News

With Sydney Sweeney’s American Eagle ad controversy still making waves, the now-defunct energy corporation Enron’s parody ...
An energy and renewables company called Enron shared on social media that it was ending its collaboration with Sydney Sweeney ...
Houston-based law firm Andrews Kurth has agreed to pay Enron's bankruptcy estate $18.5 million to settle potential malpractice claims stemming from legal advice on various transactions. Enron's ...
Enron was in the California energy market for 6 months, and had such a minuscule share of that market, that it could not have caused the crisis. The reason for the crisis was that the federal EPA ...
Some Enron employees are still adrift, four years later. "Basically, I'm starting all over," Peters said. After working 10 years at Enron, Peters says she's barely paying the bills, even with two ...
Koenig is one of 16 former Enron executives who have pleaded guilty. The defense has contended that many of those pleas were made under pressure by prosecutors and, as a result, testimony by ...
Enron shares started slipping from a high of $90 in August 2000, later invoking those triggers. It fell to less than a dollar by the time Enron descended into bankruptcy Dec. 2.
An Enron spokesperson confirmed CEO Connor Gaydos’ affiliation with "Birds Aren’t Real," and that the website is a parody, but stressed the company is not a “joke” and is serious about ...
Re "The Company Presidency," Opinion, Feb. 10: Kevin Phillips' attempt to tie President Bush to the Enron debacle would be funny (and in some ways it is funny) were it not so dishonest.
Enron was finally exposed by shortsellers and by two journalists at Fortune - but only after the magazine that had, for years, celebrated the corporation as one of the finest in America.
And Enron was pretty far down—down there among the cunning weasels of ratiocination. What Enron was doing, what caused investors to embrace it in a rapture of baffled awe, was hiding debt.