From the Wall  Street Journal:
 
It’s over. The Justice Department declined  to ask the Supreme Court to review the 2nd Circuit’s ruling in U.S.  v Stein. That’s the case, once billed by the government as the largest  tax-fraud prosecution in history, in which U.S. District Judge Lewis  Kaplan of Manhattan (pictured, left) dismissed the indictments of 13  former KPMG executives because prosecutors violated their rights. The  violation? Pressuring KPMG not to pay the defendants’ legal fees.
 
More than three months ago, the 2nd Circuit  affirmed Kaplan’s decision. The deadline to file a petition for writ  of certiorari with The Supremes was last week. “All indications were  that they would not [petition the Supreme Court], but we were not taking  anything for granted,” says David Spears, who represents defendant  Jeffrey Stein.
Meanwhile, a watered down version of  the original case is underway before Judge Kaplan. Three former KPMG  executives and an ex-partner at Sidley Austin are facing charges that  they sold bogus tax shelters.
