In Prison for 30 Years for Fraud: White Collar Sentencing After Booker (Program)

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College of William & Mary Law School William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository IBRL Events Institute of Bill of Rights Law 2005 In Prison for 30 Years for Fraud: White Collar Sentencing After Booker (Program) Institute of Bill of Rights Law at The College of William & Mary School of Law Repository Citation Institute of Bill of Rights Law at The College of William & Mary School of Law, "In Prison for 30 Years for Fraud: White Collar Sentencing After Booker (Program)" (2005). IBRL Events. Paper 46. http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/ibrlevents/46 Copyright c 2005 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/ibrlevents

Institute of Bill of Rights Law William & Mary School of Law The Institute of Presents IN PRISON FOR 30 YEARS FOR FRAUD. WHITE COLLAR SENTENCING AFTER BOOKER Friday, March 25, 2005 9:30 am to Noon Room 133

The lrr.titute of Context: IN PRISON FOR 30 YEARS FOR.FRAUD: WHITE COLLA.R SENTENCING AFTER BOOKER In January, 2005, the Us. Supreme Court decided in Us. v. Booker that the Us. Sentencing Guidelines are advisory, not mandatory. That may be good news for some defendants whose sentences were on appeal at the time of the Court's ruling. Or it may be bad news. One of the defendants who is now likely to be resentenced is Jamie Olis, who was sentenced last year to 24 years in federal prison for his role in a fraudulent accounting scheme at Dynegy, Inc. His appeal was argued in the Fifth Circuit in February. As it now stands, Olis ' sentence is the longest sentence ever imposed for securities fraud. But, as we know, Bernie Ebbers is now facing a sentence of up to 80 years. On Friday, March 25, the Institute of Bill of Rights Law will sponsor a half-day conference on white-collar sentencing after Booker. With the Guidelines novv advisory, are white-collar sentences likely to look different than they did prior to Booker? Shorter? Longer? What can we predict about the sentence for Bernie Ebbers?(! convicted, what will be the appropriate sentence for Richard Scrushy? Ken Lay?

Tho Institute uj IN PRISON FOR 30 YEARS FOR FRAUD: WHITE COLLAR SENTENCING AFTER.BOOKER Friday, March 25, 2005 Schedule 9:30 a.m. Welcome and Background Information Jayne W. Barnard 9:45 a.m. Background on Economic Crimes Under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines: The Economic Crime Package and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act Frank Bowman 10:05 a.m. Comrnents and Q&A 10: 15 a.111. White Collar Plea Bargaining and Sentencing After Booker Stephanos Bibas 10:40 a.m. Comments and Q&A 10:50 a.m. Break 11:00 a.m. There And Back Again: How the Nine Embarked on a Great Adventure to Blakely's Fiery Mountain and Found Themselves Right Back at the Door Where it Began Frank Bowman 11:25 a.m. Comments and Q&A NOON Program closes

The J nshtlll~ Df IN PRISON FOR 30 YEARS FOR FRAUD: JVHITE COLLAR SENTENCING AFTER BOOKER Speakers: Stephanos Bibas Associate Professor of Law University of low a College of Law Frank 0. Bowman 1'0. Dale Palmer Professor of Law Indiana University - Indianapolis Reporter for the ABA "Justice Kennedy Commission " on Sentencing Commentators: Jayne W Barnard James Goold Cutler Professor oflaw William & Mary School of Law Howard Zlotnick Assistant Us. Attorney Eastern District of Virginia

IN PRISON FOR 30 YEARS FOR FRAUD: WHITE COLLAR SENTENCING AFTER BOOKER Who's Who Stephanos Bibas is an Associate Professor at the University of Iowa College of Law, where he teaches and writes extensively about criminal law, criminal procedure, and sentencing. A graduate of Columbia College and Yale Law School, Professor Bibas served as a law clerk to the Hon, Patrick Higginbotham on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and to the Hon. Anthony Kennedy on the Supreme Court of the United States. He litigated a wide variety of cases as an associate at Cov111gton & Burling in \'Vashington, D.C. He prosecuted more than 100 criminal cases as an Assistant U.S. Attorney at the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, most notably winning the conviction of the world's leading expert in Tiffany stained glass for hiring a grave robber to steal priceless Tiffany windows from cemeteries. His articles and other publications have appeared in the Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Journal, Stanford Law Review,.tvIiclugan Law Review, Cornell Law Review, Iowa Law Review, Utah Law Review, Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, and Federal Sentencing Reporter. Frank Bowman is the M. Dale Palmer Professor of Law at Indiana University School of Law- Indian;lpolis. He is a former federal and state prosecutor (Trial Attorney, Criminal Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1979-82; Deputy District Attorney, Denver, Colorado, 1983-87; ASSistant U.S. Attorney, S.D. Florida, 1989-96) and a former Special Counsel to the U.S. Sentencing Commission (1995-96). He is co-author of Haines, Bowman & \V"oll, Federal Sentencing Guidelines Handbook (\'{!esr 2004), co-editor of the Federal Sentencing Reporter, and author of num.erous articles on f~deral sentencing law. Professor Bowman was particularly involved in formulating the "economic crime package" of amendments to the Federal Sentencing Guidelines passed in November 2001, inducling serving as academic advisor to tbe Criminal Law Committee of the U.S. Judicial Conference. In 2002-2003, he testified before the Senate Judiciaty Committee and the U.S. Sentencing Commission regarding the criminal provisions of 111e Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the sentencing guidelines amendments mandated by the Act. Since July 2004, he has testified before the House and Senate Judiciary Committees and the U.S. Sentencing Commission about tbe Jmpact of BlakelY v. Ifl'aJiJil1glol7 and United Stat«: I). Booker and possible legislative responses to those decisions.