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Examples
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The hedge fund manager focuses exclusively on short selling and, after identifying and short selling numerous well-known corporate financial disasters, Chanos famously called Enron's bluff and made a killing on one of the most celebrated corporate failures in recent memory.
Forbes.com: News Agustino Fontevecchia 2011
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The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 was legislation adopted in the aftermath of corporate scandals, such as Enron's, to protect shareholders and the public from corporate accounting fraud.
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Fast-paced account of how the duo unearthed evidence of Enron's far-ranging accounting dodges.
Michael Hudson: Digging Deep: A Treasury of Books About Journalism Michael Hudson 2010
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Take the case of Enron's former headquarters, which was purchased by Brookfield Office Properties for $120 million in 2006.
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Fast-paced account of how the duo unearthed evidence of Enron's far-ranging accounting dodges.
Michael Hudson: Digging Deep: A Treasury of Books About Journalism Michael Hudson 2010
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According to Businessweek, Lehman pays its advisers at a rate of $1.3 million every day of the year, for what has become the most expensive bankruptcy in the nation's history, outpacing Enron's.
Lehman's Bankruptcy Advisers Make $1.3M Per Day The Huffington Post News Team 2010
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Known as Four Allen Center, the building formerly had Enron's trademark crooked "E" sign near the entrance.
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It became a poster child for the market's troubles when it remained virtually empty for several years in the wake of Enron's bankruptcy.
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Three years ago, I asked Sam Buell, the former federal prosecutor in the government's effort to indict Enron's Jeff Skilling, the question of whether we'd see widespread prosecutions from the financial crisis.
Lyric Hughes Hale: Why the Bankers Aren't In Jail Lyric Hughes Hale 2011
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And if you want to know why bankers haven't been prosecuted for the financial crisis, well just before the crisis, the court upheld a ruling that investment bankers who knowingly structured sham transactions they knew would be used to falsify Enron's financial statements hadn't committed fraud.
Dylan Ratigan: Bought Justice and the Supreme Court Dylan Ratigan 2011
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