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View Full Version : Ding dong Kennith Lay is dead



Sofa King
07-05-2006, 04:42 PM
good riddence and embarrassed to have known you as a Houstonian.

Arip

undertaker
07-05-2006, 05:04 PM
This should be posted in the "Whatever you want to talk about" section.:yes: :bonk: :bonk: :bonk: :bonk: :bonk: :bonk: :bonk:


Hello.....:confused: :confused: :confused: :bonk:


Undertaker:pimp:

oilman
07-13-2006, 08:07 PM
Heart attack my ass...with his connections, he's probably alive and well is some remote location:shocking:

olredalert
07-14-2006, 10:22 AM
--------I see in this post and one other that you actually can spell like a normal human being. Please,,,,for all of the rest of us,,,,continue on this trail............Bill S

Carl C
07-14-2006, 10:45 AM
Heart attack my ass...with his connections, he's probably alive and well is some remote location:shocking: Hmmmmm.....he certainly had the $$ to obtain a look-alike corpse!:eek!: Wonder if they DNA tested the body:confused:

gcarter
07-14-2006, 12:32 PM
So why couldn't he just have a heart attack and die?
He was certainly old enough.

Carl C
07-14-2006, 12:39 PM
So why couldn't he just have a heart attack and die?
He was certainly old enough.'Cause conspiracy theories are more fun.:) :wink: :lookaroun

gcarter
07-20-2006, 06:23 AM
Autopsy: Lay had 3 blocked arteries
Former Enron chairman died of heart disease, report confirms


By TERRI LANGFORD
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle

Former Enron Chairman Ken Lay's three main coronary arteries were more than 90 percent blocked and he had suffered two previous heart attacks before he collapsed and died earlier this month in Aspen, Colo., according to an autopsy released Wednesday.

The autopsy, released by the Pitkin County Sheriff's Office, confirmed earlier conclusions that Lay, 64, died of heart disease.

"The immediate cause of death is arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease with severe blockage of all three coronary arteries," wrote Dr. Rob Kurtzman, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy.

Lay awoke about 1 a.m. MDT on July 5, according to information Kurtzman gathered for his autopsy report.

"According to his wife, they were talking and he subsequently went into the bathroom," Kurtzman wrote. Minutes later, Linda Lay heard a "thump," and when she checked on her husband, he was lying "unresponsive" on the bathroom floor. He had vomited and suffered brief seizurelike activity.

Paramedics were called to the Lays' rental home in Old Snowmass, Colo. They performed CPR as they transported him from the home to nearby Aspen Valley Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Lay did have a history of heart problems. The autopsy revealed he had two coronary artery stents in place to increase blood flow.

Prior to his collapse, Lay did not complain of any chest pains, according to the pathologist's report.

However, Lay recently had been experiencing upper gastrointestinal symptoms and was taking medication for that, the autopsy stated. Further details about that medication and any others taken by Lay at the time of his death were not released.

Kurtzman, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy, said that there was "no significant toxicology that contributed to his death."

Pitkin County officials released only six pages of the 18-page autopsy report. Details about the toxicology tests were not contained in the autopsy summary released by the sheriff's office. The Houston Chronicle requested a copy of the complete autopsy report.

Lay's body was identified by family members and local officials.

"The allegations that this is not his body are ludicrous," said Kurtzman. "It really is ludicrous."

The autopsy was performed within hours of Lay's death. His body was later cremated and two memorial services — in Aspen and Houston — were held.

Lay died about six weeks after he and former Enron chief executive Jeff Skilling were convicted May 25 of federal conspiracy and fraud charges for lying to Enron investors about their knowledge of the company's health in the final months before its 2001 bankruptcy. Lay was also found guilty of four counts of bank fraud.

The Enron founder maintained he had done nothing wrong and had planned to appeal. He was to be sentenced in October, along with Skilling.

Lay was facing up to 25 years in prison. His death clears the way for his defense attorneys to request that the conviction be vacated, or dismissed.

His attorneys are expected to make this request within a few weeks. However, the government is also expected to file a motion to seize Lay's assets.

Chronicle reporter John Roper contributed to this report.

terri.langford@chron.com

Carl C
07-20-2006, 09:15 AM
Sorry but Ken was in my store last week-end.......................Shortly after Elvis left.:yes:

Bob
07-20-2006, 11:04 AM
Heart attack my #$%&, it was global warming.

Walt. H.
07-22-2006, 01:12 AM
The plot thickens!!

I read earlier this week that one of three english bankers that we're questioned by the Feds for possible money laundering connection for Enron was found dead in the United Kingdom sitting on a park bench, and the cause of dealth was not disclosed.
Dead men tell no tales and three can keep a secret if two are dead.
Heart attacks, suicides, accidental pool drownings, natural deaths, car accidents and falls, wrong medications, etc...

Stranger chain of events have happened before in recent history, where's Bill & Hillary???????????:yes::cool: