English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Seems damn convenient to me. He could have died any time in the last few years and it would seem less suspicious than dying right after sentencing and right before going to prison for good. I just know if I was his age, had his kind of money and connections, I would do anything to avoid dying in prison. What did he have left to lose?

2006-07-11 07:22:59 · 3 answers · asked by Derek D 2 in Politics & Government Other - Politics & Government

3 answers

I'm not quite sure he died of a heart attack at all, but stress makes it possible.

Of course he's happy to avoid prison!
I just don't understand why the Federal Government didn't seize his assets as well as the other execs involved, so all of those people that lost everything could have at least gotten something in a civil suit.

I do know that Enron contributed a lot of money to the Bush campaign in 2000. So I believe that's why the govt looked the other way.

And why was his home in Aspen for sale the same day he died?
He had no right to live in freedom, while all of those ex-employees suffered and lost everything.

I got tired of hearing about him"finding GOD" the day he died. If he'd found GOD, he would have personally made it right with all of those that he screwed.
He absolutely deserves whatever he gets now !

2006-07-11 08:02:55 · answer #1 · answered by Big Bear 7 · 0 2

Considering that most everyone wants to live and considering that his type of prison is white collar with golf courses and considering that he knew others made it ok - he would not want to die now but instead go to prison.
People on death row prefer prison to death.

2006-07-11 14:58:13 · answer #2 · answered by Lou 6 · 0 0

Yep....seems awful lucky....and there are legal drugs that could make it look like a heart attack...and easy to pay off people to say it was just a heart problem.

2006-07-11 14:26:57 · answer #3 · answered by darthbouncy 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers