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To: Cactus Jack who wrote (187172)2/23/2010 12:09:46 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361936
 
Google gets go-ahead to buy, sell energy
by Candace Lombardi

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has authorized Google Energy to buy and sell electricity in bulk like any other utility.

The FERC, the agency with oversight of the U.S. power grid, signed an order (PDF) on Thursday that grants Google Energy market-based rate authorization. This paves the way for the search giant to not only better manage its own energy costs, but to possibly add electricity marketer to its repertoire of services.

The order specifically grants Google Energy--a subsidiary of Google--the rights "for the sale of energy, capacity, and ancillary services at market-based rates" while acknowledging that neither Google Energy nor its affiliates "own or control any generation or transmission" facilities.

Google has expressed a desire for access to larger amounts of renewable energy to help produce the electricity it consumes as part of its vast search-engine empire. Google has long maintained that its goal is to become a carbon-neutral company. As a side note, it's not unusual for large companies to be granted the authority to trade in the wholesale electricity market for the purpose of managing their own energy costs.

As recently as January--after Google Energy made its request to FERC--the company maintained that its expressed immediate wish was for more control over electricity pricing to more effectively gain access to affordable renewable energy.

"Right now, we can't buy affordable, utility-scale, renewable energy in our markets. We want to buy the highest quality, most affordable renewable energy wherever we can and use the green credits," Google representative Niki Fenwick told CNET News at the time.

But it seems that Google may actually enter the energy business. The search giant formed the Delaware-based subsidiary called Google Energy in December and when asked about it, hinted at a future in energy.

"We don't have any concrete plans. We want the ability to buy and sell electricity in case it becomes part of our portfolio," Fenwick told CNET News in January.

Google's escalating interest in energy
Prior to that obvious play, the company has been testing the energy industry waters through green energy technology investment, and research.

In 2007, Google pledged to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to help engineers and scientists figure out a way to generate 1 gigawatt of clean electricity and make it cheaper than coal.

In 2008, Google CEO Eric Schmidt presented an energy plan--complete with explicit math calculations--to back up an idea for how the U.S. could eventually get 100 percent of its electric power generation from renewable sources, cut emissions by half, create more jobs, and decrease overall energy costs.

Google has also invested hundred of millions in green energy technology research and start-up companies with projects in wind, solar, solar thermal, and geothermal. It has invested in projects to develop plug-in hybrid cars and has developed with its own "smart charging" software for plug-in electric vehicles.

The company has launched its own energy pilot projects including a 1.6-megawatt solar installation for its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters, thought to be the largest corporate-owned installation in the U.S.

Google has even developed a smart metering software platform for monitoring and regulating home electricity use from any Web-enabled phone. Google Power has been testing the software in the U.K., as well as unveiling a U.S. version for smart phones.

Its most notable electricity investment success story might be eSolar, a start-up that grew out of the Google Idealab and offers "turnkey" thermal solar energy plants using software-controlled heliostats. The company has already garnered over 500 megawatts worth of projects for Southern California Edison and several utilities in the southwestern U.S., with projects in the pipeline for China, Spain, the Middle East, and South Africa.

Google co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page were also early investors in the electric car maker Tesla.

And in the lead-up to the recent Copenhagen summit on climate change, Google hosted its own energy conference in November that included leading energy experts and the U.S. undersecretary of energy.

Google could not immediately be reached for comment.

news.cnet.com



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (187172)2/24/2010 11:09:48 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361936
 
Profits and Revenue Hit Record Highs at Jenner & Block
____________________________________________________________

By Andrew Longstreth
The American Lawyer
February 24, 2010

For the second straight year, Jenner & Block managed to do more with less. Between 2007 and 2008, Jenner made modest gains in profits and revenue with fewer lawyers. Last year, it did even better. While headcount at the Chicago-based firm dropped 1.5 percent, gross revenue increased nearly 6 percent to $367 million and profits per partner skyrocketed 33 percent to $1.1 million, both record highs for the firm. Jenner also saw an increase of nearly 8 percent in revenue per lawyer at $855,000.

The increases, says Susan Levy, Jenner's managing partner, are attributable to strong countercyclical practices and a reduction in expenses. As part of its cost-cutting efforts, the firm eliminated 34 support staff positions in its Chicago and Washington, D.C., offices last March, according to The National Law Journal, a sibling publication.

"We had a strong year," says Levy, noting that the firm landed several marquee assignments resulting from the recession. The engagements included: work on the General Motors bankruptcy; Jenner chairman Anton Valukas' appointment as examiner in the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers; representing plaintiffs in auction rate securities cases; and representing the trustee in the Sentinel Management Group bankruptcy.

Jenner's partner profits jumped, in part, because the firm had fewer equity partners last year. The firm's equity partner ranks shrank by 17 percent to 128. Some departing partners left to join the Obama Administration, including appellate and Supreme Court practice co-chair Donald Verrilli, who became associate deputy attorney general. The firm periodically reviews partners, Levy says. There were no lawyer layoffs in 2009, she says, and no active de-equitization program.(According to the NLJ report cited above, the firm asked 10 partners to leave in October 2008.)

Despite the drop-off in headcount, the firm expanded its reach in 2009, opening an office in Los Angeles with two attorneys from Kirkland & Ellis. Looking ahead, Levy says the firm is in growth mode and will be in the lateral hiring market in 2010.
_________________

This report is part of The Am Law Daily's ongoing Web coverage of 2009 financial results of The Am Law 100/200. Results are preliminary. Final rankings and full results for The Am Law 100 will be published in The American Lawyer's May 2010 issue and on AmericanLawyer.com. The Am Law Second Hundred will be published in the June issue.



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (187172)2/28/2010 7:29:22 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361936
 
Former Enron CEO wants high court to overturn his conviction on 'honest services' law

chicagotribune.com

By JUAN A. LOZANO
Associated Press Writer
12:12 PM CST, February 28, 2010

HOUSTON (AP) — It's a 28-word word law that federal prosecutors have used for more than two decades to send high-profile public officials and corporate executives, including former Enron Corp. CEO Jeff Skilling, to prison.

But the law's future could be in doubt as Skilling's appeal of his criminal convictions — in which he challenges the statute's constitutional validity — is set to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday.

Skilling's challenge of the law is one of three the high court is hearing in its current term, and legal experts say it has the best chance of convincing the justices to strike down the statute. Unclear, though, is whether a successful challenge would overturn some of Skilling's convictions or all of them, possibly resulting in a new trial.

If successful, Skilling's challenge could also affect convictions in other cases involving prominent defendants.

Skilling was convicted in 2006 on 19 counts of conspiracy, securities fraud, insider trading and lying to auditors for his role in the downfall of the once-mighty Houston-based energy giant. The company collapsed into bankruptcy in 2001 under the weight of years of illicit business deals and accounting tricks. Skilling is serving a sentence of more than 24 years at a minimum security prison outside Denver.

The law at issue is a short addendum to the federal mail and wire fraud statute that makes it illegal for officials, executives and others to scheme to deprive those they serve and possibly others of "the intangible right to honest services."

Skilling's lawyers say the law is unconstitutionally vague. Daniel Petrocelli, Skilling's main attorney, said in his Supreme Court brief that prosecutors have given it "whatever meaning is necessary to prosecute whatever defendant happens to be in the government's sights" and that the law "facilitates opportunistic and arbitrary prosecutions."

But federal prosecutors argued that the law is appropriate for cases involving bribes, kickbacks or conflicts of interest. They argued that Skilling feigned loyalty to Enron and its shareholders and intended to deceive them, hiding the sale of large chunks of company stock.

By participating in a scheme to disguise Enron's true financial condition, Skilling "deprived shareholders of the information they needed to make informed decisions and thereby defrauded them of his honest services," prosecutors wrote.

Skilling, 56, was the highest-ranking executive to be punished for Enron's downfall. Company founder Kenneth Lay's similar convictions were vacated after he died of heart disease less than two months after trial.

Enron's collapse put more than 5,000 people out of work, wiped out more than $2 billion in employee pensions and rendered worthless $60 billion in Enron stock. Its aftershocks were felt across the city and the energy industry.

In December, the court heard arguments in the two other cases challenging the honest services law: former newspaper mogul Conrad Black, convicted of depriving the Hollinger International media empire of his faithful services as a corporate officer, and former Alaska legislator Bruce Weyhrauch, indicted for allegedly soliciting future work from an oilfield operations business in exchange for taking steps on legislation that would benefit the company.

Skilling's case is more of a "frontal attack" on the law and would provide the high court with an avenue to void the statute, said Ellen Podgor, a law professor at Stetson University College of Law in Gulfport, Fla.

In the December hearing, several justices seemed to agree the law is vague and has been used to make a crime out of mistakes and minor transgressions.

"I hope for the sake of my students the court invalidates the statute," said Kelly Strader, a law professor at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles. "My students always end up tearing their hair out because they don't know what it means."

Jack Sylvia, a Boston-based attorney and expert on securities and financial fraud litigation, said the skepticism expressed by justices in December suggests prosecutors are in trouble.

"Those in criminal defense believe it's time the Supreme Court takes a look at it," he said.

While honest services is only mentioned in the conspiracy count, Petrocelli argues that all of Skilling's convictions have been tainted by the argument and thus should be overturned.

Prosecutors contend the jurors would have found Skilling guilty on the conspiracy count even without the honest services argument because they convicted him on the securities fraud counts based on many of the same claims.

Tom Curran, a New York-based defense attorney and former state prosecutor who dealt with securities fraud cases, said he believes the justices might strike down the honest services statute but leave some of Skilling's convictions intact. Sylvia and Podgor hesitate to predict what the high court will do.

Before Skilling's case made it to the Supreme Court, an appeals court upheld his convictions but ordered his prison term be reduced because a sentencing guideline was misapplied.

Petrocelli also is arguing that Skilling didn't get a fair trial because the massive publicity over the company's collapse tainted the jury pool, and that any Houston jury would have members who were affected, either directly or indirectly, by Enron's demise.

Legal experts say Skilling faces an uphill battle in winning a new trial on these claims.

"It's uphill if you are thinking of Everest as your hill," Curran said.

Rod Jordan, 71, a former Enron project manager and chairman of the Severed Enron Employee Coalition, said he thinks Skilling's convictions should stand.

"It would be another slap in the face ... to Enron employees" if the convictions were overturned, said Jordan, who now lives near Fort Worth.

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved.



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (187172)3/2/2010 1:42:36 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 361936
 
Behind the Rise and Fall of a Class-Action King

dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com

March 1, 2010

By Peter J. Henning

William S. Lerach is among the most famous lawyers of the late 20th century, reviled by scores of corporate executives and their attorneys while celebrated by the trial bar and individual investors. Mr. Lerach earned millions of dollars in fees from class-action cases, making more than most lawyers in traditional law firms could ever dream about.

It all came to an end in February 2008, however, when Mr. Lerach was sentenced to two years in prison for his role in making undisclosed payments to representative plaintiffs in his class-action cases and an expert witness who testified for his side.

Mr. Lerach causes nothing if not strong reactions from those who crossed his path. In their new book, “Circle of Greed: The Spectacular Rise and Fall of the Lawyer Who Brought Corporate America to Its Knees,” Patrick Dillon and Carl M. Cannon offer a comprehensive look at Mr. Lerach’s legal career. For those interested in understanding Mr. Lerach’s fall, “Circle of Greed” offers repeated examples of an even more dangerous sin than greed that can afflict a lawyer: hubris.

Early in his career as a class-action plaintiff’s lawyer, Mr. Lerach explained the key to his work: “I have the greatest law practice in the world. I have no clients.” Free to do as he pleased in his cases because he effectively answered to no one, Mr. Lerach allowed his aggressiveness and sharp tongue to get the better of him on multiple occasions.

Clients are an important constraint on lawyers, the restrictor plate on their desire to push as hard as possible for every little victory in a case. They are the human face of a case, forcing attorneys to realize that the reason for legal representation is not simply to feed a lawyer’s ego but to achieve a beneficial outcome for the client. Mr. Lerach operated in the rarified world of class actions, in which he had literally thousands of clients, which meant there was not one present to rein in his baser instincts.

The myth that Mr. Lerach built to justify his class-action work that was aimed at Corporate America was the financial loss suffered by his father, Richard, in the stock market crash of October 1929, so securities class actions were a means of vindicating all those who lost hope in the Depression. As Mr. Dillon and Mr. Cannon point out, while Mr. Lerach’s father lost his family’s inheritance in the stock market collapse, “[t]here is scant evidence that this was the seminal event in Richard Lerach’s life.”

After graduating from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, Mr. Lerach went to work for one of Pittsburgh’s leading law firms. While serving as a junior lawyer on litigation in San Diego in 1974, Mr. Lerach met Melvyn Weiss, a pioneer of the securities fraud class action. Mr. Lerach joined Milberg Weiss in 1976, and the firm grew to become a leader in class actions, with Mr. Weiss heading up the New York office and Mr. Lerach its San Diego outpost.

Mr. Dillon and Mr. Cannon trace how at about the same time that the firm, which took on the name Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach, began paying secret fees to people who agreed to serve as the representative plaintiff in their cases. In those days, securities class actions were a race to the courthouse, with the first to file often controlling the litigation. Called “pets,” these plaintiffs were lapdogs willing to serve Milberg Weiss while taking a cut of any settlement in the case, while telling the court that they had received nothing more than what any other class member got from the case.

When your opponent is your enemy, and you can say whatever you want because there is no client there to restrain your baser instincts, then at some point you will step over the line and perhaps eventually pay a price. For Mr. Lerach and Milberg Weiss, that price came in the form of Professor (and later Dean) Daniel Fischel of the University of Chicago Law School. In a class-action trial involving Nucorp Energy in 1988, Mr. Lerach for the first time faced Mr. Fischel and took a rather dim view of him, saying to a colleague that “someday I’m going to wipe that grin right off” Mr. Fischel’s face (although he used a vulgarity to refer to Mr. Fischel).

Crossing paths with the professor in another case two years later when he introduced himself, Mr. Lerach said, “I know who you are. And I will destroy you.” In the Lincoln Savings and Loan case in 1990, widely viewed as the symbol of the savings and loan crisis that took hold in 1990, Mr. Lerach was true to his word when Mr. Fischel’s consulting firm, Lexecon, was sued as part of the class action. At a Christmas party while pursuing the case, Mr. Lerach loudly proclaimed that he wanted to bury Mr. Fischel “under the courthouse steps.”

As part of the eventual disposition of the case, Lexecon returned the fees it earned from Lincoln Savings and Loan. But the Milberg Weiss lawyers made a crucial mistake: they did not have each side execute a release of all claims arising from the litigation. That small error allowed Lexecon and Mr. Fischel to sue Milberg Weiss and Mr. Lerach for trying to interfere with his business by improperly suing it to ruin his reputation as an expert witness. When Lexecon v. Milberg Weiss eventually came to trial in Chicago in 1999, Mr. Lerach paid the price for his unrestrained comments about Mr. FIschel.

Mr. Dillon and Mr. Cannon paint a particularly vivid portrait of Mr. Lerach’s cross-examination by Lexecon’s counsel as he tried to fend off the implications of his earlier statements about Mr. Fischel and the screed he wrote after the Nucorp Energy trial. The cross-examination eviscerated Mr. Lerach, making him look more like a dissembler than a high-powered attorney. Interlaced with the trial testimony is Mr. Lerach’s reactions during and afterward, such as when he forlornly called his then-wife on the telephone and said, “Star, we are getting killed.” One almost feels sorry for him at that moment, although the authors make it clear that this was something he brought on himself. The firm paid $50 million to settle the case after the jury returned its verdict in favor of Lexecon.

It was not just a legal academic who reacted strongly to Mr. Lerach’s tactics — much of Silicon Valley had felt his wrath whenever their volatile stocks took one of their periodic nosedives. His name even became a verb: a company was “Lerached” when Milberg Weiss filed its inevitable lawsuit after a report of missed estimates caused the stock price to drop.

When Republicans took control of Congress in 1994, they immediately went after the trial lawyers, citing Mr. Lerach as an example of legal excesses. Congress passed the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, and among its provisions was the elimination of the “race to the courthouse” by requiring the judge to select among the potential plaintiffs who lost the most money from an alleged fraud in picking the class representative. A “pet” could no longer be the nominal representative of the class.

In a twist, however, the new law actually helped Mr. Lerach because he immediately saw that if he could recruit institutional investors he could then win the coveted position as counsel to the class.

Even as Milberg Weiss continued to thrive under the new law, federal prosecutors in Los Angeles in late 1999 began the painstaking task of putting together a criminal case against the firm and four of its name partners for making secret payments to plaintiffs and an expert witness. The criminal case began almost by accident when one of the “pet” plaintiffs, trying to avoid a substantial prison term, spilled what he knew about Milberg Weiss. Over the next nine years, prosecutors painstakingly pulled together a case that resulted in the conviction of four of the named partners in Milberg Weiss and the firm itself.

Despite the criminal investigation, with the demise of Enron and its accounting firm, Arthur Andersen, in early 2002, Mr. Lerach had a case in which portraying corporate greed and malfeasance was almost as easy as showing devotion to mom and apple pie. Perhaps more importantly, Mr. Lerach was overseen by a sophisticated plaintiff, the Regents of the University of California, and “Circle of Greed” shows that the lawyers from Milberg Weiss did their jobs very well. Odd as it may seem, the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act worked to make Milberg Weiss a better counsel for a class action.

Despite the success in Enron, any hope Mr. Lerach had of fighting the criminal case ended when his former partner, David Bershad, agreed to cooperate in the investigation. He had been in charge of the secret payments and kept detailed records, so his testimony would undermine Mr. Lerach’s defense that only untrustworthy convicted felons comprised the prosecution’s case against him.

The final chapters of “Circle of Greed” make for compelling reading, even though readers know how things turn out. As the Enron class action moved to completion, Mr. Lerach had to remove his name from the firm he formed after leaving Milberg Weiss a few years earlier when he agreed to plead guilty.

But was his crime all that significant? In one sense, the answer is “No” because it is hard to identify any real victims from making the secret payments. But the answer is “Yes” because Mr. Lerach showed an utter disregard for the legal system, and any defense of the Milberg Weiss payments devolves into an argument that “the end justifies the means.”

Mr. Dillon and Mr. Cannon have written the type of book that, like “Den of Thieves” and “Smartest Guys in the Room,” helps to explain an era. One can make too much and too little of Mr. Lerach’s impact on the legal profession. He was a lightning rod, to be sure, but unlike generals who are lauded for “winning” a battle fought by their troops, he rolled up his sleeves and worked as hard as any associate or partner at his firm. “Circle of Greed” sketches his good and bad sides in equal measure, being neither a fawning portrait nor a hatchet job.

Next Monday, Mr. Lerach is scheduled to be released from federal custody. As a result of his guilty plea, Mr. Lerach lost his license to practice law, which will keep him out of the courtroom. Could he get it back one day? America loves a second act, so perhaps in a few years the paperback edition will need a new epilogue because I would not rule out a return to the law for someone like Mr. Lerach.
_____________

*Peter J. Henning, writing for DealBook’s White Collar Watch, is a commentator on white-collar crime and litigation. A former lawyer at the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement division and then a prosecutor at the Justice Department, he is a professor at the Wayne State University Law School. He is currently working on a book, “The Prosecution and Defense of Publc Corruption: The Law & Legal Strategies,” to be published by Oxford University Press.