In January 2002, Senator Joseph Lieberman appeared on CBS' Face The Nation talking about the revelations that Arthur Andersen destroyed documents in the Enron investigation. Lieberman prophetically declared that, "this Enron episode may end this company's history." Even the brilliance of hiring Paul Volcker to reform the firm didn't help Andersen. Within two months Andersen was indicted on criminal charges. Three months later the firm was found guilty, and two months after that formally surrendered it's license to practice auditing. As clients, partners and staff bailed out throughout the year, the 89-year-old giant of the accounting profession was painfully put to rest.
01/11/02 Andersen Admits Destroying Enron Documents
01/21/02 States May Revoke Andersen's License to Practice
01/29/02 Andersen Named in Class Action Suit
02/04/02 Andersen Hires Paul Volcker to Reform, Restore Trust
03/15/02 Andersen Indicted on Criminal Charges
03/28/02 Andersen's Global Network Merger Plans Unravel
06/17/02 Andersen Found Guilty
06/17/02 Andersen to Cease Auditing Publicly-Held Companies
09/03/02 Good-Bye Andersen: Venerable Giant Will Audit No More
09/13/02 Judge Refuses Andersen's Request for New Trial
A complete digest of all Anderson/Enron related stories is available.
A list of Andersen client defections is also available.
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AccountingWEB.com Dec-27-2002
Categories: Trends, News Archives
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