Former Enron executive settles SEC fraud charges

WASHINGTON , D.C. - A former assistant treasurer of Enron Corp. has agreed to pay $300,000 to settle civil fraud charges related to the company's collapse, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said.

Timothy DeSpain, who served as assistant treasurer at the energy conglomerate between January 1999 and May 2002, pleaded guilty last October to related federal criminal conspiracy charges.

According to the SEC complaint and DeSpain's agreement with federal prosecutors, he admitted to conspiring with other Enron executives, including former treasurers Ben Glisan and Jeff McMahon, to manipulate the company's credit rating.

During the period DeSpain served as assistant treasurer, Enron failed to disclose $5 billion in financial obligations, the SEC statement said.

Glisan was sentenced to five years in prison last September for conspiracy related to crimes at Enron.

In addition to the fine against DeSpain, which will be waived based on his inability to pay, he will be permanently barred from acting as an officer or director of a public company, the SEC said.

DeSpain's attorney did not immediately return a call seeking comment on the settlement.

Earlier, the SEC said another former Enron executive, Raymond Bowen, had agreed to pay $500,000 to settle charges of earnings manipulation.

Former Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay, former Chief Executive Jeffrey Skilling and former Chief Accounting Officer Richard Causey face dozens of charges of fraud and conspiracy.

Related News

Seaspan Reliant

Electricity and water do mix: How electric ships are clearing the air on the B.C. coast

TORONTO - The river is running strong and currents are swirling as the 150-metre-long Seaspan Reliant slides gently into place against its steel loading ramp on the shores of B.C.'s silty Fraser River.

The crew hustles to tie up the ship, and then begins offloading dozens of transport trucks that have been brought over from Vancouver Island.

While it looks like many vessels working the B.C. coast, below decks, the ship is very different. The Reliant is a hybrid, partly powered by electricity, the seagoing equivalent of a Toyota Prius.

Down below decks, Sean Puchalski walks past a whirring internal…

READ MORE
turkey solar panel

Covid-19 puts brake on Turkey’s solar sector

READ MORE

electricity prices

Electricity Prices Surge to Record as Europe Struggles to Keep Lights on

READ MORE

wind power in Nebraska

Why power companies should be investing in carbon-free electricity

READ MORE

downed power lines

Can the Electricity Industry Seize Its Resilience Moment?

READ MORE