After only six days of deliberation , the Enron jury came back to the courtroom to deliver its verdicts.
Ken Lay sighed deeply as the guilty verdict was read and Jeff Skilling looked
down at the floor and remained silent.
Federal Prosecutor Sean Berkowitz hailed the jury's decision.
"The jury has spoken and they have sent an unmistakable message to
board rooms across the country: You cannot lie to shareholders, you cannot
put yourselves in front of your employees interests, no matter how rich
and powerful you are, you have to play by the rules," he said.
But defense lawyers do not see this as the end of their work. Jeff
Skilling's attorney, Daniel Petrocelli said the jury's decision is only
the beginning of another long legal battle.
"Obviously, it did not come out the way we had hoped. It does not
change our view of what happened at Enron and it certainly does not change
our view of Jeff Skilling's innocence," he said.
Petrocelli said he will file "a full and vigorous appeal," but he did
not say on what grounds. Skilling said he was prepared to move forward
with the legal fight.
"We are going to have to go back and think this thing through.
Obviously, we are disappointed, but that is the way the system works,"
said Mr. Skilling.
In the four-month long trial, Lay and Skilling claimed they knew
nothing of the fraudulent financial schemes being carried out inside
Enron. They blamed former Chief Finance Officer Andrew Fastow for the
fraud and blamed the downfall of Enron on a panicked market, driven by
negative articles in such publications as Fortune Magazine and the Wall
Street Journal.
Speaking to reporters after they had appeared in court, jurors said
they did not accept that defense. They said Fastow and other former
executives who testified under plea bargain agreements with the government
told a consistent story about what had happened and that the Lay and
Skilling defense did not hold up under scrutiny.
One juror, who said he was a school principal, gave the defendants a
failing grade.
"I cannot say that I do not know what my teachers are doing in
the classroom," he explained. "I am still responsible if a child gets lost.
I did get a phone call from school while I was here on the jury,
because they are looking for the principal. So to say that you did not
know what was going on in your company is not the right thing."
The jury's work in this case is now over and the sentencing task will
be carried out by the federal judge who presided over the trial, Judge Sim
Lake. He has a great deal of discretion under federal guidelines and could
sentence the defendants to as little as probation on some counts, but
could also impose lengthy prison sentences that would effectively keep
both Lay and Skilling in prison for the rest of their lives.
Both men are free on bond for the time being, but the judge ordered
both to turn over their passports in order to prevent them from leaving
the country.
Former Enron employees, who lost their jobs and pensions when the
company collapsed in late 2001, rejoiced Thursday. Many of them came to
the courthouse downtown to express their satisfaction with the outcome of
the trial.
Enron was at one time the seventh largest US
corporation and its demise shook confidence in the US stock market at a
time when investors were still reeling from the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001. It was also the first in a string of highly publicized
corporate scandals in which high-ranking executives were charged with
fraudulent
accounting
schemes.
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