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


To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (2333)7/12/2002 12:32:44 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 3602
 
MCCAIN ISN'T EVEN SCRATCHING THE SURFACE - POLICE STATE TACTICS IN NEW YORK

"A nation of the crooks, by the crooks and for the crooks."

westi,

John McCain's op/ed piece in the NY Times seems like small beer compared to this matter......

You might want to read and let others know that the Dept. of Justice appears to be involved in an active police state operation to suppress information regarding Operation 911. In the face of the hundreds of Unanswered Questions
unansweredquestions.net

the news that the DoJ is using legal maneuvers and the cover of "national secrets" to prevent citizens from learning the truth is become something to be alarmed about.

scoop.co.nz

This is serious business. The Bush team appears to be well on the way to completing their transformation of the U.S. into a fascist police state. A rogue nation where criminals who are in the President's inner circle are protected from any prosecution, no matter how heinous their crime.

By the way, did you catch the news from Argentina today? Jeff Skilling, unindicted criminal who fleeced millions and lost billions is on a ski holiday with his new bride.

Reminding us that in America, crime pays. Unless you are trying to steal your child's next meal. Then you get 25 years in the penitentiary.

"A nation of the crooks, by the crooks and for the crooks."

God Help America.

-Ray



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (2333)7/12/2002 11:40:00 AM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
Is the SEC up to the task?

Agency is underfunded and outgunned, say former staffers

By John W. Schoen
MSNBC

msnbc.com

July 11 — Is the Securities and Exchange Commission up to the task of cleaning up corporate accounting abuses? Some current and former SEC staffers don’t think so. They say the agency is grossly underfunded, badly demoralized, plagued by turnover, crippled by vacant commission seats and generally outgunned in its efforts to reign in the recent outbreak of bogus corporate bookkeeping.

ESTABLISHED TO RESTORE investor confidence following the stock market crash of 1929, the SEC has never had the resources to fully monitor the activities of the securities markets and review every page of corporate bookkeeping. But over the past decade, the agency’s budget hasn’t kept up with a boom in the financial markets. As a result, its resources have dwindled to levels that have left it badly outgunned as top cop to the national’s financial markets, say past and current SEC staffers.

“It doesn’t even remotely have the resources at the moment,” said Lynn Turner, former SEC chief accountant from 1998-2001.

Much of the current debate in Congress over cleaning up corporate America centers on how much money is needed to fix the problem. But everyone agrees more is needed. From 1991 through 2001, the SEC’s annual budget rose from $213 million to $412 million, an average annual increase of about 8 percent. During that period, the number of corporate filings has risen 60 percent.

Meanwhile, total mutual fund assets rose five-fold, and New York Stock Exchange volume rose nearly seven-fold. But the surge in SEC fees generated by that boom, which peaked at $2.3 billion in 2000, bypassed the agency’s budget and went to pay down the federal budget deficit.

The resulting belt-tightening has left the commission powerless to keep up with the mounting pile of phony bookkeeping churned out by corporate accountants, some former staffers say. Earlier this year, the commission asked for $20 million in emergency funding to hire 100 new enforcement officers. Congress failed to free up the money.

The agency’s technological firepower has also suffered. While the tech boom of the late 1990s saw corporate America spending billions on new computer hardware and networking gear, spending on the SEC’s data systems didn’t keep up. Turner, the SEC’s former top accountant, estimates it would take at least $100 million to modernize the agency’s technology.

Many long time staffers have left the agency in frustration: turnover is twice the average for federal government workers, according to a March report from the General Accounting Office. That report also found that the exodus has left the agency with a relatively inexperienced staff: some three-fourths of SEC examiners have less than three years experience, the report found.

“That’s created an environment in which the learning curve on any individual fraud case is that much steeper,” said Donald Langevoort, a special counsel at the SEC in the late 1970s and now a law professor a Georgetown University.

LOW PAY, LOW MORALE

Meanwhile, current SEC staffers say morale has suffered badly. Salaries have fallen some 25 to 30 percent below those of other financial regulators doing similar work at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or the Federal Reserve. That disparity has further demoralized the agency, say current and former SEC staffers.

“If you’re an SEC investigator working on a joint investigation, you’re working with a regulator who’s making 25 percent more than you, who has a better house than you — and you’re doing the exact same work,” said a current staffer who asked not to be identified.

Last year, Congress authorized an additional $76 million to bring SEC salaries up to par with other financial regulators, but the White House cut those funds from the fiscal 2003 budget proposed in February.

Then, as reports of corporate accounting abuses began mounting, the Bush administration proposed boosting the agency’s budget by $100 million, bringing the total to $567 million. A bill now before the Senate would raise that amount to $776 million. But a thorough review of corporate filings would take at least twice amount, say former agency officials.

“When you think about the fact that there are 10,000 companies out there, some of which are extremely large with overseas operations, and the complexity of the things they do, you’re really talking about a gigantic infrastructure,” said Steven Wallman, a Clinton-era SEC Commissioner.

A ‘KINDER, GENTLER’ SEC

Why is the agency so badly underfunded? Some former agency staffers say that, despite repeated calls for increased budgets, a business-friendly Congress squeezed the SEC’s funding to try rein in the tough, often combative stance of former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt. Current critics of the agency say that move to a more hands-off approach to securities regulation culminated with the appointment of Harvey Pitt as chairman.

“Harvey is fundamentally a deregulatory guy,” said Turner.

Pitt began his legal career at the SEC in the late 1960s before entering private practice representing, among others, all of the big-five accounting firms and for the American Institute of

Public Accountants. While critics complain that he is too close to the industry, Pitt defended his continued meetings with accounting industry executives in a recent Money magazine interview with CNBC’s Ron Insana.

“If we regulate a major firm and they are subject to our regulation and they have a new CEO, who wants to meet us and make it clear that we can call on them to do what they’re supposed to do in the public interest, that’s a meeting that helps investors,” he said. “It doesn’t hurt investors. Much of the criticism that I’ve seen, in my view, is both ill-informed and misdirected.”

But the tone of Pitt’s regulatory approach was spelled out early in his tenure when, to the great relief of many in the business and accounting communities, the new chairman promised a “kinder, gentler” SEC.

That speech is now coming back to haunt him. Democrats this week began calling for Pitt’s ouster. Now, Republican Sen. John McCain has joined them, noting that Pitt’s ties to the accounting industry has forced him to recuse himself from 29 SEC decisions in less than a year.

“The circumstances today require a new leader of the SEC whose background and record leave no question that he or she will proactively assert the independence and authority of the SEC to protect the integrity of our markets,” McCain told reporters Thursday.

The White House has strongly supported Pitt, and shows no signs of backing down. In a chat Thursday on MSNBC.com, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao said she thinks the criticism of Pitt has been unfair.

“It is true he has worked in the past with accounting firms,” she said. “But many people have worked with many, many other firms as well. Harvey Pitt took a pledge when he entered the federal government that he will protect investors and ensure the integrity of the financial markets. He’s a man of integrity and he will carry out his responsibilities.”

Elaine Chao: Public trust is ‘very fragile’

But former SEC staffers note that the commission was recently badly upstaged in the campaign to clean up Wall Street by New York state Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. In May, Spitzer won a $100 million settlement from Merrill Lynch, which agreed to sweeping changes in the way its analysts are paid, eliminating bonuses for researchers whose stock recommendations help generate investment banking fees. Other firms have begun to adopt similar changes.

EMPTY SEATS

Regardless of Pitt’s regulatory leanings, the agency is further hampered at the top by two vacancies on the five-member commission.

“It’s completely inexcusable that we don’t have a fully staffed commission,” said Langevoort, the former special counsel to the SEC.

While the absence of those commissioners has little impact on the day-to-day operations of the agency, it has tied the SEC’s hands in cases involving the accounting industry. A recent enforcement action against Ernst & Young was thrown out by an administrative law judge, after Pitt and Commissioner Cynthia A. Glassman, a principal at the accounting firm, recused themselves. That left the only one commissioner, Isaac Hunt, a Clinton-era holdover, to vote on the action.

Not surprisingly, the remaining appointments remain mired in politics. Bush’s efforts to appoint commissioners with close ties to the accounting industry have raised opposition from Democrats in Congress. To bypass Senate confirmation, Bush made so-called “recess appointments,” naming Glassman and Hunt earlier this year when Congress was not in session.

Progress on filling the empty seats has been painfully slow. In December, Bush nominated Paul Atkins, a lawyer and partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, but that appointment has since been held up in the Senate. In January, Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle urged Bush to nominate two Democrats, but the nominations didn’t happen until April. One is Harvey Goldschmid, law professor at Columbia University in New York, who was SEC general counsel in 1998 and 1999.

The second is Roel Campos, a lawyer and communications industry executive in Houston and formerly assistant U.S. attorney in California. Goldschmid’s nomination has been sent from the White House to the Senate Banking Committee for consideration, but Campos name has not.

But even if Congress quickly fills those vacancies and approves a big increase in funding, don’t expect to see quick results. Given the lead time involved in staffing up the agency, opening and conducting investigations and referring criminal cases to the Justice Department, it could be two years before cases begun today actually bear fruit.

In the meantime, “some of these cases are going to drop by the wayside because they don’t have the staff to deal with them,” said Turner. “I think the American public is right: some of these crooks are going to get off.”



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (2333)7/15/2002 12:35:52 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3602
 
WorldCom employees challenged accounting
Internal documents show concerns raised as far back as 2000

By Christopher Stern, the Washington Post, 7/15/2002

boston.com

WASHINGTON - As far back as 2000, WorldCom Inc. employees challenged the company's accounting and in at least one case raised those concerns with auditor Arthur Andersen LLP, according to internal documents released yesterday.

The documents, released by House Energy and Committee chairman Billy Tauzin, Republican of Louisiana, showed that WorldCom employees in the United States and Europe believed as early as March 2000 that the company was moving money around on its internal books in an effort to make the company look more profitable than it was.

The documents also show that WorldCom's senior financial managers, including former controller David Myers and former chief financial officer Scott Sullivan, had ordered lower-level employees to record transactions on its books that the workers viewed as improper.

WorldCom, based in Clinton, Miss., is expected to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and is struggling to find financing to remain operational. The company has been on the edge of financial crisis since late June, when it announced it had improperly claimed $3.9 billion in regular expenses as capital investments during 2002 and 2001. The documents now show that the practice, which made the company appear profitable when it was not, extended back to at least the spring of 2000.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged the company with defrauding investors. WorldCom is the subject of a federal criminal investigation and has been targeted by congressional investigators as well.

Tauzin, who is leading his own investigation, said yesterday on ABC-TV's ''This Week'' that other documents showed that Myers, who resigned last month, acknowledged WorldCom resorted to improper accounting to save itself from collapse.

In one of the documents, according to Tauzin, ''[Myers] said, `If we don't do this, we close our doors, we can't operate. We have to keep hiding these losses or our business fails.'''

WorldCom declined to comment yesterday on the memos. ''We are fully cooperating with all external investigations,'' WorldCom spokesman Brad Burns said. ''We want any wrongdoers brought to justice and our business to move forward.''

Separately, speaking on NBC's Meet the Press yesterday, SEC chairman Harvey Pitt said he supported ''the thrust'' of legislation that would strengthen oversight of corporate accounting. But Pitt brushed off calls from some members of Congress that he step down in the wake of accounting scandals at several companies including Enron Corp. Global Crossing Ltd. and Adelphia Communications Inc.

Pitt has been criticized, particularly by Democrats, for his close ties to the accounting industry, which he represented in his private law practice.

The documents released yesterday show that on June 26, the day after WorldCom announced that it claimed $3.9 billion in regular expenses as capital costs, Steven Brabbs, a London-based employee, wrote WorldCom auditors that he had been required to record $33.6 million in expenses, which he believed were unjustified in March 2000.

At the time he was ordered to make the entry, Brabbs held the title of director, international finance and control. Brabbs found that WorldCom had issued financial statements in the United States that made his divisions appear more profitable than he knew them to be. Brabbs became concerned and began to ask how WorldCom had come up for such a profitable figure for its overseas operations.

''After phone calls and e-mails to the US, we were told that the entry had been made on the basis of a directive from Scott Sullivan,'' Brabbs said in the memo.

Sullivan was fired by the company June 25, the same day WorldCom told the SEC about the improper accounting.

''Despite repeated requests, we were given no support or explanation for the theory,'' Brabbs said in the memo.

Brabbs, according to his account, eventually informed Andersen about the issue. ''Shortly after, I received an e-mail from David Myers indicating he was not pleased this matter had been raised with [Andersen] without his knowledge.''

Brabbs's claim that Andersen had been informed about his concerns is significant since at a congressional hearing last week, a former Andersen official in charge of the WorldCom account repeatedly denied his firm had been told about efforts to reclassify regular expenses as capital investments.

Brabbs also writes that the $33.6 million in question was related to line costs - or fees charged by other telephone companies for connecting WorldCom's long-distance customers to the local network. WorldCom has said a majority of the $3.9 billion in improper expenses it reported during 2001 and the first quarter of 2002 was related to telephone-line costs.

When he continued to raise the issue with senior WorldCom financial managers, he was told the US entry ''had been made at Scott Sullivan's direct instruction.''

Brabbs, however, refused to make the entry into his ledgers and instead created a separate ''management company,'' to which the $33.6 million in disputed expenses were attributed. In his memo, Brabbs said the new entity was ''not a legal entity,'' but did not provide further details. To further emphasize his concern about the entry, Brabbs included a note with the entry saying: late adjustment ''as instructed by Scott Sullivan.''

A second document released yesterday was a report of an interview between the company's top internal auditor, Cynthia Cooper, and mid-level accountant Troy Normand. The report showed that US employees in 2000 had raised concerns about the way the company was accounting for the cost of leasing telecommunications lines from other companies.