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Accounting Firms Settle Enron Suit
NEW YORK --
In the first settlement of a lawsuit resulting from the collapse
of the Enron
Corp. two years ago, the network of foreign accounting firms
once linked to Enron's auditor, Andersen, will pay $40 million,
Bloomberg News reported Tuesday citing court papers.
The affiliated
firms, collectively known as Andersen Worldwide Société
Coopérative, are seeking to resolve suits filed by Enron
investors and workers over Andersen's role in helping Enron hide
more than $1 billion in losses, according to court papers filed
last week in Houston. The accord does not cover Andersen, the papers
say. Andersen Worldwide also agreed to pay $20 million to Enron's
creditors.
The settlement
is a fraction of the $29 billion that shareholders and former workers
say they lost in Enron's meltdown. Judge Arthur J. Gonzalez of Federal
Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan approved the settlement on Friday.
"There
is a serious question as to whether a more favorable monetary result
would be attained by a judgment after trial," lawyers for the
University of California Regents said in court papers. The regents,
who lost $145 million in pension funds invested in Enron stock,
are the lead plaintiffs in a class-action suit against Enron executives
and Andersen auditors.
Under the Andersen
Worldwide settlement, Enron shareholders and workers will split
$25 million, the court papers say. An arbitrator will decide how
the money is divided. The remaining $15 million will be used to
finance litigation against Enron executives, Andersen's auditors
in the United States and Enron's investment bankers and lawyers,
court papers say. None of the money will be used to pay lawyers'
fees.
-- NYSSCPA.org
News Staff
Posted on
7/15/03
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