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


To: jlallen who wrote (274180)7/12/2002 2:33:11 PM
From: bonnuss_in_austin  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769669
 
Secrecy Surrounds Bush Stock Deal
truthout.org

Secrecy Surrounds Bush Stock Deal
By The Associated Press | New York Times

Friday, 12 July, 2002

WASHINGTON (AP) -- It is a stock market whodunit that has
withstood a decade of scrutiny. Who bought George W. Bush's
problem-plagued oil company stock just before its value dropped?

The 1990 transaction involving shares of Harken Energy Corp.
allowed the future president to pay off a bank loan for his now-famous
stake in the Texas Rangers baseball team. The identity of the buyer of
the stock has escaped public disclosure.

Federal regulators who examined the deal as a possible insider
trade never asked. President Bush says he doesn't know and the White
House declines to ask the broker who handled the transaction.
Reporters have fared no better in getting to the bottom of the mystery.

Was Bush's sale of Harken stock another instance of a helping hand
from family friends? Or was it a simple case of a buyer trying to make a
killing in a high-risk investment?

Corporate scandals and failures that have rocked Wall Street in
recent months have renewed questions about Bush's own business
dealings when he was a Texas oilman. The White House was put on
the defensive again Thursday, as it faced questions about the fact that
Bush borrowed $180,000 from Harken to buy some of its stock. The
loans are a type of transaction that Bush now wants to ban as part of a
crackdown on corporate wrongdoing.

In the 1990 stock sale, Bush collected $848,560 when he sold
212,140 shares he had gotten in the merger of his struggling oil
company with Harken in 1986.

By the time of the sale, Harken's finances also were in the red. Daily
trading activity in the stock was as little as 1,300 shares on the New
York Stock Exchange. If Bush had tried to sell such a large amount of
Harken stock into the open market, it undoubtedly would have driven the
price far below the $4 a share he was paid.

Bush's oil industry career is a history of being bailed out of
money-losing ventures. Among the businessmen who came to his
rescue before Harken were Cincinnati businessmen Mercer Reynolds III
and William O. DeWitt. They eventually invested in the Rangers with
Bush, raised more than $3 million for his presidential campaign and
served as co-chairmen of Bush's inaugural committee. Reynolds is now
U.S. ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

Bush's sale on June 22, 1990, was handled by California stock
broker Ralph D. Smith, who says he got a call on June 9 that year from
an institutional client who wanted to buy a large block of Harken.

Smith said he then made a couple of ``cold calls'' to people who
owned Harken stock, including Bush.

The broker said there wasn't any arrangement ahead of time to bail
Bush out of Harken.

``If there was a rigged buyer, why would he come'' to a West Coast
brokerage firm? said Smith, who worked for Sutro & Co. in California
until his retirement.

The broker said that ``if you wanted to do a favor for Bush, you just
go to him directly, say here's $800,000 and we'll get this stock
transferred.''

The 1990 sale triggered an insider trading probe of Bush because he
was eight months late in disclosing it to the Securities and Exchange
Commission. White House press secretary Ari Fleischer defended the
sale by saying Bush had notified the SEC in a timely manner that he
intended to sell his shares. However, Bush failed to notify the SEC once
the stock actually was sold, as required by law.

On Thursday, a Washington group, the Center for Public Integrity,
posted internal SEC documents on the Internet showing that Harken
initially was uncooperative in the insider trading probe. The company
subsequently provided extensive cooperation to the SEC.

Uncovering little evidence to support an insider trading case, the
SEC chose not to interview Bush.

SEC investigators interviewed Smith in the probe, but, according to
Smith, they never asked the broker who bought Bush's stock.

Over the past two years, news organizations have tried to persuade
Smith to ask the buyer to waive the cloak of confidentiality that
surrounds the transaction, but the retired broker has declined.

``They're not going to find out the name of the buyer; it's none of
their business,'' Smith said, adding that he had a professional
responsibility not to identify the buyer.

On Thursday, White House spokesman Dan Bartlett said that ``it
isn't our place'' to urge that the buyer step forward.

While Smith declines to name the purchaser, his difficult-to-read
handwritten notes turned over to the SEC in the insider trading probe of
Bush supply a clue.

The notes for June 9 appear to state that ``Geo Bush will sell
212,010 shares in about 2 weeks.'' The June 22 entry on the day of the
sale appears to state, ``s/212,140 at 4 to Lee for Bush.''

Smith declines to say whether the apparent word ``Lee'' refers to a
person or an entity.

Bush's lawyers have said his investment in the Texas Rangers -- not
any inside information about Harken's deteriorating financial
performance -- was the motivating factor in selling his shares.

The stock Bush sold for $4 was selling for $3 two months later and
fell to around a dollar by the end of 1990. It rebounded to nearly $9 a
year after Bush sold. Today it sells for 44 cents a share.

Despite financial losses in 1990 and 1991, Harken's stock price was
propped up by the company's highly publicized deal to drill for oil off the
coast of Bahrain. The project, which came together while Bush's father
was president, never struck any oil. Little Harken beat out major oil
companies, including Amoco, for what at the time was thought might be
an extremely valuable concession.

Bush's lawyers told the SEC that before the sale, his financial
adviser ``was bugging him to get liquid'' to meet a financial obligation of
$600,000 in connection with the Texas Rangers and to pay a tax bill of
a couple of hundred thousand dollars. Bush paid off a bank loan he'd
taken out for a share of the baseball team.

Bush's $600,000 stake in the Rangers in 1998 brought him $14.9
million when the team was sold.

-------

On the Net: Center for Public Integrity:
publicintegrity.org

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes.)

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To: jlallen who wrote (274180)7/12/2002 2:44:07 PM
From: Hagar  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769669
 
The final letter to Bush from the SEC at Bush's request for a no-action letter was dated in March of 1993 AFTER Clinton was President....

Thats fine. I merely pointed out relevant chronological facts from SEC memos i.e. that the decision to not pursue a case was made in aug '91.