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Non-Tech : The ENRON Scandal -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (154)1/12/2002 2:37:06 PM
From: Doc Bones  Respond to of 5185
 
A potpourri, featuring Wendy Gramm, etc.

Apologies if these are referenced elsewhere on the thread.

Doc

________________________

Mr. & Mrs. Enron [BARRONS]

#reply-16773649

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Enron Board Comes Under a Storm of Criticism [NY Times]

#reply-16798079

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Death by Guru [NY Times, Op-Ed, Krugman]

#reply-16803845

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The Overshadowing of Enron [Wash. Post - media, Kurtz]

#reply-16803926

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Laissez Not Fair [NY Times, Op-Ed, Krugman]

#reply-16803928



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (154)1/12/2002 7:37:52 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
There is the possibility that Wendy Gramm could face criminal charges as well, according to
news reports.

Wow! From Afghanistan to the White House!!!!



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (154)1/12/2002 7:38:34 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5185
 
THE ENRON INQUIRY
January 12, 2002
E-mail story
Los Angeles Times

By RONALD BROWNSTEIN, TIMES POLITICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON -- The Enron Corp. scandal is
approaching a stage where questions about the
investigative process may threaten the White House
as much as revelations about its substantive dealings
with the bankrupt energy giant.

In the next several days, the most pointed questions
confronting the administration may not be whether
officials provided favored treatment for Enron as it
slid toward ruin. Instead, the White House is likely to
be pressed about whether it is providing enough
information to the public--and whether the Justice
Department can be trusted to perform an unbiased
investigation into the company's collapse.

Like the Clinton administration before it, the Bush
White House may soon learn that Washington
investigations tend to feed on themselves, generating
a sustained stream of controversies about the inquiry itself--with or without
evidence of underlying wrongdoing. "The average person out there believes two
things: politicians are corrupt and hiding things; and where there is smoke, there
is fire,"
said University of Virginia political scientist Larry J. Sabato, author of a
book about Washington scandals. "The questions being raised today are the
smoke. You don't need fire to do damage to the administration."

The smoke grew thicker Friday, when some government reform
advocates--citing the dense web of connections between the administration and
Enron--issued the first calls for the Justice Department to appoint an outside
counsel to manage the investigation.

"This company . . . is inextricably tied to the president and top officials in this
administration. And therefore, for public credibility . . . there ought to be an
outside counsel," said Fred Wertheimer, president of Democracy 21, a
nonpartisan group.

Likewise, Charles Lewis, executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Public
Integrity, said, "Having watched the independent counsels and all the special
counsels that have been named over the years, this is a classic situation . . .
where you would do something like that. So the stars are lined up to necessitate
consideration of this."


Congress let the law establishing the independent counsel's office expire in the
backlash against Kenneth W. Starr's inquiry into President Clinton. But Lewis
and Wertheimer note that the Justice Department still has the authority to name
an outside counsel to conduct the investigation.

"When the independent counsel law was not renewed, one of the arguments was
that the Justice Department could bring in an outside counsel when it needs one.
It needs one," Wertheimer said.

White House officials say they see no need for an outside counsel. "What you
have is a situation where the administration is on a multi-front effort leading the
investigation, through the Department of Justice and the Department of Labor,"
White House spokeswoman Claire Buchan said.

Political strategists in both parties believe that a sustained focus on Enron's
collapse will likely hurt the administration at least somewhat, even if no evidence
emerges that officials provided the company any favors.

The sheer demands of responding to the overlapping investigations--several
congressional committees also are probing the company's failure--create
distracting burdens on staff members. One GOP lobbyist said Friday he was
fielding questions from White House aides wondering if they needed to retain
lawyers.

Said one former Clinton White House aide: "As somebody who lived through this,
I would not underestimate the drain on a White House when you spend your
whole day running around trying to find a phone message that [Enron Chairman
and Chief Executive] Ken Lay left for [Vice President] Dick Cheney eight
months ago."

More significantly, operatives in both parties believe that the close ties between
Enron and Bush--the company has been among the most generous financial
contributors to his campaigns--may again expose the president to charges
prevalent before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks: that he is too sympathetic to
corporate interests.

"This is going to be very useful to Democrats in 2002 and maybe even 2004,
because . . . I can't think of an administration as close to corporate and energy
interests as this Bush administration," Sabato said. "And you have that powerful
image, that powerful populist image, of the greedy big boys versus the little guys
who get hurt."

Beyond this broader political threat, the White House faces the day-to-day
challenge of responding to the overlapping inquiries. In the days ahead, demands
from the press and Congress for a full accounting of all administration contacts
with Enron officials are likely to intensify after the revelations this week that Lay
spoke with Commerce Secretary Don Evans and Treasury Secretary Paul H.
O'Neill weeks before the firm's Dec. 2 bankruptcy filing.
Both officials said they
did nothing to aid Enron.

The White House said Friday it is not seeking to compile a comprehensive list of
administration contacts with Enron. But it said it was encouraging individual
departments to respond to such requests from the media as they arise.

If the administration holds to its opposition to an outside counsel or refuses to
provide full details about the substance of its Enron contacts, it could face days, if
not weeks, of media debate about whether it is fully cooperating with the various
investigations.

But after watching Clinton's death-match struggles with independent counsels, no
president is likely to be inclined to accept demands for such an investigation.
"Everybody who watched Clinton knows you do not go down that slippery slope
lightly," one high-ranking GOP strategist said.

Democrats also face difficult choices about how aggressively to pressure the
administration concerning Enron. On the one hand, many may be reluctant to be
seen as hectoring a popular commander in chief during a time of military action.

On the other hand, because so many congressional Republicans repeatedly
agitated for independent counsels under Clinton, Democrats may feel entirely
justified to call for one in a case in which so many administration officials have
business and political connections to the company under investigation.

"I think the leadership will be reluctant to [call for an independent counsel]," one
congressional Democratic leadership aide said. "But I wouldn't be surprised if
there are those within the party . . . who will do it. And I don't think the leaders
are going to be out there aggressively saying, 'Don't do that.' "
latimes.com