资讯

Fastow proposed LJM buy a 13 percent interest in the project, which would have technically taken the project off the company's books and let it report $65 million in income during the third and ...
Fastow and Kopper have pleaded guilty to criminal charges related to the collapse of Enron in 2001. Fastow’s plea deal calls for him to serve 10 years in prison, and Kopper awaits sentencing.
Fastow, 44, took the witness stand against his former bosses Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling, who are accused of fraud, conspiracy and other charges in the spectacular collapse of Enron in 2001.
The internal report from Enron names CFO Andrew Fastow as chief architect of the partnerships scheme that helped the company hide $1 billion in losses during the 12-month period ending in ...
When Fastow began testimony last Tuesday, he spoke with a strong, steady voice regarding his wrongdoings at Enron and the directions he said he received in 2001 from Jeff Skilling and Ken Lay to ...
Fastow kept quiet as well, Skilling testified, about the fact that he had allowed several other Enron employees to gain financial interests in the partnerships, resulting in financial windfalls ...
Fastow testified earlier that his wife found a three-page, handwritten document chronicling the arrangement during a visit to the couple's safe deposit box in April 2004.
Fastow, whom Skilling hired in 1990 and mentored during his rise through the ranks at Enron, pleaded guilty in January 2004 to two conspiracy counts and agreed to a 10-year prison sentence.
Fastow is expected to turn himself in to authorities at a Houston courthouse early Wednesday morning. He would be the second former Enron executive to face criminal prosecution by the Department ...
A partnership Fastow created to help Enron hide debt and inflate profit -- LJM2 -- came through in June 2000, buying Merrill Lynch’s interest at a premium for $7.5 million.
When Fastow asked Petrocelli to let him finish an answer, Petrocelli told Fastow the trial would move faster if he stopped making speeches. I dont meant to cut you off, Petrocelli said.
Andrew Fastow is the highest-ranking former executive of Enron to plead guilty in the government's long-running case, which has yet to charge former Chairman Kenneth Lay and former CEO Jeffrey ...