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


To: Mephisto who wrote (708)1/17/2002 5:26:52 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
Bush accused of revising history over Enron links
From Conor O'Clery, International Business Editor, in Houston

The Irish Times

US President George W Bush asserted last week that he had
"inherited" Enron chief executive Mr Kenneth Lay as a supporter
from Democratic Governor Ann Richards when he defeated Ms
Richards in the gubernatorial election of 1994.

That's not how they see it in Houston, Texas, where Enron is
headquartered.

Mr Bush "revised history", said Texans for Public Justice, a
campaign finance reform organisation which produced evidence to
show that Mr Lay in fact strongly favoured Mr Bush in 1994.

The President is clearly anxious to distance himself from Mr Lay
as the scandal grows over the bankruptcy last autumn of the giant
energy trading company, which cost thousands of jobs and wiped
out the retirement savings of many employees.

In the latest revelation, Time magazine disclosed that on October
12th, just four days before Enron reported a stunning $618 million
(€694 million) loss for the third quarter, the auditor, Arthur
Andersen, received an extraordinary instruction from an Enron
lawyer to destroy all audit material, except for the most basic
"work papers", and that the process of shredding went on for
weeks.

Mr Lay and his wife Linda personally gave Mr Bush $47,500 and
Enron executives gave the Bush campaign another $146,500 in
the closely-fought 1994 campaign for governor of Texas, which Mr
Bush won, while Ms Richards received only $12,500 in Enron
money, according to Texans for Public Justice.

Mr Lay "was a supporter of Ann Richards in my run of 1994", Mr
Bush said last week. "And she did name him head of the
Governor's Business Council, and I decided to leave him in place
just for the sake of continuity. And that's when I first got to know
Ken . . ." Mr Lay confirmed his support for Mr Bush in 1994 in a
television interview last year, when he said he supported him in
that campaign because by then "I was very close to George W".

Mr Bush received a total of $220,700 from top Enron executives
for his 2000 presidential campaign, of which Mr Lay contributed
$44,000, according to another watchdog group, the Centre for
Public Integrity. During his political career, Mr Bush has received
$550,000 altogether from Enron, its employees and relatives,
according to the Washington Post, which discounted earlier
reports that he got up to $1 million.

Enron's total contributions to Republicans over the years
amounted to $1,766,244 and to Democrats $680,654, according
to the Houston Chronicle.

Court filings based on public records have meanwhile exposed
how much Enron executives made by selling their shares while
the company was riding high on the back of financial reports that
hid losses going back to 1997.

A group of 29 Enron executives made $1.1 billion by selling
shares from 1999 until six months ago, according to court papers
filed by Amalgamated Bank of New York. Of these, at least 12
received $30 million or more through their share sales. Mr Lay got
$101.3 million by selling 1.8 million shares, trading almost every
day between 1999 and mid-2001.

Mr Lou Pai, former chairman of an Enron subsidiary, received
$353.7 million, according to the filings. Mr Jeffrey Skilling, who left
Enron last year, received $66.9 million.

The law suit accuses the 29 executives of "unlawful insider
trading", saying they employed "devices, schemes and artifices to
defraud". "This is the most massive insider bailout that we have
ever seen," said Mr William Lerach, a bank lawyer. An Enron
spokesman said the suit was "completely without merit".

Mr Lay has been asked by the ranking Democrat on the House
Commerce Committee, Mr Henry Waxman, to explain an e-mail
message to employees last August stating Enron remained
strong. Severely wounded by its role in the Enron scandal, Arthur
Andersen may be forced to seek a merger with one of the other
Big Five accounting firms in the US, according to industry
analysts.

However, the other members of the Big Five - Ernst & Young,
KPMG Peat Marwick, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu and
PricewaterhouseCoopers - may not be willing to adopt Andersen's
problems. Last year, the Securities and Exchange Commission
fined Andersen $7 billion for not disclosing fraud at Waste
Management.

They are also facing scrutiny over too-cosy relationships with
firms they audit, as most of their profits now come from consulting
services. Last week, Andersen admitted that it had destroyed the
documents relating to its Enron audit. The company faces a
Justice Department criminal investigation, a Congressional inquiry
and billion-dollar law suits from shareholders.

Supervisors at Andersen repeatedly reminded employees of the
document-destruction memo in the weeks leading up to the first
SEC subpoenas that were issued on November 8th, according to
Time. The firm did not rule out the possibility that some
destruction continued even after that date.

The federal investigation in Washington will be overseen by Mr
Josh Hochberg, head of the fraud section who was involved in the
case of the FBI tape of Linda Tripp and Monica Lewinsky, which
lead to the case against former president Mr Bill Clinton.

The probe will try to determine whether Enron's partnerships with
shell corporations were designed to hide its liabilities and mislead
investors, if evidence was intentionally destroyed and whether
Enron received special favours for its political contributions.

ireland.com.

©The Irish Times



To: Mephisto who wrote (708)1/18/2002 8:25:22 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5185
 


Enron's Influence Reached Deep Into Administration
Ties Touched Personnel and Policies

By Dana Milbank and Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, January 18, 2002; Page A01

As presidential candidate George W. Bush's top economic adviser in 2000, Lawrence B. Lindsey
was also a paid consultant to Enron Corp. At one point, those two roles merged.

For $50,000 a year, Lindsey attended meetings in 1999 and 2000 of the energy
company's economic "advisory board." In those sessions, Enron Chairman Kenneth
L. Lay convinced Lindsey of the wisdom behind one of Enron's businesses, a
consulting operation that advised companies on energy efficiency.

"It stuck with me," Lindsey said in an interview yesterday.


In fact, Lindsey incorporated Lay's ideas into the Bush campaign's energy policy.
During the campaign, Lindsey described Lay's contribution as key.

The cozy relationship -- in which a Bush campaign adviser, being paid by Enron,
placed an Enron idea on the candidate's agenda -- served as one more reminder of the
political influence and reach of the once-giant energy company.

Its ties extend deep into President Bush's staff, appointments, Cabinet members,
friends, family -- and his own past.


According to financial records, 35 administration officials have held Enron stock.
A few, such as top Bush political adviser Karl Rove, had six-figure holdings.
Several others -- Lindsey, U.S. Trade Representative Robert B. Zoellick, Commerce
Department general counsel Theodore W. Kassinger, Maritime Administrator William
G. Schubert -- served as paid Enron consultants.

Bush's secretary of the Army, Thomas E. White, was vice chairman of the Enron business
that Lay had described to Lindsey during the campaign. White had held between
$25 million and $50 million in Enron stock in addition to options
and other forms of remuneration.

Newly appointed Republican National Committee Chairman Marc F. Racicot was
an Enron lobbyist. Bush campaign adviser Ed Gillespie, sent in when Bush took
office to get the Commerce Department up and running, was an Enron lobbyist.

Still others, such as Attorney General John D. Ashcroft and Energy
Secretary Spencer Abraham, received campaign
contributions from Enron, while many more -- including
Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Harvey L. Pitt,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Patrick H. Wood III
and Deputy Attorney General Larry D. Thompson --
have indirect ties to Enron or auditor Arthur Andersen.

And Enron consulted on policy with top administration officials
such as Commerce Secretary Donald L. Evans, Treasury Secretary
Paul H. O'Neill and Vice President Cheney.

There has been no indication that the administration's ties to Enron are illegal,
and the giant company had similar connections to several Democrats and Republicans
in Congress. But the sheer volume of Enron connections to the
executive branch offers a study in the long reach of a powerful campaign
contributor and aggressive corporation. Though
the administration says it made no effort to keep Enron afloat,
the extensive ties between the two may present Bush with a
political difficulty if Democrats can create a perception of guilt by association.


Enron began in 1985 as a traditional gas pipeline company, but transformed itself
into an innovative trader of gas, electricity and other commodities. Its stock became
a Wall Street favorite as it tried to enter markets for fiber-optics, movie
rentals, paper, even advertising. Many of its businesses were regulated or otherwise
affected by federal decisions.

Enron and its executives poured millions of dollars into the political process -- $1.7 million
in the 2000 election alone,
according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Over the years, a series of actions by Congress and the FERC, which
broke down the old monopoly of utility companies
over power plants and transmission lines, benefited Enron.
The company successfully lobbied for a regulatory exemption
for futures trading in energy "derivatives," complex financial instruments
that became its most lucrative business and
contributed to its downfall. The Bush administration sometimes rebuffed Enron,
however, such as when it refused to
embrace an Enron-backed position on combating global warming.

Bush last week played down his ties to Lay. He said he "first got to know Ken" in 1994,
when "he was a supporter of Ann Richards," the Democratic Texas governor whom
Bush ousted. In fact, Bush knew Lay from their work on the 1992
Republican National Convention and the Bush presidential library.

The current president received $47,500 from Lay and
his wife in 1994 -- many times what Richards received.
Lay has said he supported Bush, not Richards, in 1994.

Over the years, Lay and Enron interests have contributed more than a half million dollars
to Bush campaign funds, according to the Center for Public Integrity, making him Bush's
greatest patron. The Bush presidential campaign reimbursed Enron for use of its corporate jets.
Lay, who got the nickname "Kenny Boy" from Bush, served on Bush's
presidential transition advisory team for the Energy Department.

Enron employee Cynthia Sandherr served on the
transition team for the Commerce Department.


In the White House, four senior officials were listed as Enron shareholders.
Three of them -- Cheney chief of staff I. Lewis
"Scooter" Libby, congressional liaison Nicholas E. Calio and
former communications adviser Margaret Tutwiler -- likely sold
their interests or were not required to under ethics rules; full details will not be
made public until May.

The fourth, Rove, whose Enron holdings were valued between $100,000 and $250,000,
sold his shares last year after the value had fallen to $68,000; the Enron shares,
which the White House said Rove purchased on his own, were part of a
portfolio worth more than $2.3 million.


White House counsel Alberto R. Gonzales acknowledged last June that Rove took
part in meetings that helped shape the administration's energy policy while he
still owned stock in Enron and other energy companies. Gonzales, however, said
the meetings were general in nature and not specific enough to be barred
by conflict-of-interest regulations.


Also tied to Enron is Lindsey. His consulting firm, Economic Strategies Inc.,
counted an Enron unit among its many clients. Counting speaking fees
and his multi-client business, Lindsey earned more than $1.1 million in 2000.
White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said that Lindsey, before Enron's Dec. 2 bankruptcy filing,
led a White House "review" that monitored the impact of Enron's woes on energy markets.
Lindsey said it was merely part of an ongoing monitoring of the energy markets by
one or two aides. Democrats in Congress yesterday said Lindsey's actions may have
violated federal conflict-of-interest regulations. Lindsey said his work was not "Enron-specific."

Cheney, himself a former Texas energy executive, was on a first-name basis with Lay,
who met with the vice president to discuss development of the administration's national energy
policy. In all, the vice president's office disclosed, the energy task force met six times with
Enron representatives. Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.), a critic of the task force, said "it
seems clear that there is no company in the country that stood to gain as much from the
White House plan as Enron."

A number of senior Bush aides have had routine or incidental contact with Enron.
White House Chief of Staff Andrew H.Card Jr. was alerted by Commerce's Evans about a call
from Lay expressing a desire for government help in the weeks
before its bankruptcy. Bush budget director Mitchell E. Daniels Jr. received a call
from Lay in October about prospects for the economic stimulus package.
That package, as passed by the House, included a tax provision that would have provided
Enron with a $254 million rebate, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Even Bush's homeland security director, Tom Ridge, had Enron ties.
At Lay's urging, Bush called Ridge in 1997 when he
was Pennsylvania governor to help with Enron's bid -- eventually
successful -- to enter the Pennsylvania market.

At the Justice Department, Ashcroft and staff chief David Ayres -- Ashcroft's former
campaign manager -- recused themselves from the Enron probe because of Enron
contributions to Ashcroft's campaign funds.

The Justice Department decided that deputy staff chief David Israelite and
communications director Barbara Comstock
need not recuse themselves; both had worked for the Republican National Committee,
which received hundreds of thousands of dollars from Enron. Thompson, Ashcroft's deputy,
was a partner in a law firm, King & Spalding, that represented Enron, but he disagreed with
a Democratic lawmaker who said Thompson should disqualify himself.

After Commerce's Evans received a call from Lay in which the Enron chief said he
would value government calls to a private credit rating agency, Evans called into his
office his counsel, Kassinger. Kassinger had earlier said he had provided "legal
services" to Enron while a trade lawyer at the firm Vinson & Elkins LLP in Houston,
Enron's hometown. Ultimately, Evans
said, he decided not to intervene.

Treasury's O'Neill, who also got a call from Lay concerning Enron's dire finances,
handed the matter over to Peter R. Fisher, the undersecretary for domestic finance.
Fisher had holdings in Enron valued between $1,000 and $15,000 when
he joined the administration, as did Mark A. Weinberger, the assistant treasury secretary
for tax policy. Treasury's spokeswoman said Fisher's modest holdings were part of a trust
that he does not control. O'Neill said the department
provided no help to Enron, although it consulted with lenders.

Elsewhere in the administration, Trade Representative Zoellick received $50,000 in advisory
fees from Enron and listed stock holdings between $15,000 and $50,000 -- relatively small
percentages of his overall earnings and holdings (Zoellick
sold his shares after joining the administration).

A score of other administration officials had Enron holdings, ranging from relatively
small stakes held by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Export Import
Bank Chairman John E. Robson to holdings exceeding $100,000 by Charlotte L.
Beers, the undersecretary of state for public diplomacy.

At the SEC, Pitt faced requests this week from congressional Democrats and
the watchdog group Common Cause that he remove himself from his agency's Enron investigation because he had been a securities lawyer who represented Andersen, Enron's auditor. FERC Chairman Wood,
a friend of Lay's, replaced Curtis Hebert Jr. Hebert told the New York Times last
year that Lay had said he wouldn't back his reappointment unless Hebert changed his views on electricity deregulation.


Even since its bankruptcy filing, the vestiges of Enron continue to touch
those around the president. Bush's brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, flew to Houston yesterday for a $500-per-person fundraiser at the home of a former Enron
president.

Staff writers George Lardner and Paul Blustein contributed to this report.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company
washingtonpost.com of Texas