Former Enron CEO Skilling Surrenders to FBI
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Thursday, Feb. 19, 2004
HOUSTON Jeffrey Skilling, the former Enron chief
executive who resigned less than four months before the company
shattered in scandal, surrendered Thursday to the FBI. He was taken
in handcuffs to a federal courthouse to face criminal charges
related to the company's collapse.
Flanked by a pair of attorneys, Skilling turned himself in at
the Houston FBI offices just before daybreak. About 15 minutes
later, his hands behind him in cuffs, he was placed in a car for
the trip to the federal courthouse downtown. He was
expected to appear later in the day before a federal judge on
charges related to Enron's collapse, according to two sources close
to the investigation who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"Under the circumstances, he is doing extraordinarily well,"
said Dan Petrocelli, one of his lawyers.
Two years ago, Skilling bucked the trend of
former Enron executives invoking their Fifth Amendment rights
before Congress. He told two panels he knew nothing about serious
problems at the energy trader before he quit after serving as CEO
for only six months.
Barring any last minute delays, Skilling, 50, would be the
highest-profile former Enron executive to date to face criminal
charges. He would be the 28th individual to be charged and one of
the most anticipated in the Justice Department's methodical
investigation, which passed its two-year mark last month.
Another of his lawyers, Bruce Hiler, visited the federal
courthouse Wednesday afternoon to familiarize himself
with its layout.
Skilling's former boss, Enron founder and former chairman
Kenneth Lay, has not been charged. The sources said it was
unclear if he would become a defendant.
Both men, through their lawyers, have maintained their innocence
of any wrongdoing related to Enron's failure.
It was not immediately clear what charges Skilling would face,
although the sources said they likely would be similar to
conspiracy and fraud counts filed last month against former top
Enron accountant Richard Causey.
Two years ago, Skilling maintained during testimony before two
congressional panels that he believed Enron was financially healthy
when he stepped down citing personal reasons he has not explained.
Charges against Skilling would come just a month after former
Enron finance chief Andrew Fastow pleaded guilty to two counts of
conspiracy and agreed to help prosecutors pursue other cases.
Fastow, one of Skilling's first hires after Skilling joined
Enron in 1990, admitted that he and others manipulated Enron's
books so the company would appear successful while using
partnerships to enrich himself, his family and chosen colleagues.
Fastow's lawyers said when he was indicted on nearly 100 counts
in October 2002 that he was hired to do off-the-books financing and
that Enron's top brass approved and praised his work.
Causey and Fastow reported directly to Skilling. Causey pleaded
innocent and, unlike Fastow, is not accused of skimming millions of
dollars for himself through shady self-dealing.
But top executives, including Skilling, pocketed millions of
dollars from sales of stock prosecutors allege was inflated.
Shareholder lawsuits allege Skilling gained more than
$70 million from selling 1.3 million shares of stock, about 43
percent of his holdings, from June 1996 through November 2001.
Skilling also received $13.2 million in bonuses from 1997 through
2001.
Skilling has said that his stock sales were part of a program to sell a certain amount each month and that he didn't dump
shares for fear of Enron going under.
Skilling graduated from Southern Methodist University in Dallas,
earned an MBA from Harvard Business School and joined consulting
firm McKinsey & Co. in 1986. His theory of applying
finance principles to trading in the newly deregulated natural-gas
business led Lay to hire him.
Enron's trading operations grew under Skilling's leadership,
prompting other energy companies to imitate the company's apparent
success. In 1997, Skilling became chief operating officer and
advanced to CEO in February 2001.
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