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


To: Mephisto who wrote (3755)3/29/2002 7:47:52 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
-Andersen Backs Volcker Split-Up Plan
Fri Mar 29, 3:44 PM ET

By Chelsea Emery and Greg Cresci

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Accounting firm Andersen will
back away from its consulting business to focus on
auditing as it fights a criminal indictment over audits
that failed to flag the looming collapse of energy trader
Enron Corp., former U.S. Federal Reserve (news - web
sites) Chairman Paul Volcker said on Friday.

"We want to save the core," said
Volcker at a press conference in
New York. The nonauditing
businesses "could be sold as a
whole, pieces, individual partners
(could take over). All these
possibilities exist."

About 60 percent of the firm's
current partners work in divisions
outside the core auditing business,
including technology and
management consulting, he said. He
declined to say how many people
may lose their jobs.

Volcker has said he will head a seven-member board to
take control of Andersen and replace management if he
has support of Andersen partners and if the government
considered dropping or suspending its case.

He will also work on trying to persuade the Justice
Department (news - web sites) to drop its indictment.

"I have a personal interest in negotiations with Justice
because it's one of our conditions for our board to be put
in place," he said.

Andersen agreed to support the plan Volcker proposed
earlier to separate its consulting and auditing
businesses, a move that will likely deprive the firm of
lucrative consulting contracts.

Such consulting deals have boosted revenues at top
firms in recent years, but also raised conflict-of-interest
questions about whether auditors go easier on lax
bookkeeping at their firm's consulting clients.

Volcker's plan to whittle down Andersen could halve the
size of the 89-year old firm and put it at the forefront of
reforms sought by critics after the Enron debacle.

"I like to call it the 'new Andersen,"' Volcker said.

Andersen brought in Volcker to overhaul the firm, which
is losing droves of clients, after the government indicted
it, saying the firm obstructed justice by shredding
documents related to its Enron audits.

In the latest blow to Andersen, the Justice Department
said on Thursday it had impaneled a new grand jury to
investigate Enron and Andersen, arguing the accounting
firm has no right to stop it from going forward despite
already being indicted for obstruction of justice.

The information, which came in court papers filed late
on Thursday, raises the possibility more criminal
charges against Andersen or its employees could be
forthcoming soon.

The government's motion, in response to Andersen's
request that U.S. District Judge Melinda Harmon throw
out subpoenas for four employees, says a special grand
jury was impaneled on Wednesday to investigate crimes
related to the Enron collapse.

Xcel Energy Inc. , a electricity and natural gas company,
on Friday became the latest firm to drop Andersen as its
auditor, saying it would replace it with Deloitte &
Touche.

Enron went bankrupt late last year after investors
learned about a complex web of off-balance-sheet
transactions -- that its auditors at Andersen approved.
Last fall, the once high-flying company had to restate
earnings going back to 1997, revising profits sharply
downward.

Volcker had said earlier he would advise the firm in its
struggle to survive after the indictment, if he had
support of Andersen partners.

After a five-hour closed circuit television meeting on
Thursday, Andersen said it supported Volcker's's plan
and it will "address" its non-audit businesses, like the
tax, business consulting and corporate finance
practices. The units could be sold, merged, or spun off
into a stand-alone entity, all outcomes discussed by
Andersen's top U.S. partners at the meeting.

"We are committed to building the audit firm of the
future under the leadership and recommendation of Mr.
Volcker," Andersen managing partner Larry Gorrell said
in a statement on Thursday.

Thursday's meeting brought together Andersen's roughly
1,700 U.S. partners and comes as the Chicago-based
firm, which employs 85,000 people worldwide, is reeling
as a result of its role in the Enron scandal. The latest
casualty was the firm's Chief Executive Joseph
Berardino, who resigned on Tuesday.

Another closed-circuit meeting is set for Tuesday, when
a board meeting of umbrella organization Andersen
Worldwide will take place in London.

On the merger front, Andersen has been pushing for
deals across the globe in a bid to salvage some of its
international businesses. Talks are continuing between
Andersen and KPMG on a merger of partnerships in various countries, although
some have done deals with rival firms, including Russia, Australia, New
Zealand, Hong Kong and China.
story.news.yahoo.com
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