Jeffrey Skilling, the former Enron Corp. chief executive officer convicted of leading a fraud that destroyed the world’s largest energy trader, is seeking a new trial over government objections. A three-judge panel of the New Orleans appellate court is reviewing verdicts today against Skilling after the U.S. Supreme Court determined in June that prosecutors used an invalid legal theory to convict him. Skilling is serving a 24-year sentence in a Colorado federal prison after he and former Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay were found guilty of deceiving investors about the company’s true financial condition. “The court doesn’t act as a 13th juror” to decide Skilling’s guilt or innocence, his lead lawyer Daniel Petrocelli told the panel. “If the trial record contains evidence on which a rationale juror could’ve acquitted, that count must be reversed. Here, the record is filled with acquittal evidence.” |