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Pastimes : The California Energy Crisis - Information & Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Quincy who wrote (1677)6/5/2004 3:20:02 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 1715
 
TIME TO TAKE THEM DOWN and make them pay for ruining California
of course ARNIE has nothing to say about it as it was THE reason he was unduly elected over the LEGALLY ELECTED DAVIS
Lockyer Suit to Accuse Enron of Manipulating State Power Market
By Elizabeth Douglass
Los Angeles Times

Thursday 03 June 2004

California Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer intends to file a lawsuit accusing energy trader Enron Corp. of
manipulating the state's electricity market during the 2000-01 energy crisis, his office said
Wednesday.

"We're going after these guys to hold them accountable for rampant gaming of the market and
gouging of California ratepayers," said Tom Dresslar, a spokesman for the attorney general. He said
the lawsuit would be filed in state court "in the near future."

Houston-based Enron, which collapsed in scandal and filed for U.S. Bankruptcy Court protection in
December 2001, is already the subject of a Justice Department investigation that has led to charges
against 29 former executives for a variety of accounting and trading schemes.

Lockyer's office has been investigating Enron and other companies that traded power on California's
wholesale market. State investigators contend that electricity prices were rigged, and they hope to
convince federal regulators that California ratepayers are owed $9 billion in refunds.

During the energy crisis, the wholesale cost of power soared, and the state reeled from shortages
and blackouts. The high prices strained household and commercial budgets and pushed the state's
largest utility into bankruptcy protection.

In his case, Lockyer intends to use evidence already submitted to federal regulators as well as a
series of transcripts of routinely recorded trader conversations that have surfaced in recent months in
other cases involving Enron and other energy companies.

One set of transcripts, first reported by The Times last month, includes conversations in which
Enron employees boast of taking money from "Grandma Millie" in California and of "making buckets of
money" through an electricity scheduling scheme nicknamed "Fat Boy."

Dresslar said Lockyer's suit would be brought under California's unfair-competition law and under a
newly enacted rule that grants the attorney general authority to enforce violations of the state's
securities and commodities fraud statutes.

Enron has said it is cooperating with all investigations.