Prisons release non-violent offenders early all the time.
Do you wish for the tax payer to continue to pay for his room and board?
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/06/...=business&_r=0
What you expect anything less?
Prisons release non-violent offenders early all the time.
Do you wish for the tax payer to continue to pay for his room and board?
No, he should be shot.
I have a feeling drug offenders get treated worse.
I'd much rather pay for his room and board than the room and board of drug users/dealers who haven't ruined any other person's life. Skilling ruined thousands of lives and put California's economy in a hole it still hasn't recovered from.
Skilling has quite easily been responsible for more human suffering than all of the non violent drug offenders in California's prison system combined.
Whats worse? A guys that kills one person of a single family or another that ruins the futures of millions and their families. Of course WC is to choose his corporate overlord.
releasing him early and saving his room for "violent offenders" seems to me like hanging Von Bock while letting Hitler walk. Guy ruined more persons' lives than any "violent" offender does imho
Couple of things - looks like they screwed up on the federal sentencing guidelines, which, when corrected, might have resulted in a sentence reduction anyway. That was apparently taken into account. He also waived his right to further appeal, which means the feds get $42 million of his assets that were previously tied up. That will go to Enron victims. Amazing that he will be out by 2017, considering what he did to people's lives, but I get why the AUSAs did this.
if they decrease this clown sentence, they might as well decrease bernie madoff
I try not to be punitive for the sake of being punitive so the assets being freed to help the victims is great. As long as his life as an executive anywhere is over then great and I could care less.
Absolutely, he was supposed to be the one white collar guy that actually got held accountable and now even he is getting off the hook easy.
Madoff was an amateur compared to what's happened since then. And they never caught him either. If he hadn't turned himself in nothing would have happened to him.
The article doesn't say whether he has any $Ms left after yielding the $42M.
And why wasn't that $42M confiscated as part of his conviction, so he wouldn't have it to bargain with now?
The article doesn't say whether he's barred from the securities/financial industry/profession for life.
What exactly did this man do that the banks and mortgage company's didn't do and got a full pardon from Obama?
The dude already got ed in the ass time to move on go after Halliburton and and Monsanto.
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