Enron Ethics

Page 10 of 50 - About 500 Essays
  • Premium Essay

    Evil That Was Enron

    Section 1: Enron began back in 1985 when Houston Natural Gas entered into a merger with InterNorth. At the time of the merger, Kenneth Lay, who was the former CEO of Houston Natural Gas, was elected CEO, and later went on to become Chairman, which then made Jeffrey Skilling CEO and Andrew Fastow CFO of Enron. Once a sleeping giant of natural gas pipelines, Enron grew to become the seventh largest Fortune 500 company, and sixth largest in the world(Silverstein, 2013); but due to its shady business

    Words: 684 - Pages: 3

  • Premium Essay

    Enron

    ENRON PROJECT Gilbert Canda Strayer University LEG100 – Business Law I Professor: Gloria Sodaro Enron began as a domestic natural gas pipeline company which was established in Houston, Texas during 1930. After operating for thirty years, during the 1960s; Enron decided to expand its corporation into different segments in order to invest in the diverse levels of the energy market. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Enron established a major change in the company’s operations by making the

    Words: 705 - Pages: 3

  • Premium Essay

    The Rise and Fall of Arthur Andersen

    The Rise and Fall of Arthur Andersen LLP In October 2001, Enron was accused of overstating their earnings in the last few years in excess of $1 billion dollars (Doost, 2001). At the same time, Arthur Andersen, one of the most reputable auditing firms, was responsible for auditing Enron’s financial statements. The Security Exchange Commission (SEC) ordered Arthur Andersen to provide all relevant Enron documentation and auditing files. Going against Arthur Andersen’s impeccable reputation of honesty

    Words: 3364 - Pages: 14

  • Premium Essay

    Enron

    The Enron Scandal MSA 602 Dr. Pendarvis 12-4-2011 Abstract Enron's collapse is generally viewed as a morality tale - the natural result of managerial greed, a clueless board, and feckless gatekeepers. But none of these aspects of the story clearly distinguishes Enron from other major firms during the bubble era of the late 90s. This material identifies certain economic facts from the many moving parts that was Enron, and

    Words: 3025 - Pages: 13

  • Premium Essay

    Sarbranes-Oxley Impact on Corporate America

    Corporate Business Business scandals, Ponzi schemes and fraud are something we have all heard of. Over the years there have been many accounting scams from companies all over the world. We all remember one of the most publicized cases of fraud, Enron. For many years there has been fraudulent activity in many companies. Sarbanes-Oxley was established to prevent these types of scandals. Some believe it is not as valuable as once predicted, but is anything 100% preventable? Prior to Sarbanes-Oxley

    Words: 1439 - Pages: 6

  • Premium Essay

    Ldr531 Managerial Organization

    Enron Managerial Organization Ismael Cruz University of Phoenix LDR531 Instructor Jerry Kahn 02/27/2012 Enron Managerial Organization Organizational behavior theories help manage organizations with managerial issues, such as Enron, an energy company based in Houston, Texas, as in October 2001, revealed the largest accounting failure and internal financial corruption in U.S. history. Perhaps, the lack of transparency, and dishonest executives cause the company’s failure. The lack of specific

    Words: 1110 - Pages: 5

  • Premium Essay

    Business Failure: Enron

    Caracena June 10, 2013 How did Enron a multibillion-dollar energy company arrive at a state of non-existence?  Was it due to the lack of leadership and ethical managing or the whole organizational structure? Nevertheless, the collapse of Enron shed a whole new light on the industry of how one-minute they are the leader of the pack and the next just a remembrance of what was complete. Problems that plagued Enron were the lack of management possessing values, ethics, structure, leadership, and integrity

    Words: 907 - Pages: 4

  • Premium Essay

    Corporate Conviction

    Corporate Executive Criminal Conviction Ricaviannca Weissenberg ETH/321 July 13,2015 Christine Benway Corporate Executive Criminal Conviction Enron, an American energy company based in Texas, was named by Fortune as “America’s Most Innovative Company” for six years in a row, with revenues of approximately $111 billion. However in 2001, Sherron Watkins, Enron’s finance executive, discussed her concerns about the company’s financial and accounting

    Words: 555 - Pages: 3

  • Premium Essay

    Corporate Greed

    executives confessing to engage in price gouging, tax dodges, accounting shams, employee rip-offs, and other shady unacceptable acts are coming to light daily. Unethical and illegal practices are documented from the RJR Nabisco scandals in 1988 to today’s Enron, WorldCom, Merrill Lynch, Arthur Anderson, Xerox, and endless other corporations. The world realizes now that corporate greed is not about one-bad company, but large companies in general that have adopted unacceptable guidelines for corporate behavior

    Words: 2265 - Pages: 10

  • Premium Essay

    Enron

    What role did the CFO play in creating the problems that led to Enron’s financial problems? In order to prevent the losses from appearing on its financial statements, Enron used questionable accounting practices. To misrepresent its true financial condition, Andrew Fastow, the Enron’s CFO, takes his role involving unconsolidated partnerships and “special purpose entities”, which would later become known as the LJM partnership. Taking advantage from the SPEs’s main purpose, which provided the companies

    Words: 2137 - Pages: 9

Page   1 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 50