HOUSTON (Reuters) - Several former Enron Corp. insiders who earned a combined $25 million in the year before the company crashed are asking for millions more in severance pay, a question a bankruptcy judge on Monday said he will answer later this month.
The list of executives includes the wife of former chief executive Jeff Skilling, Rebecca Carter, and former vice chairman Mark Frevert, who has asked for more than $6 million in severance pay. Carter, who was Enron's corporate secretary before marrying Skilling in March, wants another $875,000.
The executives are among 46 laid-off employees who opted not to participate in a settlement that would provide up to $13,500 in severance to each of the workers laid off as a result of Enron's Dec. 2 bankruptcy. The Houston-based energy merchant said in a court filing that it has paid $32 million in severance thus far.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Arthur Gonzalez said he would decide by the end of the month whether those who opted out of the severance deal are entitled to anything, and if so, how much.
If Gonzalez rules the insiders are entitled to more than they would have been paid under the deal, those who have agreed to it can back out and send the process back to the drawing board.
Frevert, who was made vice chairman after Skilling's shock departure on Aug. 14, 2001, was paid $17.3 million in the year before Enron crashed. He claims that he is owed $6.6 million in severance, a calculation that was based in part on his performance bonus, court records show.
The bankruptcy creditor's committee and Enron both said they needed more time to investigate Frevert's claim. Frevert's "employment and termination package was substantially increased shortly before the filing and whose duties remained unclear," until after his firing in December, the creditor's committee said in a court filing made on Friday.
Carter earned $477,500 in the year before the crash. John Sherriff, the former head of Enron Europe, earned $4.3 million in the same period and has asked for $1.6 million more.
Kenneth Dodson, a former executive in Enron's engineering division, has asked for $210,000 on top of the $319,000 he earned last year. Charles Garland earned $1.6 million last year as a managing director at Enron, and wants $892,000 in severance.
Certain employees are entitled to ask for "administrative expenses" to reimburse them for work they did that helped preserve the value of the company after it went into bankruptcy. The creditors committee argued that most of them did no work after the filing.
Complicating the executives' claims is the fact their employment contracts were nullified on the day Enron filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Dec. 2, 2001, Further, that was a Sunday, and most employees were told to stay home pending their formal layoff notices. Most received theirs by Wednesday of that week.
[ August 13, 2002, 09:25: Message edited by: Jay the Obscure ]
-------------------- Great is the guilt of an unnecessary war. ~ohn Adams
Once again the Bush Administration is worse than I had imagined, even though I thought I had already taken account of the fact that the Bush administration is invariably worse than I can imagine. ~Brad DeLong
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Registered: Mar 1999
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Cartman
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I am of a simpler disposition.
How about, instead of offering severance pay to these greedy self-centered [explicative deleted], we give financial compensation to the people who truly deserve it, like, I don't know, former Enron employees who have lost everything they owned? Take the money out of the pockets of the XO's -- those are lined with enough dough to make every victim a millionaire ten times over.
Registered: Nov 1999
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-------------------- Great is the guilt of an unnecessary war. ~ohn Adams
Once again the Bush Administration is worse than I had imagined, even though I thought I had already taken account of the fact that the Bush administration is invariably worse than I can imagine. ~Brad DeLong
You're just babbling incoherently. ~C. Montgomery Burns
Registered: Mar 1999
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Cartman
just made by the Presbyterian Church
Member # 256
posted
How do these people sleep at night? I feel terrible if I accidently cut someone off in traffic.
-------------------- "Nah. The 9th chevron is for changing the ringtone from "grindy-grindy chonk-chonk" to the theme tune to dallas." -Reverend42
Registered: Sep 2000
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posted
I don't like having to owe money to anyone let alone several hundred thousand or more dollars to people. Those Execs already have over a million a piece at least and they want more? Greedy bastards. They owe the employees money, not themselves.
-------------------- It takes 42 muscles in your face to frown. It only takes 4 muscles to extend your arm and smack someone upside the head.
Registered: Jan 2000
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Oops, sorry. I mean, THEY are rich! Let's hope that the bankruptcy judge has some common sense, to at least refuse their claim in its entirety.
I'd like nothing better than to take every last cent earned and/or taken by those Enron executives and distribute it to the rest of the employees. Unfortunately, that's not the way the country works... unless we can somehow legally prove that all those guys were accomplices to fraud, and fine the bastards for every last penny they've got.
Somehow, I get the feeling that that's not going to happen. This is one of the few times I would ever curse that little principle called "ex post facto."
-------------------- “Those people who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do.” — Isaac Asimov Star Trek Minutiae | Memory Alpha
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