Enron

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    In today’s society, there are many legal risks that could arise within an organization. Employees could embezzle money from the company, company data may be exposed, or a hacker could enter into the secure company network. All of these situations have legal risks associated to them and the legal risks would cost the company thousands of dollars, which could make the company go out of business. In order to reduce these legal risks, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was implemented by Congress to help…

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    Kenneth Lay’s naïve presumption of Innocence Enron has been yet another example of how a group of unethical individuals with a taste of success can manipulate a position into unscrupulous grandeur for the benefit of a few with no oversight from above and the auditors who should have thrown up a red flag much sooner on the pay roll. It was the perfect storm for Kenneth Lay and his cohorts to squeeze every illicit cent they could from the Enron cash cow. Claiming his innocence to up until his…

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    Organizations posses a lot of information, including strategic plans, trade secrets, cost information, legal documents, and process improvements. Of course, preserving the confidentiality the organization’s intellectual property is the basic objective of information security. Protecting the privacy of their customers’ information is also equally important. That means a company and its management team is also responsible in protecting confidentiality and in implementing privacy controls. If they…

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    There’s no known cure for greed. That said, the fall of Enron was inevitable from its inception, for whichever way the head goes, the body follows and with Ken Lay as the head, one could expect nothing less. Can a rotten tree produce good fruit? My initial response to the movie, “The Smartest Guys in the Room”, was to discuss Lay and Skilling. But a more careful consideration of the matter, I had to admit that they really weren’t the problem, even though they were the deed doers. None of…

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    The Sarbanes-Oxley Act

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    Chapter 3: Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 3.1 Introduction The bankruptcy of the one of the best companies in the United States, Enron, resulted in big shock and decrease in the public confidence. After Enron, to improve the public confidence of the United States people and the rest of the world, and also to strengthen weaknesses in the accounting profession, there had to be something done. The introduction of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was then the key to address all these matters. Passing of…

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    Brian Cruver's Report

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    Brian Cruver was a firsthand witness to the disturbing, surreal, and hilarious moments of Enron's long dance with death. When he first entered Enron's office complex, "the Death Star," he was the epitome of the Enron employee: young, brash, sporting a shiny new MBA, and obscenely overpaid. From his first day, however, when he was told that some colleagues hadn't really wanted to see him hired, he found himself in the middle of a venal greed machine whose story unfolded with all the absurdity and…

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    2001that Section 906

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    were Enron scandals and WorldCom scandals. Enron scandal was a problem revealed in the year 2001that…

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    White-Collar Crimes

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    by people in the course of their work lives. In recent years, around a decade ago one of the biggest multinational companies, “Enron” served as a synonym to white-collar crime and a formal definition of deviant behavior. The companies executives practiced false accounting; falsifying profit while inflating the value of Enron, by 2001 the company filed bankruptcy. Enron found a loop hole in society to avoid disciplinary actions, know also as punitive measures. One of the most important factors…

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    Fall of Enron” was written by Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind and was published in 2003. It was all about the company of Enron and the downfall of it all and the scandals associated with it. Enron was an American energy, commodities, and services company which was located in Houston, Texas. At one point in time, it was the 7th largest company worth almost about $70 billion. There were many scandals involved in all of this, but before I get into detail about those, the book says how fast Enron…

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    Enron used the practice of posting profits on potential instead of actual gains and used Arthur Andersen accounting firm to cover any losses through the misuse of special purpose entities (SPEs). Arthur Andersen, was old and well-respected; no one believed it would be party to corporate fraud, making Enron seem squeaky-clean. Retrieved on 23 October 2017 from http://www.mademan.com/mm/enron-scandal-summary.html (Links to an external site.). This scheme was working until Enron decided to falsely…

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