Andersen Judge to Give Key Ruling If convicted, Andersen might
effectively be put out of business
BBC News Friday, 14 June, 2002, 08:28 GMT 09:28 UK
Listen to James Doyle's Interview
The judge in the Arthur Andersen obstruction of justice trial is on
Friday expected to give crucial guidance to the deadlocked jury, paving
the way for a verdict in the high-profile case.
Jurors had on Thursday sent a string of questions to the judge after
failing to reach a unanimous decision on the US accountancy firm's guilt
or innocence in eight days of deliberations.
Graphic: "Can one believe it was agent A, another believe it was agent
B, and another believe it was agent C?" -- Jury, in note to judge
The queries revolved around whether jurors could disagree over the
identity of any guilty individuals but still convict the accountancy
firm as a whole.
Andersen, which audited the accounts of collapsed energy giant Enron,
was put on trial after allegations that employees illegally destroyed
thousands of documents and computer records relating to their
scandal-hit client.
If convicted, Andersen would face fines but, more importantly, could
also be barred from auditing publicly traded companies - something that
would effectively put the US arm of one of the world's top five
accountants out of business.
Disagreement
In Thursday's note to trial judge Melinda Harmon, the jurors asked: "If
each of us believes that one Andersen agent acted knowingly and with
corrupt intent, is it for all of us to believe it was the same agent?
"Can one believe it was agent A, another believe it was agent B, and
another believe it was agent C?"
Judge Harmon, sitting in Houston, said she wanted to review more case
law before instructing the jury how to proceed.
Lawyers for the government and Andersen disagreed over the answer.
"As long as they agree on the bottom line, it isn't necessary for them
to agree on the same actor," said assistant attorney general Andrew
Weissman.
Andersen lawyers argued jurors needed to be unanimous on the guilt of
one person before they could convict the firm.
|