Sponsored by
Associated Press
  •  

Nacchio asks court to deny full appellate review

By Associated Press May 15, 2008 Comments (0)

0 Recommendations

An attorney for former Qwest CEO Joe Nacchio asked the full 10th Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday not to review a decision by a three-judge panel to overturn his insider-trading conviction.

Attorney Maureen Mahoney wrote in a court filing that the three-judge panel's ruling did not establish a legal precedent that requires a review by the full court.

"The petition thus seeks (full court) review of alternative reasoning that would not change the result," she wrote. "For that reason alone, it should be denied."

Nacchio was convicted in April 2007 of 19 counts of illegally selling $52 million worth of stock in 2001 after prosecutors argued he made the trades when he knew Qwest Communications International Inc. was at risk but didn't tell investors. The jury acquitted him on 23 counts of insider trading.

He was sentenced to six years in prison but remains free on appeal.

The three-judge appeal panel overturned Nacchio's conviction in a 2-1 decision in March, concluding U.S. District Judge Edward Nottingham improperly excluded trial testimony from a defense expert witness, law professor Daniel Fischel.

The panel also said Nottingham failed to give the defense adequate opportunities to disclose the reasons for Fischel's opinions and that he erred in excluding Fischel's economic opinions on the basis that they were within the jury's common knowledge.

Federal prosecutors asked the full 10th Circuit panel to reconsider whether a district judge may exclude expert testimony under certain conditions and whether a judge may exclude expert testimony about economic concepts.

The full 10th Circuit typically is 12 judges.

The case grew out of a multibillion-dollar scandal that forced the Denver-based telecom to restate $2.2 billion of revenue. Federal regulators have said Qwest falsely reported fiber-optic capacity sales as recurring instead of one-time revenue between April 1999 and March 2002.

Nacchio still faces a civil fraud lawsuit filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission against him and four other former Qwest employees. The SEC alleges they coordinated a financial fraud that allowed Qwest to improperly report about $3 billion in revenue.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Report This Comment

Use this area to report a comment that you believe is in violation of the community guidelines. Our team will review the entry and take any appropriate action.

Sending report...

Compare Brokers

TD AMERITRADE
more info
ShareBuilder
more info
Power E*Trade

more info
Scottrade
more info
Fool Disclosure

DocumentId: 646394, ~/articles/articlehandler.aspx, 7/24/2008 8:42:14 AM,

Sign up for FREE Motley Fool site access!

Already registered? Login Here

It’s FREE! Enter your email address, and we’ll rush you to the article you're looking for right now.

Privacy / Legal Information

We will use your email address only to keep you informed about updates to our web site and about other products and services that we think might interest you. The Motley Fool respects your privacy. Please read our Privacy Statement

.

Related Tickers

Qwest Communications International, Inc.

Q Up! $3.81 +0.05 (+1.33%) 4:00 PM
CAPS Rating:
517 Outperforms
102 Underperforms
Rate This Stock

Major Indices

S&P 5001,282.19+0.41%
DJIA11,632.38+0.26%
RSL 2K719.19+0.33%
NASD2,325.88+0.95%
Updated: 4:02:47 PM
Sponsored by:

The Motley Poll

What company will see the next Bear Stearns-style implosion?

Sponsored by: