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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Arthur Radley who wrote (269508)7/2/2002 7:59:42 PM
From: Ron  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
MILWAUKEE –– President Bush defended in a snappish tone Tuesday his own business experience with a corporation
accused of fishy accounting.

"Everything I do is fully disclosed; it's been fully vetted," the president said as he paused to speak with reporters during a
church appearance in Wisconsin. "Any other questions?"

Bush was responding to a journalist who asked for his reaction to New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, who said in
Tuesday's newspaper that Bush's recent campaign against corporate malfeasance draws on "firsthand experience of the
subject."

Bush, in 1989, was on the board of directors and audit committee of Harken Energy when the company masked $10
million in losses by reporting a profit on the sale of a subsidiary to a group of Harken insiders borrowing money from the
company itself.

The Securities and Exchange Commission ruled the transaction phony and forced the company to restate its 1989 earnings.
The SEC also investigated Bush for insider trading after he sold nearly $850,000 of Harken stock shortly before its
mounting debt was publicly disclosed.

The SEC eventually closed its investigation of Bush without taking action against him, although The Dallas Morning News
has quoted a 1993 letter from the SEC to Bush's lawyer emphasizing that its decision "must in no way be construed as
indicating that (Bush) has been exonerated."

Democrats said those investigations bear close similarities to current-day corporate accounting scandals involving Enron,
WorldCom and other business giants that have shaken investor confidence.

Democratic National Committee spokeswoman Jennifer Palmieri called the 1989 transactions by Harken and Bush "very
Enron-esque" and said they were symbolic of how Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, whose former employer
Halliburton is also now under SEC investigation, had helped create a business climate ripe for accounting fraud.

Republicans say Democrats are just desperate to make political hay in an election year.

© 2002 The Associated Press



To: Arthur Radley who wrote (269508)7/2/2002 8:22:56 PM
From: SeachRE  Respond to of 769667
 
Bush said he is NOT A CROOK. I appreciate straight talk, so did Nixon.<g>