Ex-WorldCom CEO Ebbers wants sentence commuted

Former WorldCom chief convicted of fraud, conspiracy in 2005, wants Bush clemency grant

Imprisoned former WorldCom chief Bernie Ebbers is hoping that President Bush will give him the gift of clemency this holiday season.

Ebbers, the ex-WorldCom CEO who is serving a 25-year prison sentence after being convicted on charges of fraud and conspiracy, has filed a petition with the US Department of Justice asking for clemency. The Justice Department has told Reuters that it has received the petition and that it is currently under review.

Ebbers was convicted in 2005 of orchestrating US$11 billion in accounting fraud that was designed to falsely inflate WorldCom's revenue and share price. After his conviction, Ebbers unsuccessfully appealed to a US Court of Appeals and the US Supreme Court in an effort to get his conviction overturned.

Since September 2006, he has been imprisoned at the Oakdale Federal Correctional Institution, an institution most famous for housing former Louisiana Governor Edwin Edwards, a four-term Democrat who was sentenced to 10 years in prison on racketeering charges in 2001.

During his heyday at WorldCom in 1999, Ebbers was named one of Network World's 25 most powerful people in networking.

President Bush has granted 14 pardons and has commuted two sentences over the past month. In addition to Ebbers, former media mogul Conrad Black and financier Michael Milken have asked Bush to commute their sentences.

More about: Billion, Department of Justice, Reuters, US Department of Justice, WorldCom
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