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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: Poet who wrote (278528)7/21/2002 6:06:34 PM
From: bonnuss_in_austin  Read Replies (1) of 769670
 
Files Reveal: Bush Knew Firm's Plight Before Stock Sale

truthout.org

Files Reveal: Bush Knew Firm's Plight Before Stock Sale
By Mike Allen
Washington Post Staff Writer

Sunday, July 21, 2002; Page A07

As a businessman in 1990, George W. Bush was deluged with confidential
information about the financial plight of a Texas oil company before he sold the
majority of his holdings and triggered a federal investigation, according to
Securities and Exchange Commission records.

President Bush has refused to authorize the SEC to open the full file on his
investigation, but selected documents have been released under the Freedom
of Information Act. The president's business dealings have come under more
scrutiny as he tries to restore confidence in markets hurt by business
scandals. Nearly half of 1,004 respondents in a Newsweek poll released
yesterday said they thought Bush took advantage of the system for personal
gain with the 1990 stock sale.

The documents show that four months before Bush sold most of his stake
in Harken Energy Corp., he and other board members received a letter from
management calling the previous year's profits disappointing and warning that
the company would "continue to be severely limited in our activities due to cash
constraints." The letter said that "as indicated at the December board meeting,"
the failure of a deal involving a subsidiary had "left the company with little cash
flow flexibility."

A management letter to the board in July 1990, a month after Bush's
$848,560 stock sale, portrayed the company as enduring months of turmoil.
"Due to the nature of our tasks through this past quarter the stress level is
beginning to show," the letter said.

The documents, released Friday by the nonpartisan Center for Public
Integrity, show that analysts following Harken were shocked by the losses
reported for the quarter that ended eight days after Bush's sale. Harken
President Mikel D. Faulkner told board members that he had received many
calls from brokers, shareholders and creditors and had provided "as positive a
response as is possible."

The White House has said Bush knew the company would record losses
but did not know how large they would be. Harken's stock price initially
plunged, then recovered and rose.

The SEC's investigation of Bush was closed after officials determined he did
not have enough insider information before his stock sale to warrant a case.

SEC Chairman Harvey L. Pitt said last week that he would release the
records if Bush asked him to. In response to a question about whether he
would ask the SEC to release the file, Bush replied Wednesday that "the key
document said there is no case."

The 150 pages of minutes and other board documents released Friday tie
Bush to the company's sale of Aloha Petroleum Ltd., which was recorded in
such a way that Harken masked massive losses, leading critics to compare the
accounting to methods used by Enron Corp. The SEC forced Harken to restate
the transaction.

The documents show Bush was proposed as chairman of a special
committee of the board with duties that included reviewing Aloha-related debt.
An analysis by the Center for Public Integrity said the documents "do not
unambiguously resolve the question of what Bush knew about Harken's
reporting of the sale."

Reflecting growing White House concern about the impact on the fall
elections of corporate wrongdoing and falling stock markets, Bush used his
radio address yesterday to promise that his administration "will do everything in
its power to ensure business integrity and long-term growth."

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed
without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational purposes.)

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© : t r u t h o u t 2002

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