Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Michael G. Oxley, helped write Sarbanes-Oxley Act

- By Nancy Moran

NEWYORK— Mike Oxl e y, the former Ohio congressma­n who was the House sponsor of the landmark Sarbanes-Oxley Act requiring corporate executives to vouch for company financials in the wake of the Enron and WorldCom accounting scandals, has died. He was 71.

He died Jan. 1 in McLean, Virginia, the Associated Press reported, citing his wife, Patricia Oxley. The cause was non-smallcell lung cancer, which can afflict nonsmokers.

A Republican, he served 12 terms in the House of Representa­tives, retiring in 2007. The Sarbanes-Oxley legislatio­n took aim at the corporate fraud that toppled energy firm Enron Corp. and telecom provider WorldCom Inc., among others, and sought to protect investors from further governance abuses.

“Investor confidence is almost an oxymoron these days,” Oxley said on July 24, 2002, the day the bill he co-sponsored with Democratic Sen. Paul Sarbanes of Maryland was cleared by congressio­nal negotiator­s. He promised that the law would “make corporate executives who break the law and betray the public trust pay severely.”

Sarbanes-Oxley, sometimes referred to as SOX, came after a whistle-blower in 2001 revealed that Enron kept large debts off its balance sheets and after WorldCom, in 2002, inflated revenue and misreprese­nted expenses.

President George W. Bush signed the legislatio­n in July 2002.

Sections of the law require officials to certify that financial statements are true and fair, report on the adequacy of internal controls, and give timely disclosure on material changes.

The legislatio­n also provides for whistle-blower protection and clawbacks of executive pay in cases of wrongdoing. It bans audi- tors from doing consulting work for a public company for which it serves as an auditor, imposes criminal penalties for destroying, concealing or falsifying records, and created the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, subjecting auditors of public companies to independen­t oversight for the first time.

Part of the law was struck down in 2010 when the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that the board violated the Constituti­on’s separation of power provisions because it didn’t give the president enough say over its members. While the PCAOB was left intact, the ruling meant the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission would have unfettered authority to fire members.

Michael Garver Oxley was born Feb. 11, 1944, in Findlay, Ohio. In 1966, he received a bachelor of arts degree from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, and three years later earned a law degree from Ohio State University, according to Oxley’s official House biography. After graduating, he joined the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, where he worked until 1972. He then went into private practice.

Oxley became a member of Ohio’s state House of Representa­tives and served as a delegate to both state and national Republican convention­s. In 1981, a special election chose him to fill the seat vacated by the death of U.S. Rep. Tennyson Guyer.

He held the seat for 25 years and, from 2001 to 2006, served as chairman of the House Committee on Financial Services. He left Congress in January 2007.

Other bills he sponsored included the Child Online Protection Act of 1998, an effort to keep minors from accessing material deemed harmful to them on the Internet. That measure was challenged in court and never took effect, with a permanent injunction against the law in 2009. He also wrote a 2006 measure that condemned media outlets for publishing details of a secret George W. Bush administra­tion financial-surveillan­ce program that passed the House, but not the Senate.

After leaving public office Oxley was a counsel at the BakerHoste­tler law firm in Washington, serving corporate- governance clients, and a senior adviser to the board at Nasdaq OMX Group Inc.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? In this photo taken in 2007, Michael G. Oxley attends the opening bell at the Nasdaq stock market in New York.
AP FILE PHOTO In this photo taken in 2007, Michael G. Oxley attends the opening bell at the Nasdaq stock market in New York.

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