Ken Lay now facing 'financial ruin'
About time that happened, he can ask Georgie for a HANDOUT, seems appropriate to me.
RAW STORY
Published: February 25, 2000
Former Enron chairman Ken Lay is now facing "financial ruin," according to an article scheduled for the front page of Sunday's New York Times, RAW STORY has learned.
Excerpts from the article written by Alexei Barrionuevo and Kurt Eichenwald:
Once at the pinnacle of Houston's financial and political elite with a fortune worth as much as $400 million, Lay, the former chairman of the Enron Corp., is now facing financial ruin.
While he has talked about his shrinking wealth since Enron's collapse, he has managed to keep up appearances, continuing to live in a full-floor apartment in the city's affluent River Oaks section. But already, according to personal financial records obtained by The New York Times, Lay has fallen out of the ranks of the city's millionaires, with a stated net worth of less than $650,000.
And that financial assessment is probably on the optimistic side. His assets, for example, include $1.9 million held in a trust that is almost sure to be eaten up by legal fees.
In addition, Lay, 63, faces potential liability from lawsuits that were filed against him by shareholders and others after Enron's collapse that would almost certainly force him into personal bankruptcy. Lay may also be forced to forfeit his remaining home, along with some other assets, if he is convicted in the criminal fraud trial that is now taking place in Houston.
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