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April 8, 2011

In the News & Around the Blogosphere

Amanda Bronstad, NLJ, Alleged bribes included a yacht and a Ferrari

Leigh Jones, NLJ, law.com,  Attorney, client sanctioned for violating gag order

Kian Ganz, law.com, India's Corruption Scandals Start to Worry Investors

 DOJ Press Release, Johnson & Johnson Agrees to Pay $21.4 Million Criminal Penalty to Resolve Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and Oil for Food Investigations - Company to Pay Total Penalties of $70 Million in Resolutions with Justice Department and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

DOJ Press Release, Comverse Technology INC. Agrees to Pay $1.2 Million Penalty to Resolve Violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act

BLT Blog, Mike Scarcella, D.C. Judge Stays Prison Sentence in Bloch Case

Michael Riley & Laurel Brubaker Calkins, Bloomberg, JGC to Pay $218.8 Million to Resolve Foreign Bribery Charges

Tom Kirkendall, Houston's Clear Thinkers, The Fifth Circuit Punts on the Skilling Case Again

(esp)(blogging from Lubbock, Texas)

April 8, 2011 in News | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

April 6, 2011

Commentary on Skilling Remand Decision

As noted here, the 5th Circuit entered its remand decision in the Skilling case, following the Supreme Court's ruling that honest services would be limited to bribery and kickbacks. Jeffrey Skilling had won the issue of honest services in the United States Supreme Court, but this highest court had sent it back for the lower court to determine if the error was harmless and how far it extended - did it affect other crimes he was convicted upon.

There was never any issue of Skilling being involved in bribery of kickbacks, the only aspect of honest services that remained after this Supreme Court decision.  So, it was clear that the lower decision had erred.  But merely having error is not enough these days.  The error also has to be either a fundamental one or not harmless error in order for a defendant to receive relief.

This remand decision is a most interesting decision for several reasons:

"This single reference to Skilling's honest services, in light of the Government's extensive argument on securities fraud, merely permitted the jury to decide the case on the wrong theory.  It did not force or urge it to do so, and therefore, it shows only that an alternative-theory error occurred, not that the error was not harmless."

See also Doug Berman, Sentencing Law & Policy, Fifth Circuit makes former Enron CEO Skilling's SCOTUS victory Pyrrhic

(esp)

April 6, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack

Skilling Remand

The Fifth Circuit issued its decision on the Skilling remand here.

The US Supreme Court had "invalidated one of the objects of the conspiracy charge - honest-services" and sent it back to the 5th Circuit to determine if the error was harmless.  The 5th Circuit ruling today found it to be harmless error, and they now sent the case back to the trial court for resentencing.  

The 16-page decision commences with a review of how to analyze harmlessness of an alternative-theory error.   The court concludes that "based on [its] own thorough examination of the considerable record in this case, we find that the jury was presented with overwhelming evidence that Skilling conspired to commit securities fraud, and thus we conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the verdict would have been the same absent the alternative-theory error."  The court later states that because it finds "that the alternative-instruction error in this case was harmless with respect to the conspiracy conviction, it follows that Skilling has no basis on which to challenge the remaining convictions."

More later.

(esp)

April 6, 2011 in Enron | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

April 3, 2011

New Scholarship - Brotman on Sentencing

Check out Ellen C. Brotman's (Montgomery, McCracken, Walker & Rhoads) article: Make Probation a Real Option at Sentencing, 23 Federal Sentencing Reporter 257 (No. 4) (April 2011).  Her opening line: "My advice to the Commission is to amend the Guidelines to establish probation as a distinct type of sentence with independent value, rather than as merely a lenient option to be used only in extraordinary cases."

(esp)(hat tip to Evan Jenness)

April 3, 2011 in Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack