Former
Enron Broadband Chief
Executive Officer Kenneth
Rice
Sentenced on Securities
Fraud Charge
WASHINGTON, DC (June
18,2007) – Kenneth Rice, a
former chief executive
officer of Enron Broadband
Services (EBS), was
sentenced to 27 months in
prison and ordered to
forfeit approximately $15
million to be used to
compensate victims of the
Enron fraud, Assistant
Attorney General Alice S.
Fisher of the Criminal
Division announced today.
Rice was sentenced today
at a hearing before Judge
Vanessa Gilmore at U.S.
District Court in Houston.
Rice pleaded guilty on July
20, 2004 to the securities
fraud charge, and cooperated
with the government’s
investigation into the
collapse of Enron.
Rice admitted that while
he was at EBS, a unit of the
now-defunct Enron Corp., he
and others made a series of
false statements about the
products, services and
business performance of EBS
in order to mislead
investors and others about
the success of the company
and to inflate artificially
the price of Enron stock.
Rice admitted that while
serving as EBS’s CEO, he
conspired with others to
make false statements about
the company’s development of
various software
capabilities and its
fiber-optic network. Rice
admitted that he falsely
portrayed EBS as a
commercial and business
success, and falsely claimed
that network control
software developed by EBS
was “up and running” – when
in fact the software had not
progressed beyond the
internal development stage.
These and other
misrepresentations,
including a failure to
disclose to the investing
public that the company
stood to sustain operating
losses in 2001, contributed
to a sharp rise in Enron’s
stock price.
Enron filed for
bankruptcy protection on
Dec. 2, 2001, and its stock
became virtually worthless.
Kevin Hannon, the former
chief operating officer of
EBS, was sentenced by Judge
Gilmore earlier this month
to two years in prison, and
fined $125,000. Hannon
pleaded guilty in August
2004 to conspiracy to commit
securities fraud and wire
fraud.
The Rice and Hannon
convictions were part of an
investigation conducted by
the Enron Task Force, a team
of federal investigators
supervised by the Justice
Department’s Criminal
Division and agents from the
FBI and the IRS Criminal
Division, with assistance
from the Securities and
Exchange Commission. After
the October 2006 sentencing
of former Enron Chief
Executive Officer Jeffrey
Skilling to 24 years in
prison, all outstanding
Enron Task Force matters
were assigned to the
Criminal Division’s Fraud
Section.
To date, criminal charges
have been brought against 36
defendants, including 25
former Enron employees.
Eighteen of those defendants
have pleaded guilty or been
found guilty after trial,
including Skilling. Former
Chairman and CEO Kenneth
Lay’s convictions in two
cases were dismissed by
abatement following his
death. The Task Force has
seized more than $100
million in ill-gotten
proceeds of crime.