity of U.S. mainstream journalists than it does Lay’s stock sales. Even a cursory glance at the record demonstrates that reality is not what the government is claiming. But then, neither the government nor mainstream journalists are bound by truth; nothing should get in the way of a good story or a politically popular indictment.
[W]we are pessimistic about Lay’s chances of avoiding conviction. His jurors most likely will consist of middle-class individuals who are loyal to the U.S. Government and will be of the mentality that anyone in the dock must be guilty by definition. Since the media has a vested interest in having been “right” in its demonization of Lay, it is doubtful that the coverage of the trial and pre-trial activities will change in its pro-prosecution, pro-government bias.
Professor Anderson then notes that Mr. Lay’s failures are better dealt with in the civil justice system rather than the criminal justice system:
It’s doubtful that Lay is guilty of criminal activity, especially in the sales of Enron stock. However, as the chairman of the firm, he had fiduciary responsibilities to the firm and stockholders. Moreover, many of the decisions he made, in good faith or not, resulted in huge business losses for investors, not to mention employees who purchased large blocks of Enron stock.
These matters are better suited for civil, not criminal court. Historically, this has been the venue where issues like this were argued and — at least to a point — resolved. By muscling into this legal realm, U.S. attorneys not only are criminalizing acts that are not traditionally criminal, but they also ensure that the people who should be receiving real justice are left out.
In closing, Professor Anderson provides a disturbing insight into the current psyche of American society in regard to business leaders:
There is no doubt that there will be cheering when Lay’s guilty verdict is announced and he is sentenced to what effectively will be a life term in prison. Americans have become people who enjoy watching others suffer — particularly watching leaders fall from grace — and perhaps one should remember that business executives have wives and children who also will have loved ones incarcerated for many years.
While U.S. attorneys are not providing bread and circuses to the masses, they are giving the public the next best thing: public humiliation of wealthy executives and their families, many of whom have committed the crime of being successful. Others, apparently, have committed the crime of not being successful enough.
Read the entire piece. As Professor Ribstein aptly notes in his blog today regarding yesterday’s post about the Global Crossing, Ltd.:
Yes, it is true, that the market often got it wrong during the speculative bubble that ended with Enron. But as I’ve discussed, many people share the blame for this mass delusion, not least investors themselves. We are going to find as these cases go to trial that there are nuances here the headlines have missed, and that raise serious doubts about dealing with these cases as criminal matters.