Arthur Andersen was collateral damage. [Weissman] (IMO) 'gifted' Enron's facility to Rob Roy
Rob Roy | INFRASTRUCTURE MASONS
A key turning point for the Switch technology ecosystems occurred in 2002. Rob Roy acquired the former
Enron facility in Las Vegas and tapped into a unique technology treasure – an advanced fiber optic nexus
with a level of connectivity unlike anywhere else in the country. The network capacity, redundancy and
reliability of the facility enabled Switch to create the largest technology optimization sites in the world.
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enron
>https://imasons.org/team/rob-roy/
(2002) Although the jury convicted the entire firm, it focused the blame on a single person, Andersen's Chicago-based
lawyer Nancy Temple, who, according to the legalese, played the "corrupt persuader" who led others astray.
Knowing the Securities and Exchange Commission was starting to scrutinize Enron's books, Temple told
David Duncan, who supervised the account, to remove her name from a file memo that disagreed with
Enron's characterization of a $1 billion loss as "non-recurring." Said prosecutor [Andrew Weissman]: "This
is a perfect example of Arthur Andersen sanitizing the record so the SEC would have less information."
>http://content.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,263006,00.html
WASHINGTON (2005) — In a unanimous opinion, the Supreme Court (search) overturned the conviction of Arthur
Andersen for destroying Enron Corp.-related documents before the energy giant's collapse.
>https://www.webcitation.org/5tZ5BkNtb?url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,158160,00.html
amirite?