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Chip Skowron
Chip Skowron
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Joseph F. "Chip" Skowron III (c. 1968)[2] is an American former hedge fund co-portfolio manager of FrontPoint Partners LLC's health care funds. He was convicted of insider trading, for which he served five years in prison. He was also required to repay his hedge fund employer $32 million it had paid him in compensation, because he had been a “faithless servant.”

Key Information

Early and personal life

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Skowron was born and grew up in Cocoa, Florida, and attended Cocoa High School.[2] He earned his undergraduate degree from Vanderbilt University in 1990.[2][4]

He then attended and graduated from Yale University Medical School in 1998 with a medical degree, and from Yale Graduate School with a doctorate in cellular biology.[5][6][4] Skowron spent three years in an orthopedic residency at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, one of Harvard Medical School's teaching hospitals, leaving in 2001 before finishing the residency.[6][4][7] He published a number of medical papers, including "Cloning and characterization of mouse brush border myosin-I in adult and embryonic intestine."[6][5] He was a member of the board of directors of Americares, a non-profit disaster relief and global health organization.[8][9]

Skowron resides in Greenwich, Connecticut.[10][11] He has a wife, Cheryl, and two daughters and two sons.[2][12]

Hedge fund career

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After leaving his residency Skowron worked as a healthcare analyst at SAC Capital Management in Stamford, Connecticut, and then at Millennium Partners in New York, for less than one year at each.[4][6][2][13][14]

Skowron then became a hedge fund co-portfolio manager of Greenwich, Connecticut-based FrontPoint Partners LLC's health care funds.[15][16][4] He joined FrontPoint in 2003, co-founding its health care team and taking on the title of managing director at Morgan Stanley, its owner, which bought the firm for $400 million in 2006.[4][5][2][17] He was paid in part based on the performance of the funds he managed, earning $13.5 million in 2007 and $7 million in 2008.[2]

Insider trading

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In April 2011, he was arrested by the FBI.[10] Skowron was charged with securities fraud and conspiracy to obstruct justice by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.[16] According to court filings he also lied to his employer about his insider trades, and lied under oath to the Securities and Exchange Commission.[2] He was released on a $6 million bond.[18]

According to the government, Skowron sold shares of Human Genome Sciences Inc. in 2007 and 2008 after being tipped off by a consultant to the company that the company was about to make a negative announcement regarding its clinical trial for the drug Albumin Interferon Alfa 2-a, a potential drug to treat hepatitis-C, before the announcement was made.[4][16][19][20] As a result, FrontPoint's hedge funds were able to avoid $30 million in losses, according to the government.[16][4][21]

At first Skowron denied the charges against him, and his defense attorney said he would plead not guilty, saying "We look forward to responding to the allegations more fully in court at the appropriate time".[6][9][22] However, after the doctor charged with tipping him off pleaded guilty, he changed his position, and admitted his guilt.[6]

The U.S. Attorney charged the consultant with tipping Skowron material, non-public information concerning pharmaceutical company Human Genome Science's clinical trial.[16][23][24] The consultant agreed to plead guilty to a four-count criminal information, and agreed to cooperate with the government's investigation.[16]

In August 2011, Skowron pleaded guilty in federal court in Manhattan to conspiracy to engage in insider trading and obstruction of justice.[1][25] Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said: "Chip Skowron is the latest example of a portfolio manager willing to pay for proprietary, non-public information that gave him an illegal trading edge over the average investor. The integrity of our market is damaged by people who engage in insider trading...."[1] Skowron was sent to prison for five years.[2][1][26]> Skowron's wife asked the judge to be lenient with him, saying her husband didn't realize he was doing anything that could result in him going to prison.[27] Skowron also agreed to forfeit $5 million to the government and pay a $2.7 million SEC penalty.[1][2] The judge, noting that Morgan Stanley's "expectation was that Skowron would abide by policies" that "prohibited insider trading," also ordered him to pay restitution to Morgan Stanley for legal fees ($3.8 million), and 20% of his compensation during the period of the conspiracy from 2007 to 2010 ($6.4 million).[2][28][29][24] The awards were upheld on appeal.[28][30]

Skowron, sentenced in November 2011 by Judge Denise Cote to, and served, five years in federal prison at medium-security Schuylkill Federal Prison Camp in Minersville, Pennsylvania.[24][31][3][2][32][33] He was released in 2017, subject to three years of supervised release.[31][34][35][3][2][32] He was prohibited from working in the securities industry.[33]

Institutional investors immediately withdrew $3 billion from FrontPoint, which until that time had $7 billion in assets under management and earlier had $11 billion under management, causing it to shut down in May 2011, after Skowron's arrest.[3][2][32][31]

Skowron later said: "Over 200 people lost their jobs because of me. My wife and my children endured extraordinary embarrassment, isolation, and absence because of my choices because of the empire I thought I needed to build."[3] His country club ejected him.[33]

FrontPoint, which was spun off from Morgan Stanley, stressed that the FrontPoint Healthcare Funds were not charged with any securities law violations, and that Skowron breached FrontPoint's compliance policies and Code of Conduct.[16][36][37] The FrontPoint Healthcare Funds were named solely as relief defendants, and agreed to make a disgorgement payment with prejudgment interest to the SEC for the alleged losses avoided, and paid the SEC $33 million in an enforcement action.[16][38][39]

Faithless servant lawsuit

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Morgan Stanley filed a separate civil lawsuit in October 2012 seeking the $33 million it paid the SEC, as well as the entire $32 million it had paid Skowron in compensation from 2007 to 2010.[28][40] In its lawsuit, Morgan Stanley called Skowron a “faithless servant” who lied repeatedly to continue being paid by Morgan Stanley and to avoid a blow to his reputation.[2] A. Jeff Ifrah, co-author of Federal Sentencing for Business Crimes, said: "The reputation of an employer like this one can get killed by the conduct of its employee," and seeking restitution "is certainly a good strategy" to recover a company's good reputation.[24]

In December 2013 Judge Shira Scheindlin of the U.S District Court of the Southern District of New York ruled on a motion for summary judgment that Skowron must forfeit $31 million—100% of the compensation he earned from the firm between 2007 and 2010—to his employer, Morgan Stanley.[28][41][42][43] The judge applied the legal doctrine of "faithless servant" to require Skowron to return his ill-gotten gains from the use of inside information to his employer, because he had engaged in insider trading, in violation of the firm's code of ethics, and failed to report his insider trading to the company.[44][41][45] The judge said that insider trading was "the ultimate abuse of a portfolio manager's position."[28] She noted further: "In addition to exposing Morgan Stanley to government investigations to and direct financial losses, Skowron's behavior damaged the firm's reputation, a valuable corporate asset".[46]

References

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from Grokipedia
Joseph F. “Chip” Skowron III (born c. 1968) is an American former co-portfolio manager specializing in investments, best known for building a successful team at LLC before his conviction for . A Yale-trained physician with a Ph.D. in and partial orthopedic residency at Harvard, Skowron shifted from to in the early , initially at and Millennium Partners, before joining FrontPoint in 2003 to launch and manage its health care funds, which grew to oversee more than $1 billion in assets by 2005. Skowron's career ended amid a major scandal revealed in 2010, stemming from his receipt of confidential information in 2007 from a French clinical researcher, Dr. Yves Benhamou, about the failure of Sciences Inc.'s Albuferon drug trial. He directed the sale of approximately 6 million shares of the company's stock across six hedge funds he co-managed, avoiding roughly $30 million in losses when the stock fell 44% upon public disclosure in January 2008; Skowron compensated Benhamou with cash payments totaling at least $15,000 and later urged him to mislead investigators. In 2011, Skowron pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit and obstruction of justice, receiving a five-year federal prison sentence, from which he was released in 2015 after forfeiting over $7 million in illicit gains and paying additional penalties. Following his incarceration, Skowron underwent a personal transformation, embracing and engaging in prison ministry and advocacy for , including co-founding initiatives for inmate outreach through organizations like the New Canaan Society. He has since resided in , with his family, pursuing ventures in , , and while speaking publicly on redemption and second chances.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Joseph F. "Chip" Skowron III was born around 1968 and raised in . From the age of six, Skowron aspired to become a doctor. At age 11, Skowron experienced a significant family trauma when his fell from the while power washing their home in Cocoa, leaving him crumpled and motionless on the driveway; Skowron discovered him in this state, an event that intensified his determination to pursue in order to address such injuries. His survived the accident and remained involved in Skowron's life, later visiting him in in 2012. Little public information is available regarding Skowron's mother or other immediate family members during his childhood.

Medical Training and Initial Career

Skowron completed his undergraduate studies at before enrolling in the combined M.D./Ph.D. program at . He earned a (M.D.) and a (Ph.D.) in cellular and molecular biology from Yale in 1998, focusing on research in that field during his doctoral training. After graduation, Skowron entered an residency program at , a of . He completed three years of the residency, gaining clinical experience in orthopedic procedures, but departed the program prematurely around 2001 to transition into investment analysis. This marked the extent of his formal medical practice, as he did not pursue or independent clinical work thereafter.

Professional Career in Finance

Transition from Medicine to Finance

After completing three years of orthopedic surgery residency training at , a , Joseph F. "Chip" Skowron III left clinical medicine on Sunday, 2001, with two years remaining in his program. His departure was driven by the residency's grueling demands, including extended hours that caused him to miss family milestones—such as seeing his young daughter on —and ongoing pressure from superiors to conduct additional surgeries even when fatigued. Skowron then entered the finance sector, drawing on his Yale M.D. and Ph.D. in molecular and cellular biology to specialize in investing. He briefly worked as a health care analyst at and Millennium Partners, spending less than a year at each firm. In 2003, Skowron co-founded ' health care investment team with two partners, launching its inaugural fund that year and applying his scientific background to assess clinical trials, pipelines, and viability for superior returns. The team expanded rapidly, overseeing more than $1 billion in assets by 2005.

Roles at SAC Capital and Millennium Partners

Following his medical residency, Skowron transitioned to as a healthcare investment analyst at SAC Capital Management in , starting in April 2001. In this role, he applied his medical expertise to analyze and pharmaceutical stocks, contributing to the firm's healthcare sector research amid SAC's aggressive growth in the early 2000s. His tenure lasted approximately 10 months, ending in January 2002. Skowron then moved to Millennium Partners in New York as a senior investment analyst, beginning in January 2002. Focused on healthcare investments, his responsibilities included stock selection and portfolio management in the sector, but reports indicate he generated significant losses for the firm during his one-year stint ending in December 2002. These short roles at both firms, each under a year in effective duration, preceded his longer position at .

Tenure at FrontPoint Partners

Joseph F. "Chip" Skowron III joined LLC in 2003 as a focused on healthcare investments, following brief roles at SAC Capital and Millennium Partners. He co-managed the firm's healthcare funds, overseeing six specialized hedge funds with approximately $1 billion in . Skowron's medical background, including an MD from , informed his sector expertise, partnering with figures like in analyzing biotech and pharmaceutical opportunities. In 2006, acquired , integrating it as a , yet Skowron remained as a managing director and co-portfolio manager, continuing to lead healthcare strategies. His compensation structure tied incentives to both firm-wide and fund-specific performance, reflecting the high-stakes environment of management. Under his leadership, the healthcare funds gained recognition for specialized insights, though detailed return metrics remain proprietary and were not publicly disclosed in regulatory filings. Skowron's tenure emphasized rigorous in volatile biotech sectors, leveraging his clinical experience to evaluate drug pipelines and clinical trials. The funds operated within FrontPoint's broader multi-strategy framework until internal reviews in late 2010 prompted his suspension, marking the effective close of his role.

Insider Trading Allegations and Investigation

The Human Genome Sciences Case

Joseph F. "Chip" Skowron III, while serving as a for healthcare-focused hedge funds at LLC, obtained material nonpublic information from Dr. Yves Benhamou, a French medical researcher and member of the steering committee for Sciences Inc.'s (HGSI) Phase 3 of Albuferon, an investigational hepatitis C treatment. Benhamou, who had access to confidential trial data as a paid and investigator, disclosed to Skowron during private communications—facilitated initially through an expert networking firm—that the trial was unlikely to meet its primary efficacy endpoint due to inadequate patient response rates compared to standard therapy. Skowron, aware of Benhamou's obligations to HGSI and the of the information, nonetheless acted on the tip in January 2008, prior to any public disclosure. Skowron directed the sale of approximately 6 million HGSI shares held across six hedge funds he co-managed, including a block trade of 2 million shares on , 2008, liquidating the entire position over a six-week period. HGSI publicly announced the trial's failure on , 2008, causing the company's to plummet 44% that day and enabling the funds to avoid losses exceeding $30 million. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) alleged that Skowron's actions constituted , as the information was both —directly impacting HGSI's valuation and development pipeline—and obtained through Benhamou's breach of , with Skowron providing no legitimate consideration beyond illicit incentives. To secure and maintain the flow of tips, Skowron paid Benhamou cash bribes, including 5,000 euros in April 2007 and at least $10,000 in an envelope handed over in in April 2008, following an unsuccessful attempt in in late February 2008; these payments exceeded standard consulting fees and were tied to the HGSI disclosures. The scheme came under SEC scrutiny starting in February 2008 amid investigations into suspicious HGSI trading patterns, leading to civil and criminal charges against Skowron on April 13, 2011, for , , and obstruction. The relief defendants—the hedge funds—later agreed to disgorge over $33 million in trading profits plus interest to settle related claims.

Involvement with Dr. Yves Benhamou

Dr. Yves Benhamou, a French infectious disease specialist serving as for Human Genome Sciences' (HGS) Phase 3 of Albuferon, a hepatitis C treatment, initially connected with Skowron through the firm Guidepoint Global, which had a $900,000 consulting contract with . Their relationship, which began as legitimate consultations in early 2007, evolved into an illicit arrangement where Benhamou supplied Skowron with material non-public information about the trial's negative results from February to November 2007. To formalize the scheme, Skowron met Benhamou in April 2007 at a hotel, delivering an envelope containing approximately 5,000 euros (about $7,200) in cash as an inducement for future tips. Additional payments followed, including $4,600 for Benhamou's New York hotel stay later in 2007 and $10,000 in cash handed over in a hotel bar in April 2008, totaling around $90,000 for the insider information. Using Benhamou's disclosures of escalating trial failures, Skowron directed FrontPoint to short HGS stock, avoiding approximately $30 million in losses when HGS announced the drug's inadequacy on January 23, 2008, causing shares to drop 44%. Skowron and Benhamou explicitly agreed to deceive regulators, with Benhamou initially lying to federal investigators about the tips' origins and payments during interviews in 2008 and 2009; Skowron reinforced this in their 2008 meeting by urging Benhamou to maintain the falsehoods. Benhamou pleaded guilty on April 11, 2011, to conspiracy to commit , wire fraud, and obstruction of justice, cooperating with authorities thereafter, which contributed to Skowron's charges; he was sentenced on December 20, 2011, to two years in prison and ordered to forfeit $90,000.

Discovery and Charges

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) initiated an investigation into ' trading activity in Human Genome Sciences Inc. (HGSI) stock in February 2008, shortly after the company's January 23, 2008, announcement of negative results from a Phase III of its C drug Albuferon, which caused the stock to drop approximately 14%. The probe focused on suspicious trades executed by Skowron's healthcare fund, which had reduced its HGSI holdings by selling over 1.7 million shares and purchasing put options in the days preceding the announcement, thereby avoiding estimated losses of up to $30 million. Upon learning of the SEC inquiry, Skowron contacted Dr. Yves Benhamou, the clinical trial advisor who had provided the non-public tip, instructing him to fabricate a story denying any discussion of trial results and to destroy related records; Skowron himself submitted false testimony to the SEC, claiming his trades were based solely on publicly available information and independent analysis. Benhamou was arrested on November 2, 2010, in and charged by the SEC with tipping material non-public information to Skowron on multiple occasions between November 2007 and January 2008, in violation of laws; he pleaded guilty to and charges in April 2011 after cooperating with authorities. This cooperation, including Benhamou's recorded admissions and evidence of cash payments from Skowron (totaling $10,000 in April 2008 in ), contributed to the escalation against Skowron, who was suspended from FrontPoint in late 2010 amid the widening probe. On April 13, 2011, federal authorities in charged Skowron criminally with one count of to commit , one count of , and one count of to obstruct justice, alleging he profited personally by over $1 million from the illegal trades while directing the fund's avoidance of multimillion-dollar losses. Concurrently, the SEC filed civil charges against Skowron for and Benhamou's violations, seeking of profits, prejudgment interest, and civil penalties. The charges stemmed from forensic analysis of trading records, communications between Skowron and Benhamou, and Skowron's subsequent efforts to suborn and obstruct the investigation, including a 2008 meeting where he paid Benhamou to maintain the cover story.

Guilty Plea and Sentencing

On August 15, 2011, Skowron pleaded guilty in federal court to one count of conspiracy to commit by means of and one count of obstructing an SEC investigation, admitting that he had obtained material nonpublic information about a clinical drug trial failure from a and used it to short Sciences stock, thereby avoiding approximately $30 million in losses for his funds. As part of the plea agreement, he agreed to forfeit $5 million to the . On November 18, 2011, District Judge Denise L. Cote sentenced Skowron, then 42 years old and residing in , to five years in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. The judge also imposed a $100 special assessment, ordered forfeiture of $5 million (as per the plea), and required restitution of $5.96 million to affected investors. Prosecutors highlighted the scheme's breach of trust in healthcare expertise-driven investing, while Skowron's defense noted his remorse and family circumstances, though the sentence reflected the crime's severity in undermining market integrity.

Prison Term and Immediate Aftermath

Skowron was sentenced on November 18, 2011, to a five-year term of imprisonment by U.S. District Judge in federal court for and to commit . He also received three years of supervised release and was ordered to forfeit over $7.2 million in illicit gains, with the court emphasizing the scheme's role in evading approximately $30 million in potential investment losses for his funds. Skowron surrendered to begin serving his sentence in January 2012 at the , a medium-security facility in Minersville, . He ultimately served approximately four years before release in November 2015, accounting for federal good conduct credits that typically reduce sentences by up to 15%. Upon release, Skowron returned to his family home on Doubling Road in , where his wife Cheryl and their four children had remained during his incarceration, maintaining a comfortable financial situation supported by prior assets and settlements. He immediately entered the three-year supervised release period, which imposed restrictions including regular reporting to authorities and prohibitions on securities industry involvement. Initial reintegration involved navigating community dynamics in affluent Greenwich, where encounters with former professional and social contacts often resulted in avoidance or strained interactions.

Civil Litigation and Financial Repercussions

Faithless Servant Lawsuit by Morgan Stanley

In October 2012, Morgan Stanley filed a civil lawsuit against Joseph F. "Chip" Skowron III in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (case Morgan Stanley v. Skowron, No. 12-cv-08016), seeking to recover approximately $31 million in total compensation—including salary, bonuses, and other payments—paid to Skowron from 2007 to 2010 during his tenure as a portfolio manager at FrontPoint Partners, an affiliate of Morgan Stanley Investment Management. The suit invoked New York's faithless servant doctrine, which permits employers to forfeit an employee's entire compensation for the period of disloyalty if the employee's breach of fiduciary duty, such as fraud or illegal conduct, constitutes a material violation of their duty of loyalty. Morgan Stanley alleged that Skowron's insider trading activities—detailed in his August 2011 guilty plea to conspiracy to commit securities fraud—and subsequent obstruction of a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) investigation rendered him a "faithless servant" who systematically deceived the firm to retain his earnings. Skowron moved to dismiss the faithless servant claim, arguing that the doctrine did not apply to compensation earned prior to the discovery of his misconduct and that his actions did not taint all aspects of his employment. The court denied the motion in part, upholding the claim and reasoning that Skowron's repeated lies and illegal trades permeated his role, justifying full forfeiture under precedents like Phansalkar v. Andersen Weinroth & Co., L.P. (344 F.3d 184, 2d Cir. 2003), which emphasize the doctrine's strict application to deter breaches. In December 2013, Judge granted Morgan Stanley's motion for partial on the faithless servant count, ruling that Skowron's admitted crimes provided undisputed evidence of disloyalty, entitling the firm to recoup the full $31 million without offset for any purported value he provided. The ruling distinguished the claim from a separate criminal restitution order of $10.2 million, imposed in March 2012 for 's defense costs in the SEC probe obstructed by Skowron, confirming the civil forfeiture targeted pre-conviction earnings tainted by ongoing disloyalty. Following the decision, voluntarily dismissed its remaining claims for , , and in January 2014, securing the clawback as the primary remedy and affirming the doctrine's potency in holding employees accountable for conduct undermining employer trust. No appeal overturned the forfeiture, which courts upheld as aligned with New York law's policy against rewarding infidelity during employment.

Court Rulings and Clawback Outcomes

In October 2012, filed a civil against Skowron in the U.S. District for the Southern District of New York, invoking New York's doctrine to seek forfeiture of all compensation paid to him during his period of disloyalty from 2007 to 2010, totaling approximately $31.1 million in salary and bonuses. The bank argued that Skowron's and related obstruction of justice constituted a fundamental breach of loyalty, rendering all services during that timeframe unfaithful, regardless of whether every action was directly tainted. In December 2013, District Judge Shira A. Scheindlin granted Morgan Stanley's motion for summary judgment, applying the strict version of the faithless servant doctrine under New York common law, which requires forfeiture of all compensation earned during the disloyal period without apportionment. The court rejected Skowron's contention that forfeiture should be limited to the specific tainted trades or proportional to disloyal acts, holding that his guilty plea to conspiracy, securities fraud, and obstruction established pervasive infidelity that disqualified him from retaining any payments. Scheindlin ordered Skowron to disgorge the full $31.1 million, offset by the approximately $10.2 million in restitution previously imposed in his criminal sentencing (comprising 20% of compensation plus Morgan Stanley's legal and investigation costs). This net clawback of over $20 million set a precedent for employers recovering broad compensation from insider traders, emphasizing that contractual insider trading prohibitions do not supplant common-law remedies for disloyalty. Skowron did not successfully appeal the faithless servant ruling, and enforced the forfeiture, effectively recouping 100% of the targeted compensation. Separately, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the district court's denial of Skowron's motion to dismiss related restitution claims in July 2013, upholding 's status as a victim entitled to recovery for harms from his misconduct. These outcomes compounded Skowron's financial penalties, which also included $5 million in criminal forfeiture to the government and a $2.7 million SEC civil penalty, but the clawback specifically targeted employer-paid earnings tied to his employment breach.

Post-Incarceration Activities and Personal Transformation

Release and Initial Challenges

Skowron was released from in November 2015, having served approximately four years of a five-year sentence imposed in November 2011 for conspiracy to commit and obstruction of justice. Returning to his family's home on Doubling Road in —where his wife and four children had maintained financial stability despite prior forfeitures—Skowron faced reintegration challenges he later characterized as exceeding those of . Social marked his early post-release period, with neighbors maintaining distance and former social contacts shunning him amid the stigma of his high-profile in the affluent community. He avoided familiar venues, including sites near his pre-incarceration from which he had been ejected, and reported persistent emotional longing for the structured environment, stating, "I really feel most comfortable in ." Barred from the securities industry by , Skowron pursued minority ownership stakes in non-financial businesses, including apparel, medical marketing, services, and automobile , while navigating familial readjustment and identity reconstruction. These initial hurdles, encompassing judgment from Greenwich's elite circles and internal alienation, represented what he described as the greatest trial of his life, complicating efforts to restore normalcy beyond the supportive networks he had unexpectedly formed behind bars.

Involvement in Faith-Based Organizations

Following his release from in May 2015, Skowron deepened his commitment to Christian faith through active participation in redemptive initiatives. He serves as a director for NCS-Inside, the ministry outreach of the New Canaan Society—a Christian men's fellowship organization—which he co-founded with former inmate Biggs Burke based on experiences leading studies at . This program establishes chapters within prisons to promote spiritual fellowship and personal transformation among inmates. Skowron attends Trinity Church in Greenwich, Connecticut, where he regularly participates in Bible-study groups, often relating scriptural passages to his prison experiences to encourage fellow congregants. Approximately one year after his release, in late 2016, he began partnering with the New Canaan Society to conduct weekly visits to Bridgeport Correctional Center, expanding to three sessions per week, including Sundays, to lead faith-based discussions with prisoners aimed at aiding their reintegration. Since March 2020, Skowron has served as board president of First Loved Ministries, a Christian organization focused on spiritual support and second chances. His involvement across these entities underscores a post-incarceration emphasis on ministry, drawing from his own conversion prior to sentencing in 2011, when he found solace in Scripture such as Matthew 16:25.

Leadership in Prison Entrepreneurship Program

Chip Skowron served as of the Prison Entrepreneurship Program (PEP), a founded in 2004 that delivers entrepreneurship training, character development, and reentry services to incarcerated men in state prisons. Appointed in April 2024, Skowron drew on his personal experience of federal incarceration for to lead the program, which unites business executives with inmates through and entrepreneurial education aimed at reducing and fostering economic independence. His tenure, lasting until July 2025, emphasized holistic support encompassing in-prison curricula such as a four-month mini-MBA, business plan competitions, and a Academy correspondence course, followed by post-release eSchool programming and community reintegration. During Skowron's leadership, PEP maintained its status as one of the largest and most established prison initiatives , having served over 3,000 participants with outcomes including a rate under 10%, 100% within 90 days for graduates, and 46% homeownership among . The organization supported the launch of more than 700 es by former inmates, facilitated through values-driven training in ten core principles covering , , and decision-making. Skowron oversaw key reentry components, including the PEP —a incubation hub—and Entre Capital, which provides microloans to to overcome barriers like limited credit access. Skowron's approach integrated his background in and with faith-based redemption narratives, promoting redemptive and workforce development to address Texas's high incarceration rate of approximately 120,000 individuals, 95% of whom face reentry challenges. He actively engaged in outreach, such as hosting visits from groups like Leadership Houston to showcase program impacts and forging partnerships with entities including Mission:Launch and TXRX Labs for expanded training opportunities. These efforts aligned with PEP's mission to transform lives, restore families, and rebuild communities by equipping participants with practical skills and networks typically unavailable to ex-offenders.

References

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