US high court imperils Skilling, Black convictions

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The Supreme Court yesterday threw into doubt the fraud convictions of former Enron  Corp Chief Executive Jeffrey Skilling and ex-media baron Conrad  Black, a setback for the U.S. Justice Department in two of the  biggest corporate fraud prosecutions of the last decade.

The high court limited the reach of a federal fraud law  that Justice Department prosecutors have used in a number of  cases alleging public corruption by government officials and  fraud by executives like Black and Skilling.

The ruling could make it harder for the administration of  President Barack Obama to use the fraud law even as it faces  rising public anger and pressure to bring major cases against  corporations and top executives for wrongdoing in the wake of  the financial crisis.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said the fraud law at issue  only covered bribery and kickbacks, and that Skilling’s alleged  misconduct did not involve a bribe or kickback.

The court also ruled that the convictions of Black and two  former colleagues for defrauding shareholders of former  newspaper publisher Hollinger International Inc must be  reviewed because of flawed jury instructions about the fraud  law.

The court stopped short of overturning both convictions,  and sent the cases back to lower courts for more proceedings.  Both men will remain in prison.

Ginsburg said in Black’s case, the lower courts must  determine if the jury instruction error was harmless, while in  Skilling’s case, she said the conspiracy and fraud conviction  was flawed, but may not have to be reversed.

The Justice Department would defend the Skilling and Black  cases in the lower courts as well as other prior convictions  under the law, spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler said.

“While we are disappointed that today’s Supreme Court  decisions narrowed the honest services statute, we are pleased  that the court upheld many of the core provisions that have  been used for decades to prosecute corrupt public officials and  corporate executives who have breached their duties to their  constituents, clients and investors,” she said.

The ruling significantly narrows a law “crucial for holding  accountable the corporate criminals whose actions did so much  to contribute to the current financial crisis which has harmed  so many Americans,” said Vermont Democratic Senator and  Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy.

Skilling and Black had been convicted on other charges  besides fraud, and the ruling ensures further legal proceedings  to determine the fate of their convictions on all the charges.

Skilling as chief executive led Enron’s transformation from  a sleepy natural gas pipeline company into a global energy  trading powerhouse. He was convicted in 2006.

The case was part of the Justice Department’s crackdown  early in the decade targeting top executives for their role in  corporate fraud and accounting scandals in such companies as  Enron and WorldCom.

Skilling is serving a prison sentence of 24 years at a  minimum security facility in Littleton, Colorado.

Defense lawyer Daniel Petrocelli said Skilling’s first  statement was an emotional “thank you so much” to the group of  lawyers on the telephone line when told of the ruling. “He is  very happy,” Petrocelli said.

“Our position will be that every count of conviction is  undermined because the government relied so prominently on the  honest services theory at trial,” he said.

Miguel Estrada, Black’s attorney, said, “We are obviously  pleased that the Supreme Court rejected the government’s  argument that Conrad Black engaged in honest services fraud.”

“We look forward to helping Mr. Black regain his freedom,”  he added.

The Canadian-born Black, who had been a member of Britain’s  House of Lords, has been in a U.S. prison since March 2008,  when he began serving a 6-1/2-year sentence for fraud and  obstruction of justice.

The Supreme Court’s ruling stemmed from an appeal by Black  after he was found guilty by a jury in Chicago of stealing  millions of dollars from Hollinger by fraudulently paying  himself bogus fees. Hollinger was once the world’s  third-largest publisher of English-language newspapers.

In the first part of the Skilling ruling, the high court  rejected his argument that his conviction should be overturned  completely because his Houston jury had been tainted by  prejudice and anger over the energy trader’s collapse.

The court said he received a fair trial. Justices John Paul  Stevens, Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor dissented from that  part of the ruling.

In the second part of the ruling, the court focused on a  law used by Justice Department prosecutors in Skilling’s case.