News

June 12, 2002: Arthur Andersen LLP is found guilty of obstruction of justice, and becomes the first accounting firm to be convicted of a felony. May 31, 2005: The Supreme Court overturns Andersen ...
HOUSTON, March 20 -- Embattled auditor Arthur Andersen LLP began its legal defense here today by entering a plea of not guilty to a federal obstruction-of-justice charge and winning an opening ...
Arthur Andersen LLP got its wish for a speedy trial Wednesday when the accounting firm pleaded not guilty to a single criminal charge stemming from Andersen's destruction of Enron Corp. documents.
Arthur Andersen LLP has resolved so much of its litigation that its general counsel is returning to private practice. Mark Pollack joined the Chicago office of Paul Hastings LLP this week as a ...
Last year, the office hummed with 2,200 partners and staffers, who were among the 27,000 Arthur Andersen LLP employees in the United States. Now, barely a month after a federal jury found the 89 ...
Two decades after Arthur Andersen LLP’s downfall, the firm that audited Enron Corp.’s financial statements remains a punchline for many, though some prefer to remember it as an influential ...
At "Andersen U.," the lush, 150-acre campus where Arthur Andersen LLP has trained tens of thousands of new recruits, there's a shrine to ethical accounting. A display in the Andersen Heritage ...
More than 200 employees of Arthur Andersen LLP emptied their desks yesterday as the local office of the embattled company prepared to close its doors permanently and send most of its business and ...
Arthur Andersen LLP agreed to pay $16 million to Enron Corp. creditors to settle claims that the accounting firm was negligent in auditing and advising the energy trader, which collapsed in ...
Arthur Andersen LLP is expected to announce this morning plans to expand its downtown offices with a move into an unlikely location — the Power Plant — and hire more than 100 employees. The ...
Arthur Andersen LLP has a policy of destroying extraneous e-mails and documents partly because they can be used out of context in court against the firm or its clients, a top Andersen executive ...