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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (47556)2/7/2002 5:28:24 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
Folks are UPSET with the Enron Execs taking the 5th and not testifying today...

messages.yahoo.com

regards,

Scott

btw, The Enron Outrage needs to be covered thoroughly (like Watergate was)...

The truth needs to come out -- this may be the biggest case of deception and corporate fraud in our history...The country deserves to hear the hearings...We need to learn from them. The Justice Department will go after the guilty parties but Congress needs to modify the laws and improve corporate oversite.

Stay tuned...Wall Street's watching -- and the many of the I-Banks were in bed with Enron too...Congress and The Class Action Lawsuits will go after them in A BIG WAY...=)



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (47556)2/7/2002 6:42:27 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Andersen seeks to assure alums

February 07, 2002

(Reuters) — In yet another step to shore up its reputation, Andersen has dashed off a letter to its alumni telling them the beleaguered accounting firm will weather the Enron storm.

The No. 5 accounting firm, known within the industry for its ability to attract the best college graduates, has been taking several steps lately to repair its battered credibility following the Enron debacle.

In a letter dated Jan. 31 to former Andersen staff and obtained by Reuters, Chief Executive Joseph Berardino outlined the actions the firm has taken so far regarding its role in the Enron saga, repeatedly noting its proactive stance.

``When committees asked us to testify, we did so,'' Berardino wrote in the letter. ``Others did not.''

The four-page letter also mentioned how Berardino voluntarily testified before Congress in December but how Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay declined an invitation to appear.

In recent weeks, Andersen has been under heavy fire for blessing Enron's books that were later restated and for admitting its partners destroyed Enron-related documents. In response, Andersen has mounted an advertising campaign and hired former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker to head a panel that will review the firm's policies and procedures to bring about fundamental changes.

In the letter, Berardino also alluded to how all the Big Five accounting firms had their share of embarrassing accounting scandals.

``We're not the first, and we won't be the last big organization to run into serious problems,'' Berardino wrote. ''Our profession has seen major issues surrounding Barings, BCCI, Cendant, Rite Aid , Xerox , Maxwell and more. Our competitors have weathered the storm of these matters, just as we will.''



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (47556)2/8/2002 11:10:34 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones) Federal Reserve Board Governor Mark Olson said Friday that regulators have not detected any systemwide problems involving accounting irregularities at U.S. banks. "We think the Fed has the ability to ask for consolidation where there's a transfer of risk," Olson said, speaking to the American Bar Association. "But we do not see a systemic pattern of risk."