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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DOUG H who wrote (217194)1/11/2002 12:41:34 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 769668
 
I care when there IS an issue and when it doesn't take millions of dollars of taxpayer money to conduct witchhunt for which NO one was ever convicted....

Enron Contacted 2 Cabinet Officers Before
Collapsing

By ELISABETH BUMILLER

ASHINGTON, Jan. 10 — The
White House disclosed today that
Kenneth L. Lay, the chairman of the Enron
Corporation (news/quote) and one of
President Bush's biggest political
contributors, telephoned two cabinet officers
last fall, and one of them said Mr. Lay had
sought government help with its dire financial
condition.

Both said they declined to offer government
aid.

In a day of rapid-fire developments,
Attorney General John Ashcroft excused
himself from all matters involving Enron
because of campaign contributions he
received from it.

In addition, Enron's auditors said they had
destroyed numerous company documents
and electronic communications.

The Justice Department said on Wednesday
that it had created a nationwide task force to
conduct a criminal investigation into the
collapse of Enron, an energy trading
company with close ties to Mr. Bush and
many top administration officials.

Today, the entire United States Attorney's
office in Houston recused itself from the
investigation, saying many of its
approximately 100 lawyers, including the
chief prosecutor, Michael T. Shelby, had
family or other relationships with people
affected by Enron's filing on Dec. 2 for
reorganization under Chapter 11 of the
bankruptcy law.

The White House moved quickly to contain
the damage. The White House spokesman
said Mr. Bush was made aware of the
phone calls to the cabinet members only this
morning during an Oval Office meeting.

"What you have here is a case where a
contributor called up and asked for
something but did not get it," said Ari
Fleischer, the White House press secretary.

Yet the two cabinet secretaries who
received calls from Mr. Lay described
somewhat different conversations.
Commerce Secretary Donald L. Evans said
that Mr. Lay had indicated he would
welcome any government help with its bond
ratings, while Treasury Secretary Paul H.
O'Neill said the Enron chairman requested
no assistance at all.

Enron officials disputed the White House
version of events this evening and said Mr.
Lay was not asking for assistance from the
Bush administration in calling Mr. O'Neill
and Mr. Evans, Mr. Bush's presidential
campaign chairman and chief fund-raiser.
Enron officials also said Mr. Lay had called
Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the
Federal Reserve, to alert him to the
company's problems.

Mr. Lay was simply informing the
government about the possible bankruptcy
filing of the nation's seventh largest
company, Enron officials said, as has been
the practice of executives of other large
companies whose collapse could affect
worldwide financial markets.

"He did not ask for anything," said Mark
Palmer, an Enron spokesman.

Enron's troubles and its numerous links to
the Bush administration threatened to
consume the president's time and attention
even as he enjoys high approval ratings for
his conduct of the war on terrorism.

As morning newspapers announced the
expanding Justice Department investigation
today, Mr. Bush summoned reporters to the
Oval Office to declare that he had instructed
his economic advisers to develop a plan to
protect workers' pensions from similar
corporate failures. Thousands of Enron employees lost their life savings and
much of their retirement accounts when the company's stock became
virtually worthless last November.

Enron's auditor, the giant accounting firm Arthur Andersen, then said that it
had destroyed a "significant" volume of documents related to Enron. The firm
said it was still gathering information about the episode before deciding if it
would discipline the employees involved.

The Securities and Exchange Commission, which is investigating both
Enron's collapse and Andersen's conduct, said its inquiry would be
expanded to include the destruction of documents, in addition to looking into
whether it had created off- the-books private partnerships that disguised the
true financial condition of the company.

Almost simultaneously, Attorney General Ashcroft said he was recusing
himself from oversight of the criminal investigation of the company's collapse
because of his relationship with Enron. Common Cause reported today that
a canvass of federal election records showed that Mr. Ashcroft had received
a total of $54,499 from the company and Mr. Lay for his 2000 Senate
campaign.

Enron, which pioneered deregulation of the nation's power business and
grew to be one of the world's largest energy companies before its sudden
fall, has long nurtured close ties to Mr. Bush. But in the Oval Office today,
the president went to some length to distance himself from Mr. Lay, who he
said had been a supporter of Governor Ann Richards of Texas when Mr.
Bush defeated her in 1994.

"And she named him the head of the Governor's Business Council," Mr.
Bush said. "And I decided to leave him in place, just for the sake of
continuity. And that's when I first got to know Ken and worked with Ken."

Mr. Bush said that he had never discussed the financial problems of Enron
with Mr. Lay and that he had last seen him in the spring, at a fund- raising
event in Houston. Mr. Fleischer said Mr. Bush had not talked to Mr. Lay
since the spring.

It was Mr. Fleischer who first told reporters this morning, almost as an
afterthought at a sparsely attended early news briefing, that Mr. Lay had
called both Mr. O'Neill and Mr. Evans last fall to alert them about the
company's financial straits.

Officials at the Treasury and Commerce Departments said Mr. Lay had
spoken to Mr. O'Neill about Enron's condition on Oct. 28 and Nov. 8 and
had spoken to Mr. Evans on Oct. 29. Although Mr. Lay had maintained until
late October an optimistic public face about Enron's future, on Oct. 16 the
company reported a third- quarter net loss of $618 million. On the same
day, Moody's Investors Service announced that Enron's long-term debt
obligations were on review.

The dates of the calls and the announcements of the bad financial news about
the company are significant. If Mr. Lay had made the calls earlier in October,
before the state of the company was widely known, the Bush administration
would have been aware of the true condition of Enron while Mr. Lay was
promoting a different story on Wall Street.

CC



To: DOUG H who wrote (217194)1/11/2002 2:24:32 PM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769668
 
you really don't give a DAMN about "the little guy",
Hey, I like Robert Reich.
TP