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


To: Mephisto who wrote (1248)1/26/2002 4:33:27 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
Enron Ruling by Nominee Is Being Noticed
The New York Times
January 22, 2002

By JIM YARDLEY




H OUSTON, Jan. 21 - A Texas
Supreme Court justice who has
been nominated by President Bush to
fill a vacant federal judgeship could
face a fierce Senate confirmation fight
because her critics say she once wrote
an opinion that saved the Enron
Corporation about $15
million after accepting campaign
contributions from the company.


Liberal groups, who had already opposed the nomination of the justice,Priscilla
Owen, because of her conservative voting record, now plan to use her connections
to Enron to try to derail her nomination.


"I think the combination of campaign contributions from Enron and the fact that
she ruled clearly in Enron's favor in that case could be a subject of significant
concern by the committee," said Elliot M. Mincberg, legal director of People for the
American Way, a liberal group that monitors judicial nominations.

Justice Owen, 47, could not be reached for comment. She is considered by legal
analysts in Texas to be among the most conservative members of the Texas
Supreme Court, which, in turn, is considered one of the nation's most conservative
supreme courts. Last year, Mr. Bush nominated her for a seat on the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. The Senate Judiciary Committee has not
scheduled a hearing for Justice Owen.

Unlike many other states, Texas elects its judges, and candidates in competitive
state Supreme Court races can spend more than $1 million on a race. Justice
Owen was elected in 1994, and Enron's political action committee and executives
gave her $8,600. In 1996, Justice Owen's critics note that she wrote the majority
opinion in a unanimous decision that reversed a lower court order and reduced by
about $15 million the amount of school taxes paid by Enron.

A study released last month by Texans for Public Justice,
a nonprofit group that tracks campaign contributions in
Texas, found that since 1993, Enron has contributed
$134,058 to members of the state Supreme Court,
including the donation to Justice Owen. That total was the
most donated by any corporation.

The study found that Enron had a high success rate on
cases before the court. In three cases brought by Enron,
the court ruled in its favor twice. In three cases brought
against Enron, the court ruled in the company's favor each
time.

"Texas's high court judges are all tainted by
campaign-related conflicts of interest," said Craig
McDonald, director of Texans for Public Justice. "Two
months ago, Bush might have been able to put an Enron
judge on the appeals court. But he's not likely to get away
with it now."

Justice Owen, who attended Baylor College of Law, has
often been considered a member of the Texas court's
conservative bloc, led by Justice Nathan Hecht. As
governor, Mr. Bush appointed four justices to vacant seats
on the Supreme Court, all of whom were considered by
legal analysts to be more moderate than Justice Owen.

Dick Trabulsi, chairman of the political action committee
for Texans Against Lawsuit Reform, a conservative judicial
reform group, said any criticism of Justice Owen because
she sided with Enron was misguided. "We think it's very
unfair in a state that elects judges to be making
connections between the way a judge rules and a donation
that is made," he said.

"We have always found she exercises exceptional
judgment," he added, calling her a person of integrity.

nytimes.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (1248)1/26/2002 4:37:27 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5185
 
Bipartisan Outrage but Few Mea
Culpas in Capital

The New York Times
January 25, 2002

NEWS ANALYSIS

By DON VAN NATTA Jr.

W ASHINGTON, Jan. 25 -
The Enron
scandal has grown so large that it
took not one but two hearings on
Capitol Hill today for the
politicians to begin sorting
through the mess, while also
carefully sidestepping their own
role in it.

Anyone who tried to watch or
listen to both proceedings
simultaneously heard a
bipartisan chorus of outrage
about shredded documents and
empty retirement accounts.

"Enron robbed the bank. Arthur
Andersen provided the getaway
car, and they say you were at the
wheel," Representative James C.
Greenwood of Pennsylvania, the
Republican chairman of the
House Energy Committee's
subcommittee, told David B.
Duncan, the dismissed Arthur
Andersen partner who led the
accounting firm's audit of Enron
and who invoked his Fifth
Amendment right today against
self-incrimination.

Senator Richard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, said:
"When the corporate insiders at Enron realized the ship
was sinking, they grabbed the lifeboats and left the
women and children, their workers and investors, to
drown."

While politicians were quick to blame Enron's accountants
for allowing the giant energy trading company to collapse,
few on either panel were prepared today to accept any
blame for the role Congress played.

The White House, meanwhile, once again insisted today
that the company's failure was a business scandal - not a
political one.

White House officials adopted the stance of outraged
victim and vengeful cop. "Nothing is going to stop the
president and this administration from pursuing justice,"
said Ari Fleischer, the White House spokesman.

Vice President Dick Cheney continues to refuse to release
a list of people who met with his energy task force last
year, even though more senators have called for its
release.
Mary Matalin, a counselor to Mr. Cheney, said
today that the administration felt the list should be
withheld to protect the participants' privacy.

On Capitol Hill, some of the members posing the toughest
questions today had in earlier years voted for legislation
that deregulated commodities markets. They also blocked
several attempts to toughen accounting standards. Those
decisions helped make it easier for Enron to escape the
scrutiny of government regulators.

Several senators sitting on the Governmental Affairs
Committee, like Senator Robert G. Torricelli, Democrat of
New Jersey, pressured the Securities and Exchange
Commission in 2000
to abandon a proposed rule that
would have barred accounting firms from performing
auditing and consulting work for the same client, as
Andersen did for Enron. He was one of 13 senators who
intervened to quash the plan.

Yet Mr. Torricelli offered one of the day's only mea culpas.
Addressing Arthur Levitt Jr., the former chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission who had pushed for
the rule and testified today, Mr. Torricelli said: "We were
wrong. You were right."

Both at the White House and in Congress, the message is
simple: Punish those responsible for the Enron debacle,
and do everything possible to make sure another Enron
does not happen. There is not much appetite on either
end of Pennsylvania Avenue for the news media or the
public to dwell on any role the legislative or executive
branches may have played in creating an environment to
allow Enron to flourish.

"After all of the sound and fury of these investigations, the
bottom line questions are: Is Congress willing to amend
the law to rein in the greed of the next Enron?" Mr.
Durbin asked. "Are we willing to concede that the genius
of capitalism can result in ruthless behavior without our
oversight and the protection of law?"

Just as the White House has tried to avoid any political
fallout from the Enron debacle, members of Congress have
tried to escape any collateral damage from the scandal. So
the House Energy Committee resembled a bipartisan
corporate tribunal. Members acted as both prosecutors
and judges and the accused, Arthur Andersen L.L.P., was
left with almost no defense.

But many of the 11 House and Senate investigations into
the scandal plan not only on looking back, as was today's
chore, but also on trying to draft legislation that will
prevent another Enron. Whether that includes the
campaign financing laws that have helped give the public
the impression that many legislators have been tainted by
contributions from Enron or the accounting firms remains
to be seen.

"They are going to hit the easy targets first and hit the
easiest bad guys first," said Larry Noble of the Center for
Responsive Politics. "But they are going to have to deal
with the tougher questions, too, about their own role in
this."

Senator Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut, one
Democrat who has come under scrutiny for his role in
accounting legislation, has vowed his committee will
recommend changes in the law and regulations.

The inquiries are reminiscent of the role played by
Congress during the savings and loan crisis of the 1980's.
Some lawmakers touched by the scandal, most notably
Senator John McCain of Arizona - who took
contributions from Charles Keating, the operator of a
failed thrift, and spoke on his behalf - were deeply
affected by that experience and made campaign finance
overhaul a signature issue. Mr. McCain said of the Enron
scandal, "It's clear there is a taint out there on all of us."


As Mr. McCain's campaign finance bill regains momentum
on Capitol Hill, it is unclear whether the Enron debacle
will have a similar effect on House members and senators
who once sided with Enron and the accounting industry.

One candidate is Representative Billy Tauzin, the
Republican chairman of the House Committee on Energy
and Commerce. On July 20, 2000, in a letter co-signed by
20 House members, Mr. Tauzin opposed any toughening
of accounting rules. In the previous five years, Mr. Tauzin
had received nearly $150,000 from accounting firms.


As chairman of Congress's most aggressive committee
investigating Enron, Mr. Tauzin has hammered away at
the accounting profession.

His spokesman, Ken Johnson, said the case had changed
Mr. Tauzin's view of auditor independence. Two years ago,
Mr. Tauzin was convinced Mr. Levitt's plan was "a solution
to a problem that didn't exist," Mr. Johnson said. "Now we
know there's a problem. It's time to fix it."


nytimes.com