Andersen Offers Enron Settlement, Reports Say  Thursday February 28 12:42 AM ET  dailynews.yahoo.com                                                
                          WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Embattled auditor Andersen is                         offering a total payment of $750 million dollars to settle                         lawsuits stemming from its association with the fallen                         Enron Corp, newspapers reported Thursday. 
                          The Washington Post and USA Today said that under the                         settlement, $250 million would come from an insurance                         company co-owned by Andersen and its global affiliates                         with the remaining $500 million to be paid out in $100                         million increments over the next five years. 
                          An Andersen spokesman had no immediate comment on                         the reports. 
                          Andersen has come under fire for its auditing role at                         Enron amid questions about the energy company's                         accounting for certain partnerships that were off its                         balance sheets. 
                          USA Today said Andersen's New York law firm, Davis                         Polk & Wardwell, outlined the proposal Wednesday in a                         meeting with the Securities and Exchange Commission                         (news - web sites). 
                          The newspapers, citing sources close to the talks, said                         the settlement would cover all Enron-related legal                         actions threatening the accounting firm, including a                         federal class-action lawsuit filed by investors, a lawsuit                         on behalf of 401 (k) retirees and any SEC enforcement                         action. 
                          The Washington Post cited a source close to the firm as                         saying Andersen was also seeking to persuade the U.S.                         Justice Department (news - web sites) not to indict the                         firm. 
                          The paper cited a source close to the firm as saying                         Andersen was anxious to get the Enron litigation                         settled, within two weeks, before corporations send out                         annual ballots asking shareholders to ratify their choice                         of independent auditors. 
                          Both newspapers said SEC and Andersen                         representatives declined comment on the settlement                         efforts. 
                          Andersen has been saying that under the Enron cloud                         its very survival was threatened because it could have                         difficulty holding on to corporate clients and top talent. 
                          When Enron collapsed, Andersen's professional                         judgements became the subject of federal, civil and                         criminal investigations. dailynews.yahoo.com |