Enrons Fall

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    Nextcard, Inc.

    when will the fraudulent activity stop. The answer is never because as long we have businesses someone go to the dark side and do dishonest things. Since the SOX and creation of PCAOB and AICPA the activity has been a small amount and not as large as Enron and World Com. Also the number of auditors getting in trouble are in small amounts of activities. Even though they might think they were successful in manipulating the work papers, they will always get caught or do the right thing turn themselves in

    Words: 1786 - Pages: 8

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    Effect of Unethical Behavior Article Analysis

    like the Enron Scandal. Enron was an energy trading and communications company based in Houston, Texas. Enron employed 21,000 people by June 2001. Enron was accused of misrepresenting the earning reports. Enron lied about its profits as well as rumors of a number of shady dealings. Enron was also accused of concealing debts so that these debts did not show up on the company's accounts records. There were also rumors of embezzlement of funds from the executives. Shares from Enron dropped from

    Words: 676 - Pages: 3

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    Enron: What Ever Happened to Going Down with the Ship?

    down with the ship. And Enron looks to me like the captain first gave himself and his friends a bonus, then lowered himself and the top folks down the lifeboat and then hollered up and said, 'By the way, everything is going to be just fine.'" But there is, in the Titanic cast of characters, a good analog for the Enron leadership. While the captain, the first officer, and the Titanic's designer did go down with the ship, there was one honcho whose behavior was more like the Enron executives': J. Bruce

    Words: 742 - Pages: 3

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    Scandal

    Case Study: Enron Corporation and Andersen LLP Enron was one of the biggest companies, in the industry of electricity, natural gas, and paper manufacturing. The Company's revenues in 2000 were 111 billion, which made Fortune magazine Comrade crowned her the most innovative in the United States for six consecutive years. At the end of 2001, the company declared bankruptcy with approximately -65.5 billion dollar in debt and the company’s share price fell within a few weeks from a high of nearly ninety

    Words: 2037 - Pages: 9

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    Enron

    Enron was almost universally considered one of the country's most innovative companies -- a new-economy maverick that forsook musty, old industries with their cumbersome hard assets in favor of the freewheeling world of e-commerce. The company continued to build power plants and operate gas lines, but it became better known for its unique trading businesses. Besides buying and selling gas and electricity futures, it created whole new markets for such oddball "commodities" as broadcast time for advertisers

    Words: 432 - Pages: 2

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    Enron

    ENRON COMPANY Foundation, History and Decline 1. Enron company 1.1 What is Enron 1.2 History and Organization 1.3 Main business units 1.4 Main characters 2. Enron scandal 2.1 The decline 2.2 Causes 2.3 Consequences of the scandal 2.4 Punishment 2.5 Enron's insurances 3. Enron reconstitution 3.1 Cleaning up after the fall 3.2 Restructuring Enron 3.3 The future (and present) of Enron 3.4 Preventive measures 1.1 What is Enron : Enron was one of the ten largest American

    Words: 5885 - Pages: 24

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    Business

    Looking from different perspectives on how businesses can rise and fall from unethical accounting practices. When you look over businesses such as Enron and Washington Mutual bank you can see the hard lessons of what they had to endure and the end result of the chaos. Take a look for example Washington Mutual they were the one of the greatest banks in America their portfolio was one of the largest. But after acquiring so many mortgage loans it was way too much for the company to handle. Washington

    Words: 330 - Pages: 2

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    Eth 501 Case 5

    and formed Enron. The former president of Inter North, Sam Segnar became the president of the newly formed Enron. It was then that it appeared that the corporate culture had changed. Unlike Segnar's predecessor, Willis Straus who was loved by all within his company and achieved an open culture where employees were treated fairly Segnar was often disliked and held in disdain. It appeared that Segnar was an elitist who separated the working class from management so the newly formed Enron began its

    Words: 1401 - Pages: 6

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    Tangle Webs

    both Enron and WorldCom, the causes of fraud surrounded the manipulation and misleading financial reports created by accountants. Enron was accused of lying about its profits and committing a range of inappropriate deals, including hiding the company’s debt so it would not show in the financial statements to the public. Enron was not the only company that made history for fraudulent events. WorldCom, the largest handler of long distance internet data filed for bankruptcy a year after Enron. Although

    Words: 1474 - Pages: 6

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    Corporate Governance

    financial scandals that have occurred in both the United States and abroad in the past decade. For many organizations, the way to rebuild shareholder confidence was to implement a fundamental framework of procedures that would ensure scandals like Enron, WorldCom and Tyco would not occur in the future. It is precisely these scandals that made corporate governance the focus of organizations worldwide. Corporate governance is defined as the principles and processes that provide the strategies on how

    Words: 1286 - Pages: 6

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