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To: Cactus Jack who wrote (53102)6/24/2002 2:47:43 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Market Crisis Management

By HEDRICK SMITH
The New York Times / Editorial
6/20/02

WASHINGTON — With the conviction of Arthur Andersen for obstruction of justice, the Bush administration can claim an early, if shaky, victory in the Enron scandal. But that case does not address the central problem: the deceptive bookkeeping at Enron and elsewhere that has left a cloud of public distrust hanging over the financial markets.

The Bush administration has two potential strategies to restore this trust. It can vigorously prosecute corporate executives and their auditors for putting out flawed financial reports. And it can revamp the standards and oversight system to prevent misleading reports from being issued and make enforcement easier when potential fraud is discovered.

On regulatory reform, the proposal put forth Tuesday by Harvey Pitt, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, falls short. At any rate, the S.E.C. can only impose civil penalties; it cannot bring criminal charges against wrongdoers.

But fines and even stockholder lawsuits have been insufficient deterrents. Last year, for example, the S.E.C. reprimanded and fined Arthur Andersen $7 million for what the S.E.C. called a six-year cover-up of "massive fraud motivated by greed" at Waste Management. Andersen promised never to do it again. But it was already enmeshed in Enron, and there was no visible effect on its conduct. In general, accounting firms see fines and even huge stockholder settlements as a cost of doing business.

But the threat of going to jail will get the attention of top executives. What's more, cynicism about the markets will persist until the public sees some corporate officials sent to prison for putting out false financial reports.

Oddly, better criminal enforcement is the easy part — and the part for which the Bush administration has thus far shown a preference. The hard part is finding better ways to prevent failed audits and dishonest books, and on that score, both the Bush administration and Congress have failed. Neither the administration's proposal nor a bill passed Tuesday by the Senate Banking Committee does enough of what is necessary: tightening up auditing standards, assuring auditor independence from corporate clients, imposing effective oversight and having a federal agency — not accounting firms — determine what documents must be kept and provided to regulators.

In April the House of Representatives passed a bill that does little to plug the legal loopholes or materially strengthen oversight. At the S.E.C., Mr. Pitt — who spent years serving as a lawyer for the accounting industry — has put forward a modest proposal for a new Public Accountability Board, consisting of three accountants and six public members, to monitor the quality of audits. It would have power both to replace poor auditors and to discipline corrupt ones. But it leaves the initiative for setting standards in the hands of the accounting industry, a process that has served corporate clients better than investors.

Senator Paul Sarbanes of Maryland, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, crafted a bill with significantly stronger provisions that would change the way the accounting profession does business. The Sarbanes bill moves to reduce the conflicts of interest for auditors. It puts strong limits on the consulting work that accounting firms can do for corporate audit clients and requires the rotation of auditors every five years.

Where the Sarbanes proposal fails is in creating a public oversight board of five members, two from the accounting profession. This leaves the board too vulnerable to dominance by the industry it is charged with regulating. And the bill could still be watered down on the Senate floor or, if it passes, in conference with the House.

In short, the momentum for reform so visible in January has largely evaporated. Debate is now bogged down in politics, mostly out of public view and couched in legislative complexity that leaves millions of disillusioned investors shut out.

To show a serious commitment to fighting the corporate scandals represented by Enron, the Bush administration must aggressively pursue criminal prosecutions of corporate executives and auditors — not just at Enron but elsewhere. And it will need to show the investing public that it is taking action to restore the independence of auditors by curbing the hand-in-glove collaboration of accounting firms and their corporate audit clients.

But what investors really need may be a political champion who will make honest accounting a high-profile issue, as Senator John McCain did with campaign finance reform. Otherwise, they should brace themselves for more Enrons.

________________________________________

Hedrick Smith is correspondent and senior producer for "Bigger Than Enron," a Frontline investigative report airing tonight on PBS.

nytimes.com



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (53102)6/25/2002 8:13:54 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Bonds Goes Deep Twice, Wins Game

By JOSH DUBOW
AP Sports Writer
June 25, 2002, 2:52 AM CDT

Barry Bonds gets pitched around so often that Trevor Hoffman thought he could sneak a first-pitch fastball by him.

Think again.

After tying the game with a three-run homer in the seventh inning, Bonds won it with a solo shot off Hoffman in the ninth, leading the San Francisco Giants to a 7-6 victory over the San Diego Padres on Monday night.

"The pitch I threw is a pitch that's going to make your manager and pitching coach cranky," Hoffman said. "It was a pitch that was good enough to hit out of the ballpark, so it was a pitch that shouldn't have been thrown."

Bonds, who has 91 walks this season, has 24 homers on the year and 591 for his career.

"I've never seen anything like what he did tonight," said reliever Jeremy Fikac, who served up Bonds' three-run homer. "I don't know if he's human right now."

With one out in the ninth, Bonds drove the first pitch he saw from Hoffman (1-1) down the right-field line, the ball curling just inside the foul pole. It went an estimated 378 feet.

It was the first homer allowed by Hoffman in 28 innings this season.

"He hit a good pitch on the inside off Trevor," Giants manager Dusty Baker said. "They know each other pretty good. They've been facing each other for years. That's a real cat-and-mouse game between those two. Trevor's a star and Barry's a star. Tonight, Barry won."

In other NL games, it was: Colorado 4, Los Angeles 1; Atlanta 3, New York 2; Philadelphia 15, Florida 4; and Chicago 6, Cincinnati 4.

Bonds is fourth on the career homer list, 69 behind his godfather, Willie Mays. It was his 60th multihomer game.

Bonds has 68 career homers against the Padres, his most against any team, and 36 in San Diego, his most in any road ballpark.

They were Bonds' first homers since June 12, a span of eight games. Bonds walked twice Monday, the first intentionally, and he remains on pace to break the single-season walks record of 177 he set last season when he hit 73 home runs.

"He was getting some balls to hit, occasionally; most of the time they were running from him," Baker said.

Tim Worrell (4-0) pitched a perfect eighth for the win. Robb Nen pitched the ninth for his 19th save.

Rockies 4, Dodgers 1

An emotionally charged Mike Hampton won for the first time in four starts and hit his second home run of the season as visiting Colorado won its fifth straight.

Pitching for the first time since the death of former Houston teammate Darryl Kile, Hampton wore Kile's No. 57 on his cap. He allowed one run and five hits over six innings and was aided by three double plays.

After giving up Shawn Green's two-out homer in the first, Hampton (4-8) homered off Kazuhisa Ishii (11-3) to lead off the second and give Colorado a 3-1 lead. It was Hampton's ninth career homer -- the most among active pitchers -- and his 50th RBI.

Jose Jimenez got three outs for his 20th save. It was his 61st with the Rockies, breaking Bruce Ruffin's club record.

Braves 3, Mets 2

At New York, pinch-hitter Keith Lockhart lined a leadoff home run in the ninth inning against Scott Strickland (6-4) and Atlanta won its sixth straight.

The Braves improved to 17-4 in June behind a solid effort from starter Kevin Millwood and the majors' best bullpen. Julio Franco also homered for Atlanta.

The Mets began a big week -- four games against the Braves and three against the Yankees -- by dropping 8 games behind Atlanta in the NL East.

Phillies 15, Marlins 4

Ricky Ledee had a career-high four hits, hiking his average from .140 to .190, and Vicente Padilla pitched five innings for his 10th victory as Philadelphia won at Florida.

Pat Burrell and Mike Lieberthal each homered and drove in four runs. Bobby Abreu also homered.

Padilla (10-4) was taken out as a precaution after bruising his right arm when hit by a pitch. The right-hander won his fourth consecutive decision, allowing two hits and one run.

Cubs 6, Reds 4

Delino DeShields hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning as the Chicago bats broke through late in the game to hand visiting Cincinnati its eighth straight loss.

Trailing 2-1 in the seventh, the Cubs took control in the seventh with an RBI double by Roosevelt Brown off Scott Williamson (2-2) and DeShields' third homer.

Jeff Fassero (2-5) got two outs for the win. Antonio Alfonseca pitched the ninth for his 11th save.

Copyright © 2002, The Associated Press
______________________

Btw, jpgill I hope you are enjoying your vacation.



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (53102)6/26/2002 10:22:07 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
NEWSMAKER-Superlawyer Boies fights for corporations in peril

By Philip Klein

NEW YORK, June 21 (Reuters) - Corporate America, reeling from scandals that top executives misled investors and used company cash as their personal piggy banks, is turning to the same lawyer Al Gore hoped would stave off defeat in the last presidential election.

It's business as usual for David Boies, 61. The attorney has been at the center of the biggest legal fights of the last quarter century, including arguing "hanging chads" should count as Gore votes, grilling software billionaire Bill Gates in the Microsoft anti-trust trial, and nailing former junk bond king Michael Milken.

The omnipresent lawyer recently has been hired by companies Adelphia Communications Corp.<ADELA.PK> and Tyco International Ltd.<TYC.N>, as both struggle to overcome regulatory and criminal probes into charges of corporate malfeasance.

"In troubled times a company wants to turn to someone who has a reputation for thoroughness and integrity, and he has a reputation for that," said Charles Elson, director of the University of Delaware Center for Corporate Governance.

Boies' firm, Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP, also is representing Qwest Communications International Inc.<Q.N>, the cash-squeezed local telephone company that is being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for possible accounting errors.

Boies, who has been known to appear in court wearing sneakers and poorly fitting suits, has a knack for explaining complex issues in plain English, said Steven Edwards, an attorney at Hogan & Hartson LLP. That's precisely what makes Boies one of the most sought after corporate attorneys.

After decades of involvement in big cases -- including aiding the U.S. Justice Department in its antitrust case against Microsoft -- Boies has enormous credibility among boards of directors, regulators and shareholders. As his stature has risen, so have his fees: he now charges over $700 an hour, according to news reports.

Boies has such a full plate, it seems impossible he can give any client the necessary attention, critics say. Then again, Boies 5-year-old law firm now employs 100 lawyers in five U.S. cities.

"Obviously, clients think it's worth it to get whatever time he can spend," Edwards said.

SCANDALS

Boies, who suffers from dyslexia, was selected by Time magazine as a runner-up to President George W. Bush for "Person of the Year" in 2000. He was born in Illinois and went to law school at Northwestern University outside Chicago.

He is no stranger to scandal. According to Time, he was forced to leave Northwestern after an affair with a professor's wife. Boies got his law degree from Yale University instead, and married the professor's wife. He is now on his third marriage.

In April, Boies agreed to settle with two women lawyers who filed a discrimination suit against him and his firm that claimed the firm paid women attorneys less and refused to consider them for partnership.

Tyco, reeling from allegations its former chief dodged state taxes on expensive art buys, and Adelphia hired Boies to conduct internal investigations into possible wrongdoing by corporate executives. These reviews parallel probes launched by the SEC, and in Tyco's case, by New York state prosecutors as well.

"You're not exactly dealing with shrinking violets here," said Edwards, who has known Boies since they worked at Cravath, Swaine and Moore in the 1970s. "You want somebody who can say: 'You better cooperate or you're out of here.'"

Within a week of hiring Boies, Tyco ousted its top lawyer who had been with the company since 1998, saying he was not cooperating with Boies' investigation. Tyco on Monday sued the lawyer and a former outside director, claiming the executives abused company loans.

OMNIPRESENT

Boies also has worked the other side of the fence -- representing Enron's former Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow, after Fastow's two-week disappearance during a congressional investigation.

Boies keeps a tight lid on his clients. He forbade Fastow from talking to reporters at a packed press conference at Boies' New York office. After reporters pleaded, Boies allowed his client to say, "Hello. Happy holiday season. Thank you for coming."

The wide array of cases Boies has handled over more than 25 years almost always have a lot at stake and broader legal implications, a long-time colleague said.

In addition to his work for the government in the Microsoft Corp. <MSFT.O> case and for Gore in the disputed election, Boies defended IBM against an antitrust suit and defended CBS News in a libel suit brought by U.S. Army General William Westmoreland. He helped the government recover investor losses from Milken and defended Internet song-swap service Napster in a copyright case.

He currently represents the Yankees Entertainment and Sports Network in its suit against Cablevision Systems Corp. and London insurers contesting an attempt by World Trade Center leaseholder Larry Silverstein to collect two claims for the Sept. 11 attacks.

"The pattern you see is David's involvement in what's among the most important and most challenging problems to deal with at a given time," said Robert Silver, who has worked with Boies for 22 years. "That's what he likes because he enjoys, I think, the challenge of the unknown, the difficult, the complicated -- finding what is simple in the complicated."

06/21/02 12:53 ET