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Late Enron boss's verdict quashed | |
(10 minutes later) | |
A US court has ruled that the conviction of former Enron boss Kenneth Lay cannot stand as he died before he was able to appeal against the verdict. | |
He died in July, less than two months after his conviction for fraud and conspiracy related to Enron's collapse. | |
A US district judge ruled that the whole case should be erased as a dead defendant could not be punished. | A US district judge ruled that the whole case should be erased as a dead defendant could not be punished. |
The US energy giant went bankrupt in 2001 with debts of $31.8bn (£18bn), leaving 4,000 people out of work. | |
The verdict is likely to hamper the government's efforts to recover $43.5m in cash and other financial assets which prosecutors claim that Mr Lay stole from Enron shareholders. | |
The authorities can still pursue these claims in a civil court but will have to compete with other litigants, which include ex-investors and employees of the energy giant. | |
Jeff Skilling, also convicted with Mr Lay, is due to be sentenced on Monday. | Jeff Skilling, also convicted with Mr Lay, is due to be sentenced on Monday. |
Financial implications | |
Mr Lay's lawyers argued the conviction should be overturned following his death, citing a 2004 appeals court ruling that the state could not punish a dead defendant or their estate unless their case had been heard on appeal. | |
Mr Lay was chairman of the Texas firm at the time of its spectacular collapse in 2001 after a huge black hole was uncovered in its finances. | |
He was found guilty of being aware of and doing nothing to prevent a massive fraud at the company, which knocked $60bn of its market value. | |
Andrew Fastow, the firm's former finance director who gave evidence against Mr Lay and Mr Skilling in their fraud trial, was sentenced to six years in jail earlier this month. |