The admission on Tuesday by a senior auditor at Arthur Andersen that he broke the law destroying documents in Enron's collapse gives U.S. prosecutors a powerful tool in their broadening financial investigation, legal experts say. David B. Duncan could provide the government details about Enron's controversial deals and insights into what the Justice Department says was Andersen's widespread shredding of papers and e-mails.
April 10, 2002 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
Presented by BigVoodoo
This conference aims to help insurers and litigators better manage complex claims and litigation.
Recognizing innovation in the legal technology sector for working on precedent-setting, game-changing projects and initiatives.
Legalweek New York explores Business and Regulatory Trends, Technology and Talent drivers impacting law firms.
Sellars, Marion, Bachi & Contri, P.A., a well-established civil defense law firm with over 30 years of experience in West Palm Beach, Fl...
Mineola defense firm seeks attorneys with 3-5 years of actual insurance defense experience to handle complex general liability matters. Sala...
Pacific Law Partners, LLP Seeking Litigation Associate Attorney with 3+ years relevant experience Recognized for decades as specialists i...