| Ashcroft Recused Himself From  Enron Case 
 ``The amount of Lay's contribution was many times
 greater than the maximum allowable contribution by
 individuals to federal candidates, which is just $2,000,
 and it appears to have been given in a manner that
 many campaign finance experts believe thwarted the
 intent of election laws,'' Waxman said.
 
 Thursday January 10 4:01 PM ET
 
 By James Vicini
 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S.
 Justice Department , which is investigating Enron
 Corp., said Thursday that Attorney
 General John Ashcroft (news - web
 sites) has removed himself from the
 case after receiving campaign
 contributions from the fallen
 energy giant.
 
 Enron and its employees
 contributed $57,499 to campaign
 committees for Ashcroft, previously
 a Republican senator from
 Missouri, in 1999-2000, according
 to Holly Bailey, researcher for the
 Center for Responsive Politics.
 
 This included a $25,000 donation
 from Enron chief Kenneth Lay, she
 said. Most of the rest of the money
 came from the corporation,
 although there were small amounts
 from other employees.
 
 Ashcroft took the action the same
 day U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman
 (news), a Democrat from California,
 sent him a letter saying Enron had
 been one of Ashcroft's largest
 contributors.
 
 ``The amount of Lay's contribution was many times
 greater than the maximum allowable contribution by
 individuals to federal candidates, which is just $2,000,
 and it appears to have been given in a manner that
 many campaign finance experts believe thwarted the
 intent of election laws,'' Waxman said.
 
 The Justice Department said in a three-sentence
 statement, ''The attorney general has not been
 involved in any aspect of initiating or conducting any
 investigation involving Enron.''
 
 The Justice Department, which confirmed the Enron
 investigation late Wednesday, said ``any and all
 responsibilities'' that would be handled by Ashcroft in
 the case would be handled instead by Deputy Attorney
 General Larry Thompson.
 
 Once the world's largest energy trader, Enron slid in
 mere weeks last year from Wall Street stardom to the
 largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history on Dec. 2.
 
 Enron was a major contributor to the election
 campaign of President Bush (news - web sites), as well
 as many other lawmakers, including Ashcroft. The
 once politically powerful company also advised the
 Bush administration on energy policy.
 
 The Houston, Texas-based company, once ranked No.
 7 on the Fortune 500 list of large corporations, is also
 being investigated by five congressional committees,
 the market-regulating Securities and Exchange
 Commission (news - web sites) and the Labor
 Department (news - web sites).
 
 ASHCROFT ACTED FOR 'SAKE OF APPEARANCE'
 
 A Justice Department official said Ashcroft removed
 himself from the case ``for the sake of appearance.''
 The official said government career ethics officers had
 ``looked at'' Ashcroft's situation.
 
 Also removing himself from the case was Ashcroft's
 chief of staff, David Ayers. He previously worked with
 Ashcroft in Congress.
 
 ``After review of the relevant facts and law, the attorney
 general and his chief of staff, David Ayres, have
 recused themselves in all matters arising out of
 allegations of misconduct by Enron Corp. due to the
 totality of the circumstances of the relationship
 between Enron and the attorney general,'' the
 department said.
 
 The official said Ashcroft and Ayres were the only
 Justice Department officials to remove themselves so
 far, but that the U.S. attorney's office in Houston was
 expected to issue a statement later Thursday.
 
 The Justice Department is setting up a task force to
 handle the Enron investigation. It is expected to
 include federal prosecutors from Houston, New York
 and San Francisco, and members of the Justice
 Department's fraud section.
 
 Robert Bennett, a lawyer representing Enron, has said, ``To my knowledge
 there's no evidence of wrongdoing yet. You have a business failure and you
 have a lot of allegations. But allegations are not the same as evidence.''
 
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