On the heels of my earlier post today on Richard Chesnoff’s NY Daily News op-ed, I clicked on the television to watch Martha Stewart‘s statement after her sentencing. Much to my surprise, my old friend David Chesnoff — one of Las Vegas’ best attorneys and Richard’s younger brother — was standing there next to Martha. Looks like Martha is strengthening her legal team.
Chez and I struck up our long friendship while toiling together for the same Houston law firm in our first job of out of law school in 1979-80. After practicing civil trial law for a year, Chez decided that he wanted to practice criminal defense law, so he took a job in Vegas. He and I loaded everything he owned into and on top of his late model Fiat and we embarked on a legendary road trip down I-10 from Houston to Vegas. Chez quickly established himself in the Vegas criminal defense bar, and has risen to the top of his profession over the past 24 years.
Adding Chessie to your legal team is a good move, Martha.
And, as usual, Professor Ribstein puts Martha’s sentence and the sentence given in the sad case of Jamie Olis in proper perspective.
Homeland Security?
If you read nothing else today, read this harrowing account of a family’s experience in a recent domestic flight.
Please pass this along the next time you hear someone complain that there is no reason to sacrifice any civil liberties in order to fight the war against the radical Islamic fascists.
Michelle Malkin is running posts on her blog attempting to verify the accuracy of the events described in the account. The skeptics speculate that, if the events happened at all, that the men were either praying or members of a musical group. Which, in my mind, is no justification for allowing such behavior to occur on a commercial airline flight.
Hat tip to Instapundit for the link to this article.
Revisiting the 1970’s – Are we better off?
Arnold Kling provides this excellent TCS article in which he forcefully reminds us that the standard of living for the vast majority of Americans is far better now than it was 30 years ago. The entire article is a must read, and Mr. Kling concludes as follows:
The reality is that neither the rise in health care expenditures nor the standard of living of working Americans represents a problem. The false portrayal of these issues by the Left is more likely to provoke a crisis than to solve one.
Richard Chesnoff on the Jordanian option
Richard Z. Chesnoff has long been one of America’s leading correspondents on Middle East affairs, and his pieces have been noted here on several previous occasions.
In this NY Daily News op-ed, Mr. Chesnoff comments on the new ideas that are springing from Israel and Jordan regarding a resolution to the Palestinian problem. Although not yet the subject of widespread political support, the ideas are are notable in that they do not include relying on Yassir Arafat for support, as Mr. Chesnoff notes:
[The] extreme ideas are not welcome among Palestinians, Jordanians or most Israelis. But in between there may be a meeting of the minds. Why not offer financial compensation to West Bankers willing to to move to unsettled parts of Jordan? Why not a border secured in part by Jordan? Why not a Palestinian West Bank and Gaza (minus border areas Israel needs for security) linked to Jordan with an economic union bonding both to Israel’s burgeoning economy?
Anything would be better than the options Arafat & Co. offer: more blood, more corruption, more hatred, more suffering for all sides.
Amen. Read the whole piece.
Tyco’s general counsel acquitted
Mark Belnick, the former Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison partner who was Tyco’s general counsel during the Dennis Kozlowski scandals, was acquitted yesterday of corporate fraud charges that involved an allegedly unapproved $15 million bonus and $14 million in personal real estate loans.
The article on the acquittal provides the normal exaggerations regarding the impact of the acquittal on prosecutors and defense attorneys, suggesting that it will make the former more cautious in future white collar prosecutions and that it will make the latter bolder in defending hte cases. In reality, the acquittal has very little effect in that regard.
However, the article does provide the following important information about the trial:
Mr. Belnick relied on the advice of the chief financial officer, Mr. Swartz, on the propriety and the disclosure of the relocation loans, Mr. Weingarten [Belnick’s defense attorney] told the jury. “There was nothing unusual, extraordinary or improper about seeking advice from that source,” he said.
Over nearly a week of testimony, Mr. Belnick essentially stuck to that argument, saying that he had done nothing wrong, had not intended to do anything wrong and had relied on advice from people he had no reason to distrust.
So, Mr. Belnick did what neither Martha Stewart nor Jamie Olis elected to do — i.e., testified during his criminal trial.
Although the temptation is great not to have a white collar criminal defendant testify during a trial and the decision can always be defended on technical grounds, the bottom line is that jurors want to hear what the white collar defendant has to say regarding the criminal charges. The decision not to testify is not the only reason that Ms. Stewart and Mr. Olis were convicted, but my experience is that the risk of conviction in white collar criminal prosecutions increases substantially if the jurors do not hear directly from the defendant.
Enron reorganization plan approved
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Arthur Gonzalez approved Enron Corp.’s Chapter 11 reorganization plan today in New York, under which $63 billion of claims will share about $12 billion in cash and the value of stock in newly formed companies that will hold and probably sell Enron assets.
Enron now employs 9,300 people, about a third as many as before its bankruptcy filing. Inasmuch as the Enron plan essentially calls for a going concern liquidation of Enron’s assets, most of the employees who are left will become employees of other companies that will hold and then sell Enron’s assets.
Enron’s domestic pipelines are being transferred to CrossCountry Energy Corp., which Enron is currently selling at a rather lively auction. Enron is awaiting regulatory approval on a sale of Portland General Electric, its Oregon utility, to a group headed by Texas Pacific Group, a Fort Worth, Texas, investment concern. A substantial portion of Enron’s remaining foreign assets are being transferred to a new entity, Prisma Energy International Inc., which may be sold or spun off to creditors.
However, the main legacy of Enron’s plan is the litigation that Enron’s bankruptcy has generated. Literally hundreds of lawsuits have been filed against former employees, trading partners, and many financial institutions that furnished money to partnerships that Enron used to mask its highly-leveraged financial condition. Those cases will continue to drain attorneys’ fees from Enron’s bankruptcy estate for years.
The Enron bankruptcy estate has already paid Enron’s attorneys, various other committee attorneys, and two examiners’ attorneys in the hundreds of millions in attorneys fees. When the final professional fees tab is calculated, the Enron case almost certainly will be the most expensive chapter 11 case in the history of reorganization law in the United States.
Southwest Airlines CEO resigns
James F. Parker, Dallas-based Southwest Airlines’ CEO, unexpectedly resigned yesterday after just three years. The publicly stated reason for the resignation was the ubiquitous “personal reasons,” such as the “draining” nature of the job. Airline CEO’s are becoming as disposable as football coaches. Mr. Parker becomes the sixth major airline CEO to step down since the 9/11 attacks.
However, the resignation coincidentally came just hours after Southwest reported that its second-quarter earnings had fallen 54%, although that dip was attributable mainly to labor-related charges in the current quarter and a onetime gain a year earlier. Nevertheless, as with the entire airline industry, Southwest has been troubled by labor troubles, higher operating costs and terrorism concerns since the 9/11 attacks. Moreover, although it pioneered the no-frills, low-cost approach, Southwest faces increased competition from new low-cost upstarts who have chased its business and kept fares under pressure.
Mr. Parker’s undoing probably was due to the acrimonious labor contract talks with the flight attendants union that the CEO complained became “personal” and “off track.” They were were settled only with the involvement of an outside mediator and the company’s hard-charging co-founder and chairman, Herbert D. Kelleher, whom Mr. Parker had to bring in as lead negotiator in the labor negotiations.
Mr. Parker had been seen as a transitional CEO, who definitely had a tough act to follow in Mr. Kelleher. The charismatic Mr. Kelleher had worked hard to build personal rapport with employees and won popularity on Wall Street with his pioneering low-cost approach. The two men were longtime associates who began working together 30 years ago at a San Antonio law firm and Mr. Parker was for years known as Southwest’s coordinator of big projects such as leading Southwest’s successful opposition to a high-speed rail project in Texas. But Mr. Parker had also been largely in the background while Mr. Kelleher became the company’s public face.
Chief Financial Officer Gary Kelly, who is 49, was named to replace Mr. Parker as CEO. Mr. Kelly was responsible for negotiating protective price hedges against higher fuel prices that saved Southwest hundreds of millions of dollars as other carriers suffered higher fuel costs.
The scuttlebutt within the industry is that the Southwest board and Mr. Kelleher had become frustrated by the tenor of labor relations at the airline over the past few years. If true, it’s understandable that Mr. Kelleher would have a hard time comprehending why it took two years of negotiations to settle an agreement that he and the union were able to settle in two months once Mr. Kellerher got involved.
Thinking about buying a new car? Read this!
Choosing Death
This Nicholas Kristof NY Times op-ed is a must regarding the U.S. Attorney General’s attempt to halt Oregon’s “Death With Dignity” experiment. The A.G. is threatening legal action against any physician who participates in assisted suicide by writing a prescription for a drug that appears on the federal government’s list of controlled substances. Hat tip to Professor Mayo and his HealthLawBlog for the link to this op-ed.
The Open
The Open begins today at Royal Troon in Scotland, and Quin Hillyer provides this excellent overview of this year’s tournament.