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7 new of 36 responses total.
tod
response 30 of 36: Mark Unseen   Sep 17 22:51 UTC 2003

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klg
response 31 of 36: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 01:04 UTC 2003

Didn't somebody who reported to Fastow just get 5 yrs. - a reduction in 
return for his testimony???
tod
response 32 of 36: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 03:29 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

carson
response 33 of 36: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 10:56 UTC 2003

(I don't disagree with the last paragraph of resp:29.  I think, Joe, that
you've missed the purpose.  and, I'm still waiting to see what the point
of resp:12 was.)

gull
response 34 of 36: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 14:42 UTC 2003

I just thought it was related, admittedly vaguely.  It's hard to argue
that the widening gap between rich and poor has nothing to do with the
huge increases in CEO compensation, which basically amount to CEOs
plundering from the stockholders and general employees.
klg
response 35 of 36: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 16:10 UTC 2003

Mr tod,

You stand corrected:

First ex-Enron exec sentenced to prison
Published in Portsmouth Herald - Indexed on Sep 15, 2003 
HOUSTON - A former Enron Corp. treasurer pleaded guilty Wednesday to a 
federal conspiracy charge and became the first executive sentenced to 
prison in the scandal that toppled the energy company. U.S. District 
Judge Kenneth Hoyt sentenced Ben Glisan to five years in prison on a 
conspiracy charge, the maximum term allowed. Prosecutors said there was 
no deal to implicate higher-ranking executives such as Enron's former 
chairman Kenneth Lay and former chief executive Jeffrey Skilling. 
Glisan, 37, will be under supervised release for three years after 
completing his prison term.
tod
response 36 of 36: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 17:12 UTC 2003

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