Houston lawyer Tom Kirkendall has been at the forefront of the fight against criminalizing agency costs. He blogged extensively on the Skilling case. He's now posted a thoughtful and lengthy analysis of the Supreme Court decision, which then proceeds to discuss the serious problems with the government's case, concluding that:
The truth about Enron is that no massive conspiracy existed. In reality, Skilling and the late Ken Lay were not intending to mislead anyone and that the company was simply a highly-leveraged, trust-based business with a relatively low credit rating and a booming trading operation. Although there is nothing inherently wrong with such a business model, it turned out it to be the wrong one to survive amidst choppy post-bubble, post-9/11 conditions when the markets were spooked by revelations of the embezzlement of millions of dollars by Fastow and a few of his minions.
That Jeff Skilling did not predict that Enron would fail under those conditions does not make him a criminal. Unlike his main accusers Fastow and Ben Glisan, Skilling didn't embezzle a dime from Enron. Did he tirelessly advocate this highly-leveraged but innovative company that was dealing with difficult market conditions during 2001? You bet. But since when is it a crime for a CEO to be optimistic -- even overly-optimistic -- about his company?
Go read the whole thing.