Disgraced former Enron chief executive Jeffrey Skilling's legal fight for a
shorter prison term could end in victory next month.
Government prosecutors filed a federal court agreement Wednesday that would cut
as much as 10 years off the 24-year federal prison term Skilling received for
his 2006 conviction on conspiracy, securities fraud and insider-trading charges
involving the now-bankrupt energy giant he helped lead.
Prosecutors agreed not to oppose crediting Skilling for six weeks of home
confinement he served before entering prison. They also agreed to defer to
prison officials if Skilling seeks participation in a drug-treatment program.
Those concessions, plus earlier court decisions, could lead to a 2017 or 2018
release, according to court records and prison rules.
The agreement filed in Houston needs final approval by U.S. District Court Judge
Sim Lake, who court filings show was involved in settlement discussions between
prosecutors and Skilling's defense team. Lake on Wednesday scheduled a June 21
re-sentencing hearing.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Stokes wrote that the deal "provides for an
appropriate sentencing" in light of a 2011 appeals court ruling that said the
original prison term imposed in 2006 had been too long under federal court
guidelines.
In return for the deal, Skilling, 59, agreed to waive his rights to all further
legal appeals of his sentencing and conviction, including his pending bid for a
new trial.
In his Monday signing of the agreement, Skilling also agreed that more than $40
million of his forfeited assets should be distributed among the many financial
victims of Enron's collapse.
The deal effectively ends the long-running legal battle waged by Skilling and
provides "finality to victims and the public," wrote Stokes.
Originally sentenced in 2006, Skilling has spent more than six years in custody.
He's currently incarcerated at the low-security Englewood Federal Correctional
Institution, about 15 miles southwest of Denver.
Enron collapsed in a market-shaking 2001 bankruptcy amid revelations that the
company had grossly overstated its earnings. The financial implosion victimized
tens of thousands of employees and investors.
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Skilling May Get Shorter Sentence
May 9, 2013
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