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


To: sandintoes who wrote (277491)7/18/2002 1:09:02 PM
From: JEB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Oh, ...is that what it is called now, ..."wisdom", ...LOL, ...maybe it should be called wizardom!



To: sandintoes who wrote (277491)7/18/2002 5:52:58 PM
From: bonnuss_in_austin  Respond to of 769667
 
Attn sandinbrain: "Army Secretary Defends Enron Record"

You like?

LMAO:

truthout.org

Army Secretary Defends Enron Record
By The Associated Press | New York Times

Thursday, 18 July, 2002

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Army Secretary Thomas White voiced deep
regret Thursday for damage to employees and shareholders in the
collapse of Enron Corp., where he served for 11 years as an executive.

But in sometimes testy exchanges with skeptical senators, White
repeatedly denied any role in manipulating California electricity prices.

``I am ashamed of what happened to that corporation and the
damage that it has done to all of us,'' White said, testifying voluntarily
and under oath before the Senate Commerce Committee.

He told senators he shared their outrage and their desire ``to hold
people accountable who were responsible for it.''

The bankruptcy of the Houston-based energy-trading company was
``an absolute terrible tragedy that has occurred,'' he said.

But White told the panel he was unaware of transactions detailed in
a December 2000 Enron memo that spelled out strategies which critics
say were meant to improperly take advantage of California's power
shortages.

``I can categorically say that it was not ever in the interest of (his
division of Enron) to see wholesale energy prices escalate,'' said White.

At one point, banging his pen on the witness table, White told the
committee: ``I am responsible for the portion of that company that I ran.
...The deals that we put together, within the accounting structure that
was the standard in the industry, I stand behind.''

White was vice chairman of an Enron subsidiary called Enron
Energy Services, which critics say engaged in questionable electricity
trading that helped drive up power prices during the 2000-2001 California
power crisis.

``We were not in the California power market for the sake of buying
and selling and swapping and trading and whatever else electricity,''
White said. ``We were there to serve retail customers.''

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., challenged him. ``I never saw so many
smart people running away from the truth,'' Boxer said.

``I'm not running from the truth,'' White retorted. ``I'm telling you how
it ran.''

Boxer pointed to a chart showing the steep climb in the price of
California electricity during the crisis. ``It went straight up to the sky.
And our state almost went bust. So it didn't work out the way you
hoped,'' she said.

Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., said he found it hard to believe that
those in White's division were unaware of what other divisions of Enron
were doing in attempting to allegedly manipulate electricity prices.

``It's all part of the Enron Corporation. You're all kissing cousins
here,'' Dorgan said.

Panel members complained that White had made roughly $50
million in salary in his 11 years with Enron, and another $12 million
when he sold stock last year, while many employees and shareholders
had seen pension plans and investments become worthless.

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the committee's senior Republican,
said the wave of corporate accounting scandals that began with Enron
``has shaken the confidence of every American.''

``I, like thousands of other people, have been appalled and
outraged,'' White said. But he said that in his early days at Enron, he
was proud to work there, and saw no hints of its impending doom. ``This
was a corporation rated `most innovative in the country' six years in a
row by Fortune Magazine,'' he said.

The committee is looking into White's tenure, particularly during the
California energy crisis, and his contacts with officials after he became
Army secretary.

After joining the Bush administration in May 2001, White spoke
dozens of times to his former colleagues at Enron.

Most of the calls came around the time of Enron's collapse late last
year. He has said that no sensitive information was exchanged during
the calls and that he was not asked for -- and did not offer -- Bush
administration aid as the company headed toward bankruptcy.

White told the panel that he was ``appearing here voluntarily.'' Asked
if he had considered invoking his Fifth Amendment Right to silence, he
said he had not.

Since becoming Army Secretary, ``I have done everything possible
to advance the interests of the country and the Army I love,'' said White,
who had a long Army career before joining Enron.

(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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