I guess the president won’t be seeing his buddies from Enron for quite a while. Ken Lay and Jeff Skilling were, not suprisingly, found [tag]guilty[/tag] this afternoon.
A federal jury today [tag]convicted[/tag] former [tag]Enron[/tag] Corp. top executives Jeffrey K. Skilling and Kenneth L. Lay of multiple fraud charges, writing a powerful coda to the government’s four-year-old push to hold executives accountable for wrongdoing on their watch.
[tag]Skilling[/tag], 52, and [tag]Lay[/tag], 64, once stood near the pinnacle of American business, as the energy trading powerhouse they created out of a stodgy pipeline company grew to become the nation’s seventh-largest public company. But their fortunes collapsed in a heap along with the business when it declared bankruptcy in December 2001.
Now the two men, who spent millions of dollars in their their defense, face the possibility of spending the rest of their lives in prison.
Enron’s bankruptcy filing cost thousands of workers their jobs, spooked investors into doubting the integrity of the stock market and spurred lawmakers to enact the most significant changes to corporate practices in more than 70 years. The verdict provides a reminder of the need for those changes at the very moment business groups are seeking to overturn them in the courts and within federal agencies.
As CNN explained (with a helpful little chart), Skilling was found guilty on 20 counts of conspiracy, fraud, false statements, and insider trading. He was found not guilty on eight counts of insider trading. Lay was found guilty on all six counts of conspiracy and fraud. In a separate bench trial, Judge Sim Lake ruled Lay was guilty of four counts of fraud and false statements. Both Lay and Skilling could face 20 to 30 years in prison, legal experts say. Sentencing was set for the week of Sept. 11.
They won’t be missed.