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Former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling indicted
By Joseph Kay
24 February 2004
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Former Enron chief executive officer Jeffrey Skilling was indicted
February 19 on 35 counts of fraud, conspiracy and insider trading.
He is the latest and most prominent former Enron executive to
face charges since the energy giant collapsed in a wave of accounting
and corruption scandals in December 2001.
If convicted on all counts, Skilling faces a maximum sentence
of 325 years in prison and millions of dollars in fines, as well
as the forfeiture of $66 million in earnings allegedly received
through insider trading. He pleaded not guilty to all charges.
The indictment was filed by the Enron Task Force, a joint unit
of the Justice Department, the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS), in cooperation with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). The SEC separately announced civil charges of securities
fraud and insider trading against Skilling.
Former chief accounting officer Richard Causey, who was indicted
in January on six counts of fraud, was charged concurrently with
Skilling in the new indictment. Causey also pleaded not guilty.
A record of corruption and deceit
The indictment of Skilling comes five weeks after Andrew Fastow,
Enrons former chief financial officer, pleaded guilty to
two counts of fraud in a plea bargain with prosecutors. Fastow
agreed to cooperate in future investigations and received a 10-year
prison sentence. Fastow was one of Skillings closest associates,
allegedly working with him in engineering off-the-book partnerships
to hide debt and artificially inflate Enrons earnings in
1999, 2000 and 2001.
Fastow is expected to implicate Skilling, who more than any
other Enron executive was responsible for the practical measures
by which Enron was transformed from a traditional oil and gas
pipeline firm into a giant trader on the wholesale energy market.
The rise of Skilling was bound up with the rise of Enron as the
paradigmatic example of the new economy company, touted
by analysts and rewarded by Wall Street.
Skilling joined Enron in the early 1990s and rose through the
corporate hierarchy until Kenneth Lay, who was chairman of Enrons
board of directors and long-time CEO of the company, named Skilling
CEO in 2001. Skilling and Lay exploited opportunities for corporate
and personal gain that arose out of the deregulation of the energy
industry begun under the Reagan administration in the 1980s. As
a consequence of this deregulation, there emerged a breed of market
makers that mediated, for a profit, between energy producers
and consumers. Skilling and Lay sought to place Enron in a position
where it could profit through the buying and selling of wholesale
contracts in a new market largely of its own creation.
In 1995, Skilling was named CEO and managing director of Enron
Capital & Trade Resourcesa branch of the company that
dealt with energy trading. In the same year, Enron was named the
most innovative company by Forbes magazine,
an honor that it was accorded in each of the subsequent six years.
In 1997, Skilling became president and chief operating officer
of Enron.
The Houston Chronicle notes that Skilling had
little use for anything that smacked of a traditional energy companycalling
companies like Exxon Mobil dinosaursor even
Enrons own projects, which included power plants and pipelines.
We are doing great things, he later said. We
are creating markets where markets didnt exist.
Like many of the new economy companies that relied
heavily on financial speculation and market manipulation, Enrons
success depended largely on its rising stock price, which allowed
it to finance loans and increase its market leverage. When the
companys operations failed to be as successful as they were
touted to be, Enron resorted to accounting sleight-of-hand and
other fraudulent activities to hide debt and inflate earnings.
According to the indictment, Skilling, Causey and other executives
manipulated finances so that financial results would falsely
appear to meet or exceed analysts expectations, and
made public statements that misrepresented the health of the company.
Meeting analysts expectations was necessary to avoid a sharp
drop in share prices.
Much of the fraud focused on Enrons telecommunications
division, known as Enron Broadband Services (EBS). Skilling
and others sought artificially to support and inflate Enrons
stock price by falsely characterizing Enron as a company whose
earnings and future prospects were determined to a substantial
extent by...EBS. At that time, stocks of technology sector companies...generally
traded at a significant premium on public securities markets.
Enron stock soared 25 percent after the announcement of the formation
of EBS.
At an analysts conference in January 2000, Skilling and
other Enron executives claimed that EBS was nearly fully functional,
when in fact it remained only unproved concepts and laboratory
demonstrations that Skilling was advised would take years to complete
and might never be realized, according to the indictment.
It was to conceal losses at EBS that Enron used its now infamous
off-balance-sheet partnerships. The so-called LJM partnerships
were controlled by Enron chief financial officer Fastow, but were
falsely treated in Enrons accounts as independent entities.
Skilling and Fastow allegedly shifted Enron debt to these entities
to remove this debt from Enrons books.
Another aspect of Enrons fraudulent activities involved
the California energy crisis. According to the indictment: During
2000 and 2001, the profitability of Enrons wholesale energy
trading business...dramatically increased for reasons including
rapidly rising energy prices in the western United States, especially
California. This sudden and large increase in trading profits,
which exceeded $1 billion, if disclosed to the public, would have
made it apparent that Enron Wholesales revenues were closely
tied to the market price for energy, and that Enron therefore
was exposed to the risk of a decline in such prices. Skilling,
Causey and other executives concealed these profits by placing
them in reserve accounts.
The indictment does not mention the fact that the high energy
prices in California and other western states were themselves
a result of market manipulation by Enron and other energy giants.
According to the indictment, Skilling used these reserves to
boost profits in other sections of the company, particularly Enron
Energy Services (EES), which, like EBS, had been touted as a major
growth sector for the company. Enron hid [EESs severe
business failure] from the investigating public by moving large
portions of EESs business...into Enron Wholesale,
the indictment reads.
In the course of these actions, Skilling, Fastow, Causey and
other executives benefited personally from Enrons soaring
stock value. Skilling initiated a program in the latter part of
his career at Enron to sell a set amount of the companys
stock monthly. According to the indictment, Between 1998
and 2001, Skilling received approximately $300 million from the
sale of Enron stock options and restricted stock, netting over
$89 million in profit, and was paid more than $14 million in salary
and bonuses.
The indictment alleges that these sales were made with insider
knowledge of the true health of the company. Also selling large
amounts of stockeven as he encouraged employees to buywas
Kenneth Lay, though he is not mentioned in the indictment.
The collapse of the telecom bubble and the stock market as
a whole in late 2001 eventually undid Enrons elaborate schemes
to hide the struggling performance of many of its key components.
The various off-balance-sheet partnerships were financed by Enron
stock, and could not be sustained as the share price dropped.
Skilling unexpectedly resigned in August 2001. In December
2001, Enron filed for bankruptcy, and its stockonce valued
at over $90 billionwas now practically worthless. Thousands
of workers lost their jobs and thousands more saw their retirement
savingslargely invested in Enron stockwiped out. Enron
was the first in a series of corporate scandals and shared many
of the features common to all: accounting fraud, heavy reliance
on debt and share value, enormous executive compensation and complete
disregard for the employees.
Political connections ignored
While Skilling was one of the principal architects of the massive
fraud carried out by Enron, his prosecution is designed more to
conceal than to reveal the underlying issues.
First, the close connections between Enron and the Bush administration
are being ignored by government prosecutors, and have been largely
dropped by the media. Kenneth Lay was, for most of George W. Bushs
political career, his biggest corporate financial backer.
Thomas White, who recently stepped down as Bushs secretary
of the army, was second in command at Enron Energy Services, which
occupies a prominent place in the indictment. If the charges in
the indictment about the inflation of EESs profits are true,
then one must assume White was aware of the fraud. Yet White is
nowhere named in the indictment, and his role has not been broached
at all in connection with the corruption at Enron.
Moreover, Enron was able to fleece California through market
manipulation and price gouging because it had the support of the
Bush administration. Despite repeated requests from California
officials, Bush refused to consider putting price caps on energy
rates being charged by companies like Enron.
Lay, in a private meeting with Vice President Dick Cheney in
April 2001, lobbied hard for the administration to take a position
against price caps. In subsequent weeks, both Bush and Cheney
announced their positions, which coincided with that of Lay and
Enron. While caps were eventually put in place several months
later, in the intervening period Enron was able to amass over
$1 billion in revenue.
As is well known, Enron played a critical role in the formulation
of the Bush administrations energy policy, having direct
input into Cheneys energy task force (the National Energy
Policy Development Group). Cheney has refused to release information
on meetings between the task force and energy company executives,
including Enrons Lay. A case against Cheney on this issue
is currently before the Supreme Court.
Cheneys task force ended up making many recommendations
in line with Enrons wishes, including the formation of a
national energy grid that would expand the wholesale energy market
in which Enron specialized.
Nowhere in the Skilling indictment is there any mention of
Kenneth Lay, by name or title. This is extraordinary, given the
fact that Lay was CEO for the entire period under question, except
for the six months when the position was occupied by Skilling,
and was the chairman of the board of directors for the entire
period. Lay was as well the leading public spokesman for the company.
When Deputy Attorney General James Comey announced the charges
in Washington on February 19, he referred to Skilling as the
guy at Enron. Journalists asked Comey whether this implied
that prosecutors would not go after Lay. He responded by saying
that he did not mean to suggest one way or another.
He added, What I wanted to do was...make sure folks appreciate
the indictments allegations about Mr. Skillings role
at Enron, that he was the CEO, that he was the person who ran
Enron, that he was its public face.
This characterization of Skilling is actually a distortion
of his role, and has the effect of downplaying both the significance
and culpability of Lay. Given that there is an ongoing federal
investigation of Lay, the prosecutions characterization
of Skilling as the man at Enron is extraordinary.
It could presumably be used by Lays defense attorneys to
argue against any charges, or at least the most serious charges,
in a future criminal or civil action against the former Enron
boss.
More broadly, the prosecution of Skilling, Fastow and top executives
at a handful of other companies is being used to obscure the broader
issues behind the wave of corporate scandals. The accounting manipulations
and fraud at companies such as Enron, WorldCom and Tyco have been
presented by both Democratic and Republican politicians and the
media as a matter simply of corrupt individuals, rather than an
expression of deeper, systemic problems and contradictions.
The Wall Street Journal, in a January 15 editorial on
the Fastow indictment, summed up this common line of defense of
the profit system. It declared: But the larger lesson here
is about individual accountability under the law. When the news
about Enron and other corporate scandals first broke, the political
and media instinct was to indict business as a class and fret
about the immorality of capitalism. This, according to the
Journal was entirely mistaken.
The newspaper concluded with a pat on the back to a corporate-dominated
economic system that had been caught defrauding millions of workers,
pensioners and small investors. All in all the system seems
to be working, even for the once high and mighty, wrote
the Journal editors.
In fact, the responsibility for the Enron collapse extends
far beyond Skilling and the other top executives. It was not just
the Enron executives who benefited from the companys soaring
stock, but the entire ruling elite, which enriched itself in the
stock market boom of the 1990s. The presentation of analysts,
banks, politicians and big investors as mere victims of a scheme
concocted by Skilling is a gross distortion of reality. All of
these forces played an active role in promoting the conditions
of speculation and criminality that gave rise to Enron.
See Also:
Supreme Court Justice Scalias hunting
trip with Cheney: the political and constitutional issues
[20 February 2004]
Enron defrauded California
out of billions during energy crisis
[10 May 2002]
The Enron collapse
and the crisis of the profit system
[29 January 2002]
Enron: The real face
of the new economy
[6 December 2001]
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