ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP V. UNITED STATES
544 U.S. 696 (2005)
NATURE OF THE CASE: Anderson (D) appealed an affirmation of its conviction of obstruction
of justice and witness tampering.
FACTS: D was Enron's auditor and during this time frame Enron was in the process of being
discovered for the fraud that it created. D audited Enron's publicly filed financial
statements and provided internal audit and consulting services to it. Things were going
downhill very quickly for Enron. D had formed an Enron 'crisis-response' team, which
included Nancy Temple, an in-house counsel. D retained outside counsel to represent it in
any litigation that might arise from the Enron matter. The next day, Temple discussed Enron
with other in-house counsel. At a general training meeting attended by 89 employees,
including 10 from the Enron engagement team, everyone was urged to comply with the firm's
document retention policy. It was stated that it was ok if documents are destroyed in the
course of [the] normal policy and litigation is filed the next day. Enron announced its
third quarter results and the next day the SEC notified Enron by letter that it had opened
an investigation in August and requested certain information and documents. On October 19,
Enron forwarded a copy of that letter to D. On the same day, Temple sent an e-mail to a
member of D's internal team of accounting experts and attached a copy of the document
policy. On October 20, the Enron crisis-response team held a conference call, during which
Temple instructed everyone to 'make sure to follow the [document] policy.' These, and other
smaller meetings, were followed by substantial destruction of paper and electronic
documents. Despite the mounting issues and obvious requests for accounting documents the
document destruction continued, despite reservations by some of petitioner's managers. On
November 8, the SEC served Enron and D with subpoenas for records. On November 9, an e-mail
was sent that stated: 'Per Dave -- No more shredding . . . . We have been officially served
for our documents.' D was indicted under sections 1512(b)(2)(A) and (B) for knowingly,
intentionally and corruptly persuade . . . other persons, to wit: [D's] employees, with
intent to cause' them to withhold documents from, and alter documents for use in, 'official
proceedings, namely: regulatory and criminal proceedings and investigations.' Eventually
after a deadlock and Allen charge, the jury returned a guilty verdict. The Court of Appeals
affirmed. It held that the jury instructions properly conveyed the meaning of 'corruptly
persuades' and 'official proceeding'; that the jury need not find any consciousness of
wrongdoing; and that there was no reversible error. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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