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Lay Defense Blames Auto Signature Machine
AP on Yahoo ^ | 5/19/06 | Michael Graczyk - ap

Posted on 05/19/2006 9:46:53 AM PDT by NormsRevenge

HOUSTON - The automated signature machine did it. Attorneys for Kenneth Lay suggested bank loan documents containing terms he allegedly violated actually were signed by an automatic signature device in the Enron Corp. founder's office and not by him.

Lay went on trial Thursday on one count of bank fraud and three counts of making false statements regarding personal banking issues.

The trial, expected to wrap up as early as Tuesday, got under way the day after jurors began deliberating the nearly four-month-long fraud and conspiracy case of Lay and former Enron Chief Executive Jeffrey Skilling. Lay is charged with six counts in that case, Skilling with 28.

Prosecutors allege that beginning in 1999, Lay obtained $75 million in loans from three banks — Bank of America, Chase Bank of Texas and Compass Bank — and then reneged on an agreement with the lenders that he wouldn't use the money to carry or buy stock. Under federal rules adopted after the 1929 stock market crash, only 50 percent of a loan can be used to buy margin stock, generally defined as a stock listed on a national securities exchange and most mutual funds.

Lay used his Enron stock as collateral for the loans. Lenders issued margin calls as Enron's share price fell throughout 2001, which he said prompted him to tap the company for cash and repay the energy giant with Enron stock.

Lay signed documents agreeing to the 50-percent rule, but wasn't satisfied and "repeatedly time and again, over a period of years," drew down on the loans to buy stock "he promised he would not purchase from these lines of credit," prosecutor Robb Adkins said.

One of Lay's lawyers, Ken Carroll, said many of the documents may have been signed by the machine that had templates with the signatures of Lay and his wife, Linda, and that Lay's assistants would have used the machine "if somebody sends him a pile of bank documents and had to be signed in order to get a loan done."

When U.S. District Judge Sim Lake, who is hearing the case without a jury, asked Carroll if there's a distinction to be made if the signatures were made electronically, Carroll responded that while it could be a civil or regulatory matter, "It's not a crime."

Carroll also said Lay had no motive to violate rules, had collateral to back up the loans and even paid them off.

"If somebody told him he wasn't doing the right thing with these lines (of credit), he would have fixed them," Carroll said in response to a question from Lake, who expressed confusion with questioning by Lay's lawyers and inquired about the direction of the defense.

Carroll had declined to make an opening statement Thursday, reserving the opportunity to do so later.

Unlike the marathon fraud and conspiracy trial, this case is expected to be quick. While there are no court proceedings on Friday, prosecutors said they expected to wrap up Monday morning. Lay's lawyers said they planned to call three witnesses, including Lay, and could be finished Tuesday.

Conviction on each charge carries a maximum 30-year prison term. Lake has said he'll deliver his verdict in the case after jurors render verdicts in the fraud and conspiracy case.

In testimony Thursday, Sally Ballard, Lay's executive administrative assistant who paid bills for Lay and his wife and transferred funds among his many accounts, described Lay as an active manager of his accounts. She acknowledged using the automatic signature machine when Lay was out of town or unavailable, but said she never used it without his permission.

James Shelton, who from 1993 to 1998 was Lay's private banker at what is now Bank of America, said he advised Lay about the 50-percent rule and that Lay was surprised he couldn't use up to 75 percent of the loan for stock purchases.

A loan agreement initially was scrapped because of the restrictions, Shelton said.

Lay, however, ultimately obtained two lines of credit, one of them for stock purchases, and signed documents agreeing to the regulations, according to evidence. It was then that Carroll raised the question whether his signatures could be authenticated as original.

Under cross-examination, Shelton said he often mailed or had documents delivered to Lay and didn't personally see Lay sign them.

Another government witness, Robert Hanisee, who oversaw Lay's investments at a Los Angeles-based management firm where Lay was on the board of directors, said he considered Lay a sophisticated investor who made all the decisions on his investments.

The banking case originally was part of the July 2004 conspiracy indictment against Lay. But Lake, ruling in October 2004 on a request by Lay to have his entire case heard separately from Skilling, said only that the four counts would be tried separately.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: auto; blames; defense; enron; kenlay; kennethlay; machine; signature
YEAH!!!

The automated signature machine did it.

YEAH!!!
That's the ticket!

Enron founder Kenneth Lay leaves the federal courthouse in Houston, Thursday, May 18, 2006, at the end of the day. As 12 jurors began their first full day of deliberations in a fraud and conspiracy case against him, Lay was in court at a new trial in a separate case where he's accused of fraud stemming from his personal banking. (AP Photo/Ric Feld)

1 posted on 05/19/2006 9:46:55 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge

Anyone that would allow there signature to be done aside from their own hand deserves anything that happens as a result.

Pure Foolishness imho.


2 posted on 05/19/2006 9:48:32 AM PDT by BlueStateDepression
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To: NormsRevenge
Ahh, the wonders of the Autopen!


3 posted on 05/19/2006 10:52:13 AM PDT by detsaoT (Proudly not "dumb as a journalist.")
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To: detsaoT

Does this mean that all those Christmas cards i got from GW Bush don't count cause they had auto signatures too?


4 posted on 05/19/2006 10:53:41 AM PDT by bt-99 ("it's not ours to give")
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To: NormsRevenge

Well, this is a criminal proceeding, so the standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt". If all the signatures in question are completely uniform and identical to those produced by the device, and Lay can demonstrate that subordinates had access to the device, he might get off (and rightly so under our system of laws, which prefers the abhomination of exhonorating the guilty to the abhomination of punishing the innocent because doing so restrains the threat to liberty posed by state power).

On the other hand, in the civil suits, where "preponderance of the evidence" is the standard, this won't help, and such ill-gotten gains as he still has should be taken from him and distributed to the victims of Enron's collective fraud.


5 posted on 05/19/2006 11:17:16 AM PDT by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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To: BlueStateDepression
I'm a little confused by the whole Lay/Enron fiasco. Wasn't Lay hired because he was supposed to be the best and the brightest?
Now that he has been caught screwing the pooch; He claims that he didn't know sh*t from shinola.
If I were a stockholder I would be suing him for fraud.
6 posted on 05/19/2006 12:01:38 PM PDT by dearolddad
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To: dearolddad

Well i do not see anyone getting anymore back than they already have. But IMHO skilling and lay should both be going to jail for a very very long time.

Both knew what was going on and if they could have pulled it off they would have. Sheesh they did pull it off for a time. Now it is time to pay the piper.


7 posted on 05/19/2006 12:17:08 PM PDT by BlueStateDepression
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To: The_Reader_David

It's Thomas Jefferson's fault.


8 posted on 05/19/2006 12:57:56 PM PDT by battlegearboat
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To: NormsRevenge
The trial, expected to wrap up as early as Tuesday, got under way the day after jurors began deliberating...

When U.S. District Judge Sim Lake, who is hearing the case without a jury...

Have I gone stupid again???

9 posted on 05/19/2006 1:03:24 PM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: NormsRevenge

Thanks for posting this. I looked for your Enron trial post last night and didn't find it, so I was going to hunt one down and do it myself when I got through with my chores, because of the hilarious auto-pen defense.

This was simply too good to miss. Note that his former personal secretary was a witness for the prosecution - dontcha know he tried to blame it all on her at first? And then there's the banker and the financial manager who just accepted that it was his usual signature.

Yeah, yeah, at night when the Andersen people were up there shredding docs, the secretary would join them and run that signature machine, just for grins.

Lay was his giggling self after court yesterday - said it was a "grand day" and he was happy as a lark. Meanwhile, former employees and investors are eating cat food to get by.


10 posted on 05/19/2006 1:04:25 PM PDT by Rte66
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To: battlegearboat

And that 8-sided writing table, too.


11 posted on 05/19/2006 1:08:53 PM PDT by Rte66
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