FORMER ENRON CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER JEFFREY SKILLING SENTENCED TO MORE THAN 24 YEARS IN PRISON ON FRAUD, CONSPIRACY CHARGESWASHINGTON - Former Enron Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey K. Skilling has been sentenced to 24 years and four months in prison on conspiracy, securities fraud and other charges related to the collapse of the Enron Corporation, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division announced today. In addition to the prison sentence, Skilling, 52, was ordered to forfeit approximately $45 million to be applied towards restitution for the victims of the fraud at Enron. Skilling was sentenced today before U.S. District Judge Sim Lake, at the U.S. District Court in Houston. He was convicted by a federal jury in Houston on May 25, 2006 of 12 counts of securities fraud, one count of insider trading, conspiracy and five counts of making false statements to auditors. Lay's co-defendant at trial, former Enron CEO Kenneth Lay, was also convicted after 56 days of trial and jury deliberations on conspiracy, securities fraud and wire fraud charges. The convictions
stemmed from a wide-ranging scheme that Lay, Skilling and other Enron
executives engaged in at various times between at least 1999 and 2001,
to deceive the investing public, the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission and others about the true performance of Enron's businesses.
The scheme was designed to make it appear that Enron was growing at
a healthy and predictable rate, consistent with analysts' published
expectations, that Enron did not have significant write-offs or debt
and was worthy of investment-grade credit rating, that Enron was comprised
of a number of successful business units, and that the company had
an appropriate cash flow. It had the effect of inflating artificially
Enron's stock price, which increased from approximately $30 per share
in early 1998 to over $80 per share in January 2001, and artificially
stemming the decline of the stock during the first three quarters
of 2001. "Today's
sentence is a measure of justice for the thousands of people who lost
their jobs and millions of dollars in investments when Enron collapsed
under the weight of the fraud perpetrated by the company's top executives,"
said Assistant Attorney General Fisher. "Jeffrey Skilling will
now spend more than 24 years in prison for committing one of the largest
frauds in the history of corporate America. His conviction is the
result of nearly five years of hard work and dedication by the prosecutors
and investigators on the Enron Task Force, whose tireless efforts
demonstrate the finest qualities of public service."
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