Kenneth Lay kicked the bucket.

Bradylama

So Old I'm Losing Radiation Signs
After being found guilty by a jury of his peers, and amidst international scorn, Kenneth Lay ended his life in scenic Aspen by painful cardiac arrest. Or did he?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/05/AR2006070501068.html
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The death of former Enron Corp. chief Ken Lay on Wednesday underscored the challenges facing online encyclopedia Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org/), which as the news was breaking offered a variety of causes for his death.

Lay, 64, died of a heart attack early on Wednesday, a family spokeswoman said, just six weeks after a jury found him guilty of fraud in one of the biggest corporate scandals in U.S. history.

Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia that anyone can edit, added news of Lay's death to his online biography shortly after news outlets began reporting it at around 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT).

At 10:06 a.m., Wikipedia's entry for Lay said he died "of an apparent suicide."

At 10:08, it said he died at his Aspen, Colorado home "of an apparent [[heart attack] or suicide.]."

Within the same minute, it said the cause of death was "yet to be determined."

At 10:09 a.m., it said "no further details have been officially released" about the death.

Two minutes later, it said: "The guilt of ruining so many lives finally [sic] led him to his suicide."

At 10.12 a.m., this was replaced by: "According to Lay's pastor the cause was a 'massive coronary' heart attack."

By 10:39 a.m., Lay's entry said: "Speculation as to the cause of the heart attack lead many people to believe it was due to the amount of stress put on him by the Enron trial." This statement was later dropped.

By early Wednesday afternoon, the entry said Lay was pronounced dead at Aspen Valley Hospital, citing the Pitkin, Colorado sheriff's department. It said he apparently died of a massive heart attack, citing KHOU-TV in Houston.

Officials at Wikipedia did not immediately return phone and e-mail requests for comment. Its Web site warns users that "newer articles may still contain significant misinformation, unencyclopedic content, or vandalism." Wikipedia says it has 13,000 active writers and editors.

Lay and Jeffrey Skilling, who replaced him as chief executive, were convicted for their roles in Enron's 2001 collapse. Both were awaiting sentencing and faced long prison terms.

You mean an open online forum is fallible? Say it ain't so! What will the college kids do? :(

Lay dying so soon after being found guilty is kinda bittersweet. Talk about Lay or Wikipedia. Or both! So many choices.
 
Naturally one who was so unscrupulous should evade justice by his peers just long enough to be embraced by the sweet oblivion.

What a jackass.
 
I want some hardcore identification on that body pronto. He's a shady enough character that he could be chilling in a mountain villa in Argentina or something by now.

Also, let's get that money and give it to the employees he swindled it from.
 
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