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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (2232)1/22/2002 11:10:45 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Enron: No Taxes . . .
Washington Post

By Richard Cohen

Tuesday, January 22, 2002; Page A15

I recently had dinner with a very rich man -- a multimillionaire for sure, maybe a billionaire.
He described one of his recent deals, how he had taken a small company, added all sorts
of doodads to it, done this and done that (pardon the technical
terminology) -- and sold it for an astounding amount of money. He then confided his business
philosophy: Pay no taxes.

As it happens, that's precisely my own business philosophy. Only I have been unable to implement it.
All the years I've been in business, which is to say working for a living, I have paid federal, state
and local taxes -- and I resent, loathe and even hate anyone who manages not to.

I am talking Enron here. It paid no federal corporate income taxes in four of the past five years.
It managed that while reporting profits that turned its stock from a stodgy performer to a Wall
Street high-flyer, enabling its executives and board members to sell more than $1 billion in
stock in that period. Most of that time, Enron paid nothing to Uncle Sam.

How did it manage to do this? Let me count the ways. Enron set up almost 900
subsidiaries in tax havens.
I am referring to the Cayman Islands, the Turks and Caicos,
Mauritius and Bermuda, places with nice beaches and banks that ask no
questions. Using those secret partnerships we now know about, the company buried
its profits under the palm trees, like the pirates of old.

At the same time, Enron was able to deduct the cost of stock options.
So the many millions that Enron's executives and board members received in options
were deducted for tax purposes.

In the year 2000, for instance, a tax bill of $112 million
turned into a refund of $278 million.

Enron billed itself as the quintessential American company.
It adapted to the new era and the New Economy. It traded in a
virtual intangible, energy -- by taking electricity from there and selling it here.
But it was quintessentially American in another way: It talked rugged individualism,
but when things got tough, the tough didn't get going. They put out their
hand.

The taxes that Enron did not pay -- that's YOUR MONEY. (You had to make up for it.)
The $254 million in the Republican-sponsored stimulus plan -- that would have been
your money, too,had it become law. It was awfully good of you, Mr. and Mrs. America,
to subsidize the stock options that Enron's biggies got for their hard work or,
in the case of its board, for merely showing up and asking no questions.


What we have here is an updated form of feudalism. Enron supported many
charities and cultural institutions -- but only the ones it chose. It put its
name on a stadium -- but, again, only the one it chose. It basked in the gratitude
it received for such largess -- All hail Enron -- and it felt it owed nothing to the
community at large. This is what taxes are about. You even support institutions that don't
have your name on them -- the welfare department, for instance.


I am about to get letters of reprimand. Enron did nothing illegal. I know that.
Avoiding taxes was smart -- and, while not commonplace, not unknown, either.
I know that, too. Some other Fortune 500 companies also paid no federal taxes.

In fact, I sense that everything Enron did was legal and that an entire company can collapse,
some people getting very rich and others losing everything they had, and no one will
ever go to jail. Enron failed because "the economics didn't work." So said Joseph Berardino,
the chief executive of Arthur Andersen, the accounting firm that ought to make the three monkeys
its corporate symbol.

But legal is not the same as right. It is simply not right that Enron paid no taxes while,
just to pick an example, its now-broke former employees did. It's not right that an
American company -- and oh, how American Enron was -- should act
like a drug dealer, laundering its money so that a profit somehow becomes a loss.
This is clever accounting, I grant you. It is, however, obscene.

For so much of what Enron and Arthur Andersen did, the phrase it is not right
seems apt. And the more you hear the likes of Berardino explain how everything
done was legal and up to the highest ethical standards, the more you understand that
this is not a scandal about a single company, but a reflection of a society in which the rules
you think apply to everyone actually don't. Most people pay taxes,
but some don't -- and the ones who pay subsidize the ones who don't.

I suppose you can call that a business philosophy. I call it a rip-off.


© 2002 The Washington Post Company



To: Mephisto who wrote (2232)8/17/2002 8:47:12 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 

"A senator leading an investigation of Enron asked the Justice
Department to explain why it hasn't prosecuted executives of the energy company that collapsed in December."

By MARCY GORDON 08/17/2002 10:29:35 EST

siliconinvestor.com

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Commerce subcommittee on
consumer affairs, asked Attorney General John Ashcroft in a letter on Friday
"why no action has been taken against those who were responsible for illegal activities
at the Enron Corp."


Dorgan noted that in recent weeks, the Justice Department has filed criminal charges
against top executives of several big companies, some of whom have been led away in
handcuffs.

On July 24, for example, the founder of bankrupt Adelphia Communications Corp. and
two of his sons were charged with conspiracy for allegedly looting the cable TV
provider and using it as their "personal piggy bank." Two former WorldCom executives
- chief financial officer Scott Sullivan and controller David Myers - were released on
millions of dollars in bail after their arrests Aug. 1 on charges of concealing more than
$3.8 billion in company expenses.

"These arrests have been arranged to allow the American public to see corporate
executives taken away in handcuffs," Dorgan wrote Ashcroft.

"The Enron scandal was the corporate scandal first to be uncovered. Yet the investors,
the employees and the American public have seen no action taken against those who
were involved," Dorgan said.


Justice Department spokesman Bryan Sierra said Ashcroft hadn't yet seen Dorgan's
letter.

A department task force investigating Enron since January "is working as fast as they
can and as aggressively as they can," Sierra said.

Justice prosecutors won a conviction of accounting firm Arthur Andersen in June on an
obstruction of justice charge for shredding of Enron audit documents.

Sierra said the Enron investigation is extremely complex and any prosecutions will be
"based solely on the evidence and the facts," rather than politicians' calls for action.

Houston-based Enron, which took the investments of millions of people with it when it
entered bankruptcy in December, used a web of thousands of off-balance-sheet
partnerships to hide some $1 billion in debt from investors and federal regulators.


A director of the failed company who conducted an investigation has said that
Enron managers, from former chairman Kenneth Lay down, knew that the
network of partnerships was being used to conceal huge debts.

Lay, who has been a friend of President Bush and one of his biggest campaign
benefactors over the years, enjoyed access to regulators and lawmakers in
Washington.


In June, the Justice Department charged three former British bankers with wire fraud in
an alleged $7.3 million scheme involving Enron - the first charges involving Enron as a
company.

The criminal complaint against the three former officers of National Westminster Bank
alleges that they secretly invested in an Enron entity, Southampton LP, through a
series of financial transactions.

siliconinvestor.com