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To: Patricia Meaney who wrote (97782)12/12/2001 3:47:47 PM
From: john  Respond to of 150070
 
Enron accountant accepts some blame
WASHINGTON, Dec 12, 2001 (United Press International via COMTEX) -- Arthur
Andersen LLP Chief Executive Officer Joseph Berardino on Wednesday described the
collapse of energy giant Enron Corp. a "tragedy on many levels" and said some
responsibility for the transparency problems should be borne by its auditor.

But Berardino also said that a full investigation is needed to determine how
Enron successfully hid massive trading losses from auditors, regulators and the
public.


"Many questions about Enron's failure need to be answered, and some involve
accounting and auditing matters," he said. "I ask that you keep in mind that the
relevant auditing and accounting issues are extraordinarily complex and part of
a much bigger picture. None of us here yet knows all the facts."

Berardino testified Wednesday before the House Financial Services Committee. The
committee chaired by Mike Oxley, R-Ohio, asked Enron officials to come and
discuss the issue with lawmakers. Enron Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lay,
however, declined to attend the hearing, citing a scheduling conflict with a
bankruptcy hearing. But Oxley and Richard Baker, R-La., who chairs the Capital
Markets Subcommittee, said they would eventually subpoena company officials if
they did not agree to appear soon.

In the past month, Enron -- which once had a market capitalization close to $80
billion -- has seen its share price drop from a 52-week high of above $80 per
share to under a dollar, the downgrading of its credit to junk bond status, the
collapse of a $10 billion merger with rival energy trader Dynegy, and finally,
bankruptcy.

The bankrupt energy trader is accused of hiding losses from ventures that fell
outside its usual power marketing, derivative trading, risk hedging and software
platform operations.

Berardino said Arthur Andersen would not have approved audits of the company
books if it knew of these ventures -- one of which was with a firm called Chewco
Investments LP.

"Very significantly, at the time of our 1997 procedures, the company did not
reveal that it had this agreement with the financial institution," Berardino
testified. "It is not clear why the relevant information was not provided to
us."

The accounting firm informed Enron on Nov. 2 that it could face a legal
investigation on its finances.

Lawmakers have opened several investigations into the Enron situation. Besides
Wednesday's hearing by the House Financial Services Committee, representatives
from the House Energy and Commerce Committee have demanded that Enron officials
turn over all records related to Enron's management and ventures and plan
extensive hearings into the resulting collapse.

Energy and Commerce Chairman Billy Tauzin, R-La., has also asked the Securities
and Exchange Commission to provide a comprehensive record of documents related
to Enron's accounting practices. Several Senate committees also plan
examinations of the company's practices.

Enron will undoubtedly also face additional scrutiny for its power trading
practices by other sets of regulators and lawmakers. Enron innovated the
treatment of electricity, futures, natural gas, bandwidth, and even weather
futures as investment vehicles, areas bound to draw the attention of
investigators for their complexity and cash flow.

Baker said Enron appeared to be an investment vehicle for its corporate officers
more than a company beholden to its shareholders.

"It has behaved like a hedge fund that happened to own a power company," Baker
said. "Over the last three years, one executive sold thousands of shares of
Enron ... worth a total of $353 million. What did this man know and when did he
know it?"

Rep. Ken Bentsen, D-Texas, who represents Houston, Enron's hometown, implied
that Enron executives intentionally violated securities laws, resulting in the
collapse of the share price. And because Enron employees were encouraged or
forced to hold a high portion of their retirement plans in now worthless Enron
stock, Bentsen is concerned about the future economic health of many of his
constituents.

"While the impact of Enron's collapse will be felt in many quarters, not the
least of which is Houston where thousands of employees have lost their jobs and
apparently their savings, this hearing will focus on the failure of the
company's corporate governance structure to properly oversee management along
with serious questions about Enron's outside auditor," he said.

"The scope of our hearing today must determine whether Enron's management
knowingly violated securities laws regarding disclosure or whether those laws
allowed for the company to limit disclosure of certain financing structures
which had the result of understating liabilities and overstating assets and
revenues," he added later.



To: Patricia Meaney who wrote (97782)12/12/2001 3:49:15 PM
From: Patsyw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 150070
 
I don't get it either, question to anyone who knows the rules, on a reverse split do MM's have to settle up short positions when the tickers change?