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


To: jlallen who wrote (275910)7/16/2002 9:08:42 AM
From: bonnuss_in_austin  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Documents show Bush promised to hold onto Harken shares

Copyright © 2002 AP Online



By PETE YOST, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (July 15, 2002 11:51 p.m. EDT) - Two and a half months
before George W. Bush sold his stock in a struggling Texas energy
company where he was a director, he signed a letter promising to hold
onto the shares for at least six months, internal company documents
show.

The "lockup" letter Bush signed on April 3, 1990, for his shares in
Harken Energy Corp. is now being compared with the account his
lawyers gave federal securities regulators who examined the stock sale
as a possible insider trade.

Bush's lawyers have maintained for more than a decade that he had a
pre-existing plan to sell his stock in Harken and other companies to pay
a tax bill and a loan debt he owed for his stake in the Texas Rangers
professional baseball team. They have said the sale wasn't motivated
by Harken's deteriorating financial situation.

The letter Bush signed promising to hold onto the stock was released
by the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Freedom of
Information Act. At the time he signed it, Harken was considering a
public stock offering to raise money to solve a cash flow problem.

"Dear George," said the April 2, 1990, letter from Harken secretary Larry
Cummings. "As you are aware, Harken is contemplating a public
common stock offering.

"In connection with such offering, the underwriters have requested
that Harken obtain consents for all directors, officers and other
affiliates to agree to not sell ... for a period of 180 days from the date
our proposed public offering goes effective."

Bush signed and returned the letter the next day.

Bush's sale of his Harken stock for $848,560 has come in for renewed
public scrutiny in recent weeks as he tries to restore investor
confidence in the financial markets and calls for a crackdown on
corporate wrongdoing.

White House spokesman Dan Bartlett said Monday the lockout letter
was "made irrelevant and obsolete" by the time Bush sold his stock in
summer 1990 because the public stock offering it affected never went
through.

But a securities expert said the document calls into question his
lawyers' account to the SEC.

"Bush's signing of the April 2, 1990, lockup agreement undercuts his
lawyers' explanation for the early sale of his Harken stock," said
Houston attorney Thomas R. Ajamie, an expert in securities law whose
firm is advising companies that did business with the failed energy giant
Enron.

"If his accountant told him that he needed to sell stock to pay a debt
obligation for his interest in the Texas Rangers, it does not make sense
that he would subsequently sign an agreement promising not to sell his
shares of Harken stock for six months," Ajamie said. Harken scrapped
the public stock offering a few weeks after Bush signed the letter
because the company was plunged into a financial crisis when one of
its bank lenders withdrew its support.

Bartlett said Bush and his accountant had discussions in late 1989 and
early 1990 about the plan.

Bush's accountant, Robert McCleskey, said in an interview that
Harken's deteriorating financial position was "not in my opinion" a factor
in Bush's sale of the stock, adding that Bush "never said anything
about it to me."

Bush had pledged 130,000 shares of Harken stock on the bank loan for
the Texas Rangers, and when the bank note was renewed in early
1990, the shares were freed up, enabling Bush to sell them, McCleskey
said.

"On the Rangers note, we were paying $45,000 to $50,000 a year in
interest," said McCleskey.

Asked about the lockup document, McCleskey said a number of Bush's
stock holdings from different companies were "on the table" and the
sales would take place "when we get it done."

When the SEC examined the transaction more than a decade ago,
Bush's lawyers offered a similar explanation as the one McCleskey gave
Monday of why the future president unloaded stock at a time when
Harken was experiencing financial difficulties.

"According to his attorneys, these sales, and the Harken sale, were
made to meet an obligation of approximately $600,000 in connection
with the Texas Rangers and to pay a couple-hundred-thousand-dollar
tax bill," an SEC memo from the probe states.

"According to his attorneys, Bush made these sales at the urging of his
financial adviser/accountant who was bugging him to get liquid," the
memo states.

The SEC did not interview Bush, so the only account of his sale came
from what his attorneys told regulators.

One expert said even though Bush signed the lockup letter, it didn't
represent a serious obstacle to selling.

It is fairly common for company insiders to sign such letters and then
obtain permission to sell the stock anyway before the lockout period is
up, said Carr Bettis, an associate research professor of finance at
Arizona State University.

Bush sold his stock for $4 a share on June 22, two weeks after being
approached by a California broker who said an institutional client
wanted to buy a large block of Harken stock. The buyer has never
been identified.

The stock's value declined to $3 two months later and to a little over a
dollar a share by year's end. The following year, the stock rose to over
$8 a share as Harken explored for oil in a potentially lucrative Middle
East venture that never found any oil.


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