14 October 2004

Enron Defendant Says Barge Deal Was a Sham

more fun and games in Nigeria 

Thu Oct 14, 2004 02:17 PM ET

HOUSTON (Reuters) - A former Enron Corp. executive told a jury on Thursday in the first Enron criminal trial that he knew the disgraced energy company had made a bogus deal with Merrill Lynch in order to post fraudulent profits. But the former finance executive, Daniel Boyle, said he had no part in the secret 1999 deal that guaranteed Enron would buy back three electricity-generating barges floating off the Nigeria coast it sold to Merrill.
 
The trial of Boyle, one other former Enron executive and four former Merrill bankers centers on the prosecution's charge that the sale of the barges was a sham that allowed Enron to book $12 million in illicit profits and fill an earnings gap before the end of 1999.
 
Boyle said under cross-examination by prosecutors that he found out about Enron's promise to buy back the barges only shortly before the energy company repurchased them in June 2000 through a partnership run by former Enron Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow.
 
Boyle, asked by prosecutor Matt Friedrich whether he knew Enron had illegally booked a profit from the sale because of the buyback, answered, "Yes I do ... it was wrong."
 
By guaranteeing to repurchase the barges, Enron should have booked the deal as a loan under accounting rules.
 
Boyle testified that his involvement in the deal was limited to setting up seller financing of $21 million through Enron for Merrill Lynch to complete the deal.
 
Merrill Lynch put up $7 million of its money for the barges.
 
Defense lawyers have sought to portray the deal as a legitimate sale, arguing that Merrill Lynch assumed real risk when it agreed to buy the barges.
 
In addition to Boyle, former Enron accountant Sheila Kahanek and former Merrill bankers Daniel Bayly, Robert Furst, William Fuhs and James Brown are on trial.
 
The six face charges of conspiracy and fraud in the case, and Brown and Boyle are also charged with lying to cover up the transaction.

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