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Non-Tech : The ENRON Scandal

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To: Mephisto who started this subject10/10/2002 11:38:05 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (4) of 5185
 
Bush Oil Firm Did Enron-Style Deal - Report
Wed Oct 9, 5:20 PM ET
story.news.yahoo.com
By Greg Frost

BOSTON (Reuters) - President Bush former oil firm formed
a partnership with Harvard University that concealed the company's financial
woes and may have misled investors,
a student and alumni group said in a
report on Wednesday.

The partnership between Harken Energy Corp. and
Harvard, created with Bush's approval, bore strong
resemblance to the partnerships that helped
disguise Enron's problems,
the report's authors said.

The White House disputed that comparison.

HarvardWatch, an independent group of students
and alumni that monitors the school's investments,
said the partnership raised troubling questions about
the university's involvement in Harken when Bush
was a board member.

The deal, which HarvardWatch said improved Harken's financial position, also
provided further evidence of improper corporate practices at Harken while Bush
was a director, the group said.


A spokesman at the White House brushed aside the group's suggestions of
malfeasance and its comparing of aspects of the Harken-Harvard partnership to
Enron's so-called off balance sheet transactions.

"Harvard proposed and set the terms of the partnership," White House
spokesman Scott McClellan said. "Independent reports note that it was fully
disclosed and complied with accounting rules, so there really is no
comparison."

"In addition, Harvard's relationship with Harken began before the president
joined the board," McClellan said.

DEBTS REMOVED FROM BOOKS

Harvard Management Co., which oversees the school's $18 billion endowment,
was the biggest shareholder in Harken when the two sides agreed to create the
Harken Anadarko Partnership in late 1990, when Bush's father occupied the
White House and was preparing to drive Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
from Kuwait.


Over the next two years, the partnership allowed Harvard to bail out Harken's
business by removing from its books a large percentage of the company's
loss-generating assets and debts in the Anadarko region of Texas and
Oklahoma.


Specifically, Harken turned over drilling operations worth $26.1 million and $20
million of bank debts and liabilities to the partnership, the report said.

The partnership was not required to report its finances, meaning details of
Harken's oil and gas operations in the Anadarko region were hidden from public
view, the report said.

The maneuver improved Harken's official financial position, leading to a gradual
recovery in the oil firm's share price.
Harvard profited from the upswing to unload
some 1.6 million shares of the company.

Bush -- who was both a board member at Harken Energy and worked as a
consultant for the firm at the time, according to HarvardWatch -- gave the deal
his personal approval, according to minutes of Harken's Aug. 29, 1990 special
board meeting.


Officials at Harken were not immediately available for comment. Harvard said its
investments in Harken "were not inappropriate and were disclosed openly and
properly."

Harvard said it sold its shares in Harken at a profit, consistent with its mission.

Bush, who received an MBA from Harvard,
has faced questions surrounding his
own sale of more than 200,000 shares Harken stock in June 1990, a few
months before the partnership was formed.

Critics have said Bush, who served on Harken's board from 1986 until 1993, had
insider knowledge of the company's woes when he sold the shares. Bush has
denied any wrongdoing, and the SEC concluded that Bush did not engage in
illegal insider trading.

HarvardWatch said key parts of Wednesday's report, including the minutes,
were obtained by the Center for Public Integrity under the Freedom of
Information Act. Other elements came from filings with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (news - web sites).

The full report is available at
people.fas.harvard.edu


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