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


To: stockman_scott who wrote (2061)5/14/2002 11:25:24 PM
From: The Duke of URLĀ©  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
Why wouldn't you cite the url to that news article?



To: stockman_scott who wrote (2061)5/15/2002 7:59:45 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
Army Secy. White Should Go--Now

thenation.com

COMMENT | May 27, 2002

White Should Go--Now by Jason Leopold

Army Secretary Thomas White appears to be inching closer to becoming the first Bush Administration casualty of the Enron scandal. Senators Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer of California have asked Attorney General John Ashcroft to launch a criminal probe into Enron's role in manipulating California's electricity market, after Enron memos released by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission showed how Enron boosted electricity prices in California and created shortages.

People close to Feinstein and California Congressman Henry Waxman said the lawmakers will ask Ashcroft to direct that the criminal investigation include White and whether the unit he helped lead, Enron Energy Services, played a part in California's two-year energy crisis. "We believe we have evidence, based on our conversations with former Enron employees, that Mr. White and other executives from Enron Energy Services may have worked side by side with Enron's traders and supplied inside information about the amount of electricity California needed," an aide to Feinstein said. "We believe, based on this information, that the traders were then able to create shortages and manipulate the price of power in the state."

Neither a spokesman for White nor for Enron returned calls for comment. Enron is already under investigation by California Attorney General Bill Lockyer for allegedly manipulating the price of electricity and natural gas. White is being investigated by the FBI on the timing of his sale of Enron stock last year and by the Inspector General's office on his use in March of a government airplane to fly to Aspen to sign papers on the sale of a $6.5 million house he owned, prompted by Enron-related financial problems. Separately, he engaged in a dispute with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld over the Crusader weapons system; Rumsfeld continued to express support for him.

Former employees of EES have come forward saying that the retail unit, under White's leadership, played a role in California's power crisis and that White told his staff that EES would earn millions in profits because of the crisis. In addition, former employees are coming forward with information about White that indicates that his involvement with Enron's suspect accounting was far deeper that he has let on. White has said that EES was a legitimate operation and not a house of illusory profits.

John Olson, an analyst now with Sanders Morris Harris, recalls asking White in 1999 how EES, a relatively small operation, could show millions of dollars in profit with barely a shred of business. "I did not believe Mr. White, nor any of the other Enron executives I spoke with, were being honest or forthcoming about EES's profits," Olson said. "When I pressed Mr. White for an answer he said, 'One word: California.'"

White told EES's sales team in 1998 that they could earn hefty bonuses by signing energy contracts with large businesses in California to manage their electricity needs for a substantially cheaper price than these companies had been paying through their local utilities. But promising customers a discount at the beginning of the contracts meant EES wasn't earning enough money to cover what the local utilities were charging for gas and electricity. Moreover, EES was spending much more than anticipated setting up the infrastructure for the contracts, said Lee Jestings, a former EES executive who worked directly with White.

Jestings said he told White that EES would actually lose money this way, but White said Enron would make up the difference by selling electricity on the spot market in California, which Enron had bet would skyrocket in 2000. Jestings said he continued to complain to White that the profits declared by the retail unit were not real. "Tom told me those are the orders," Jestings said. "He said he never questions a direct order. This man spent thirty years in the Army and was a four-star general. His life was based on taking orders." Jestings said he resigned from EES in 2000 because he did not agree with the way EES reported profits. He is now working as an energy consultant.

The ex-employees, more than a dozen interviewed, said White often clashed with Lou Pai, chairman of EES, over the company's use of "aggressive" accounting methods to make the unit appear profitable when it wasn't but that ultimately White agreed that EES would have to use such methods because the unit was hemorrhaging cash right from the start. Steve Barth, a former EES vice president of special projects who attended meetings with White and Pai, said White's job was that of cheerleader--he was supposed to motivate the EES sales force to show, by any means necessary, that the retail unit made a profit. "That meant lying to Wall Street," Barth said. "White did it, and so did I." Barth, who transferred from EES to Enron's broadband unit in 1999 and left last July to start a broadband firm, said his experience at the company had been positive.

Enron reported that EES, founded in 1997, became profitable during the fourth quarter of 1999 and had steadily rising profits every quarter thereafter. Those reports helped send Enron's stock price to $83 by the end of 2000, from $43 at the beginning of the year. As part of his employment contract with Enron, White was given a small financial stake in EES, later converted into Enron stock, which he sold for more than $50 million.

Eventually, with Enron becoming a target of California lawmakers, White may have decided it was time to get out. In early 2001, according to Barth, when then-Enron chairman Kenneth Lay was under consideration to be Energy Secretary, Lay met with George W. Bush and urged him to appoint White as Secretary of the Army. Barth said White told him that the California energy crisis was hurting EES and that the unit's profits would never materialize. White "just wasn't happy with his role at the company anymore," Barth said.



To: stockman_scott who wrote (2061)5/18/2002 2:47:45 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
Volcker gives up the fight:

story.news.yahoo.com

Volcker: 'New Andersen' Over
Fri May 17, 6:03 PM ET
By Kevin Drawbaugh

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former Federal Reserve (news - web sites) Board Chairman Paul Volcker wrote off his effort to rescue embattled accounting firm Andersen on Friday and blasted the other major auditors for resisting reform.

Volcker, who earlier this month described his work at Andersen as being in a "state of suspension," now says the possibility of creating a new Andersen "no longer exists."

With Andersen crippled by its work for now-bankrupt Enron Corp. , Volcker said the now "big four" accounting firms and the industry trade association "have reverted to past instinct, joining hands to resist meaningful reform efforts."

In a letter to Senate Banking Committee chairman Paul Sarbanes, Volcker said he supports the Maryland Democrat's proposals for establishing a new accounting overseer and taking other steps to help prevent future disasters like Enron, once the world's largest energy trader.

Volcker criticized a Republican financial reform bill already passed by the House of Representatives, calling it in parts "tentative and vague, suggesting the ambiguity and hesitancy that has undermined previous and unsuccessful oversight bodies in the accounting area."

While the debacle surrounding Enron and its auditor Andersen has shaken markets, Volcker said it also presents a chance to push through real change. "The opportunity must not be missed," he said.

"The sheer number and magnitude of breakdowns that have increasingly become the daily fare of the business press pose a clear and present danger to the effectiveness and efficiency of capital markets," Volcker said in the letter to Sarbanes.

Andersen, the nation's fifth largest accounting firm, has been selling off portions of its business to competitors. The remaining big four, KPMG LLP [KPMG.UL], Deloitte & Touche [DLTE.UL], PricewaterhouseCoopers and Ernst & Young LLP, had no immediate comment in response to Volcker's criticism.

VOLCKER PESSIMISTIC

In early May, Volcker all but abandoned a bid to rescue Andersen, saying the embattled accounting firm had failed to meet several key conditions for his help.

Andersen is on trial in Houston for a criminal obstruction of justice charge because it destroyed audit records of Houston-based Enron. Andersen has lost hundreds of clients recently and seen many non-U.S. affiliates jump ship.

Volcker was hired by Chicago-based Andersen earlier this year to lead a rebuilding effort. He set up an independent oversight board that proposed Andersen restructure as a much smaller operation specializing in corporate auditing.

"The immediate objective of the group joining me in these views was to oversee reforms of the Arthur Andersen auditing firm," he said in the letter to Sarbanes.

"The hope was to encourage a 'new Andersen' as an exemplar of a firm dedicated to disciplined auditing as its first priority, with strong internal controls and free, to the extent practical, from conflicts that might impair its principal responsibility to the investing public.

"For well-known reasons, that possibility no longer exists. What remains of critical importance is that the reform effort not be thwarted by the failure of a particular firm," he said in support of Sarbanes' legislative agenda.

Sarbanes has scheduled a session of the Senate Banking Committee to draft a bill for Tuesday.

CONGRESS CHOOSES SIDES

Battle lines formed in Congress this week over two rival proposals to prevent future Enrons, with investor activists backing Sarbanes, and Wall Street putting its money on a bill from Ohio Republican Rep. Michael Oxley.

Both lawmakers call for a new boss for accountants, crackdowns on auditors and insider stock sales, and a near doubling of the Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web sites) budget.

But Sarbanes, whose proposal is still in draft form, goes further by seeking new rules for stock analysts and stricter limits on auditor-client relationships.

Oxley's more modest bill -- the Corporate and Auditing Accountability, Responsibility and Transparency Act, or CARTA -- passed the House on April 24 with huge bipartisan support.

Volcker wrote that prior efforts to change accounting "have foundered in the face of a lack of cooperation -- in fact strong opposition -- from the accounting profession."