Is Enron back? If it's a joke, some former employees aren't laughing
						
		 
		
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		 [December 04, 2024]  By 
		JUAN A. LOZANO 
						
		HOUSTON (AP) — An elaborate parody appears to be behind an effort to 
		resurrect Enron, the Houston-based energy company that exemplified the 
		worst in American corporate fraud and greed after it went bankrupt in 
		2001. 
		 
		If its return is comedic, some former employees who lost everything in 
		Enron’s collapse aren’t laughing. 
		 
		“It’s a pretty sick joke and it disparages the people that did work 
		there. And why would you want to even bring it back up again?” said 
		former Enron employee Diana Peters, who represented workers in the 
		company’s bankruptcy proceedings. 
		 
		Here’s what to know about the history of Enron and the purported effort 
		to bring it back. 
		 
		What happened at Enron? 
		 
		Once the nation’s seventh-largest company, Enron filed for bankruptcy 
		protection on Dec. 2, 2001, after years of accounting tricks could no 
		longer hide billions of dollars in debt or make failing ventures appear 
		profitable. The energy company's collapse put more than 5,000 people out 
		of work and wiped out more than $2 billion in employee pensions. Its 
		aftershocks were felt throughout the energy sector. 
		 
		Twenty-four Enron executives, including former CEO Jeffrey Skilling, 
		were convicted for their roles in the fraud. Enron founder Ken Lay’s 
		convictions were vacated after he died of heart disease following his 
		2006 trial. 
						
		  
						
		Is Enron coming back? 
		 
		On Monday — the 23rd anniversary of the bankruptcy filing — a company 
		representing itself as Enron announced in a news release it was 
		relaunching as a “company dedicated to solving the global energy 
		crisis.” It also posted a video on social media, advertised on at least 
		one Houston billboard and a took out a full-page ad in the Houston 
		Chronicle 
		 
		In the minute-long video full of generic corporate jargon, the company 
		talks about “growth” and “rebirth.” It ends with the words, “We’re back. 
		Can we talk?” 
						
		In an email, company spokesperson Will Chabot said the new Enron was not 
		doing any interviews yet, but "We’ll have more to share soon.” 
		 
		
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            An unidentified person leaves Enron Corp. headquarters in Houston at 
			the end of the day Jan. 22, 2002. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan, File) 
            
			
			
			  Signs point to the comeback being a 
			joke. 
			 
			In the “terms of use and conditions of sale” on the company's 
			website, it says “the information on the website about Enron is 
			First Amendment protected parody, represents performance art, and is 
			for entertainment purposes only.” 
			 
			Documents filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office show 
			College Company, an Arkansas-based LLC, owns the Enron trademark. 
			The co-founder of College Company is Connor Gaydos, who helped 
			create a joke conspiracy theory claiming all birds are actually 
			government surveillance drones. 
			 
			What do former Enron employees think of the company’s return? 
			 
			Peters said she and some other former employees are upset and think 
			the relaunch was “in poor taste.” 
			 
			“If it’s a joke, it’s rude, extremely rude. And I hope that they 
			realize it and apologize to all of the Enron employees,” Peters 
			said. 
			 
			Peters, 74, said she is still working in information technology 
			because “I lost everything in Enron, and so my Social Security 
			doesn’t always take care of things I need done.” 
			 
			“Enron’s downfall taught us critical lessons about corporate ethics, 
			accountability, and the consequences of unchecked ambition. Enron’s 
			legacy was the employees in the trenches. Leave Enron buried,” she 
			said. 
			 
			But Sherron Watkins, Enron’s former vice president of corporate 
			development and the main whistleblower who helped uncover the 
			scandal, said she didn’t have a problem with the joke because comedy 
			“usually helps us focus on an uncomfortable historical event that 
			we’d rather ignore.” 
			 
			“I think we use prior scandals to try to teach new generations what 
			can go wrong with big companies,” said Watkins, who still speaks at 
			colleges and conferences about the Enron scandal. 
			
			
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