Why Enron's Ex-CEO Thinks He Got Convicted

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geochem1st

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Jeff Skilling's Jailhouse Reflections: Why Enron's Ex-CEO Thinks He Got Convicted

People in Houston and Americans everywhere are eagerly awaiting the Supreme Court's ruling in Skilling v. United States, which will decide whether former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling will serve out his 24-plus year sentence, get a new trial, or, if one of the statutes he was convicted under is invalidated, possibly get a new, reduced sentence. The soonest the opinion could come down is Thursday, and the latest is the end of this month.

In the meantime, Fortune has published a generally sympathetic profile of the man, describing a jailhouse interview with a very human Skilling. The disgraced ex-executive reports being lonely, staying focused on keeping healthy while in prison (he does yoga, walks four miles a day and eats a low-carb diet), and fears missing out on his sons' adolescence. He also describes what he considers three key mistakes he made that led to his conviction.

First, he admits he would have been smarter to have taken the Fifth, and not testified in his own defense. Skilling now thinks his testimony was too big a help to the prosecution. Indeed, his lawyers told him to stay silent, but Skilling just couldn't help himself: He wanted to tell his side of the story. Many another defendant has had the same lament.

Second, Skilling thinks he could have mounted a PR campaign that would have helped him win his case. He laments not having a comprehensive media strategy, and not maintaining relationships with "key industry advocates in and outside the media," both of which he somehow believes could have changed public opinion about Enron and himself.

While he's probably right about taking the Fifth, on this second point, he seems delusional. I can't imagine a PR campaign that could have helped. Enron then was BP today. Like Skilling then, BP isn't going to be able to spin its way into a jury's good graces through a clever media campaign. Indeed, Skilling's argument for a new trial would be undercut if he'd actually had a major PR campaign in motion: His argument is based on the idea that the jury was too biased against him to render a fair verdict.

Third, Skilling suggests avoiding sarcasm, claiming his infamous "they're on to us" comment in 2001 was just that: sarcasm, badly misunderstood. Generally speaking, avoiding phrases that make great soundbites for the prosecution, whether, sarcastic or not, is a good idea. Nonetheless, in the moments that such comments are made, few speakers are typically thinking about what a prosecutor might do with those words down the road. After all, these comments are typically made while the alleged crimes are occurring, not after the fact when there is a prosecutor to worry about. So I'm not sure how useful his "avoid sarcasm" suggestion is. It's really just a case of 20-20 hindsight.

Of course, if the Court throws out his convictions on the basis of jury bias, Skilling can let all of those regrets evaporate and try taking the Fifth during round two.

See full article from DailyFinance: http://srph.it/a6veke
 

mudfinger

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Put Skilling and Madoff in the Octagon, make it a pay-per-view event, and give the proceeds to the victims of their crimes. :thumb:

EDIT: Just smack me when I get on yer nerves, Geo. My guitar is sounding good this morning, and I'm in a smartass mood.:naughty:
 

Hamtone

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At least he doesnt see anything he did as a crime, him, tyco, world com, and maddoff should have a battle royal..Might as well add Lehman bros and Meryl lynch too
 

jbrookeiv

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No sympathy whatsoever. He is a crook and deserves to rot.
 

KSG_Standard

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High Court Sides With Enron CEO Skilling - TheStreet

What a narcissistic dufus. He got convicted because he's a liar and a thief...period. He deserves whatever punishment he gets and more. I highly recommend the documentary The Smartest Guys in the Room...very interesting story about Enron and the key players.

It looks like the Supremes ruled partially in his favor, but he had over a 100 charges against him...I doubt that he'll get out of jail.
 

Lungo

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The disgraced ex-executive reports being lonely

If he's looking for sympathy the only place he'll find it is in the dictionary between sex and syphilis.
 

mudfinger

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Actually it's the tossing of the salad that is far worse. :laugh2:

And your point of reference on this is what, exactly? :hmm: No pics, please. I'll take your word for it, whatever it is. :laugh2:
 

Jason

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And your point of reference on this is what, exactly? :hmm: No pics, please. I'll take your word for it, whatever it is. :laugh2:

Well, sometimes you don't need first hand experience to determine which of two things is worse. Right now I can't think of anything that would lose out to the option of having my tongue in a sweaty inmate's poopchute. :shock: :laugh2:
 

geochem1st

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....
EDIT: Just smack me when I get on yer nerves, Geo. My guitar is sounding good this morning, and I'm in a smartass mood.:naughty:

Not a problem. I'm glad somebody's day is going well :thumb:

At least he doesnt see anything he did as a crime, him, tyco, world com, and maddoff should have a battle royal..Might as well add Lehman bros and Meryl lynch too

And Goldman Sachs, Bear Sterns, etc.....

I am antsy for someone to go down for the mess we are in. Regulators, Financial Institution execs... It doesn't matter. There was plenty of dirty play going on. Nothing has been done to correct the real estate/mortgage/securities scam that is STILL in place or effectively deal with the shadow banking schemes.

We don't need no stinking badges... we need warrants!
 

KSG_Standard

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Don't forget the ratings agencies...the bankers took mortgages that they knew were high risk, stuffed them into brown paper sacks with some low risk mortgages and then paid the ratings agencies to rate them as low risk...and then sold them to lazy investors. There has to be fraud or some other crime there.:hmm:
 

Hamtone

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Well, sometimes you don't need first hand experience to determine which of two things is worse. Right now I can't think of anything that would lose out to the option of having my tongue in a sweaty inmate's poopchute. :shock: :laugh2:

I will give you that but the chances are they are pulling a train on him anyway:laugh2::laugh2:
 

geochem1st

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Don't forget the ratings agencies...the bankers took mortgages that they knew were high risk, stuffed them into brown paper sacks with some low risk mortgages and then paid the ratings agencies to rate them as low risk...and then sold them to lazy investors. There has to be fraud or some other crime there.:hmm:


I whole heartedly agree. I wouldn't even say 'lazy' investors. The complexity and size of the CDO/CDS contracts is mind boggling.
 

mudfinger

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mobrule.png
 

geochem1st

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THAT is where my anger is focused. The Moodys and S&Ps; where were they?! I can understand the motivation of the corporations that put together the junk debt. But it took the Moodys to stamp it as Investment Grade.

Good article....

How Moody's sold its ratings - and sold out investors | McClatchy


Moody's and S&P employees were acutally in the rooms constucting these contracts and giving advice on how to make them 'AAA'. It was a fix from the top down, The Regulators, Congress, and the Financial Industry.
 

twinrider1

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My idea for a screenplay is that of a vigilante that hunts down those untouchable a-holes that screw the masses, and hide behind loopholes and lawyers. The email spammers, the CEO that sits in front of Congress and, with a straight face, lies about his company's bad deeds.
Maybe an assassin, like Jean Reno in The Professional. Or a superhero...Captain Conscience. Or a league of killers, with different styles.
Like A Christmas Carol, each killer would be like a ghost of Christmas' past, forcing the bad guy to face his evil ways. But in the end the bad guys don't get to repent, they just get whacked.
 

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