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Enron Litigation Continues With Actions by Stockholders and Regulators of Accounts.
As class actions against investment firms face dismissal, attorneys for investors plan to go forward with claims for individual shareholders against those same firms. After the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit decided that cases in Houston against Merrill Lynch and other investment banking firms could not go forward as class actions, the door was left open for victims of Enron stock fraud to file their own claims in court or arbitration against these investment firms.
The class actions stopped the clock for filing individual claims against the defendants until appeals are completed. Also, through the class actions substantial information was learned regarding the role of these investment firms in the Enron debacle.
Meanwhile, that same Court of Appeals affirmed a district court’s order allowing Texas accounting regulators to gain access to confidential discovery material in the Enron Corp. shareholder litigation (Newby v. Enron Corp., 5th Cir., No. 05-20462, 3/16/06). The massive amounts of discovery material related to the Enron litigation led to a stipulation by parties that discovery be housed on a Web site. The district court overseeing the litigation issued a confidentiality order covering the deposition transcripts and other material, barring disclosure except to parties, their counsel, witnesses, a depository administrator, a court-appointed mediator, and a few others.
The board, which licenses and disciplines CPAs in the state, sought permissive intervention in the Enron litigation as a way of gaining access to materials protected by the district court order. It sought the materials as part of its investigation of suspected audit failures that may have contributed to Enron’s collapse and bankruptcy and potential misconduct by CPAs licensed in Texas. The district court then allowed access by the accountants’ board and the appelate court upheld that order.