Posted on 01/10/2002 4:30:08 PM PST by MeekOneGOP
Thursday January 10 6:09 PM ET
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By Arshad Mohammed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The collapse of Enron Corp. entangled the Bush administration on Thursday as the White House said two Cabinet officers were warned of its looming bankruptcy and Attorney General John Ashcroft (news - web sites) recused himself from the criminal investigation into the company.
Trying to inoculate himself from the political fallout, President Bush (news - web sites) ordered a review headed by Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill of U.S. pension and corporate disclosure rules to avoid a repeat of the energy trading firm's collapse, in which thousands of employees lost their pension savings.
In a series of stunning disclosures that followed Wednesday's announcement of a criminal probe into Enron, the energy firm's auditor, Andersen, said its employees had destroyed documents related to the former energy giant's balance sheet.
Bush's team has close ties to Enron and its chairman, Kenneth Lay, a major Bush campaign contributor who last autumn called O'Neill and Commerce Secretary Don Evans, Bush's 2000 campaign manager, to warn them of the impending bankruptcy.
The White House said O'Neill and Evans opted to do nothing about Lay's calls, which appeared to hint at the possibility of a private bailout like the one orchestrated by the New York Federal Reserve (news - web sites) in 1998 for hedge fund Long Term Capital Management.
A senior U.S. official, however, said that Lay ``did not ask for anything'' in the telephone calls.
The Justice Department (news - web sites) on Wednesday announced it had opened a criminal investigation into the energy trading company, whose December bankruptcy threw thousands out of work, devastated investors and wiped out the pension plans of many employees when its stock price plunged.
Ashcroft removed himself from the investigation, which is expected to focus on whether the firm misled investors about its accounts, because Enron gave him political contributions for his run for a U.S. Senate in his home state of Missouri.
DOCUMENTS DESTROYED
Anderson, the Big Five accounting firm that served as the company's auditor, on Thursday said its employees had deleted documents related to its review of the company's finances and congressional sources said thousands were destroyed.
Rep. Henry Waxman (news), a California Democrat who has already been seeking information about contacts between the White House and Enron, questioned whether the Bush administration could have done more to help the company and its employees.
``The White House had knowledge that Enron was likely to collapse but did nothing to try to protect innocent employees and shareholders who ultimately lost their life savings,'' he said in a statement. ``I am deeply troubled that the White House stood by and let this happen to thousands of families.''
Bush, who worked in the oil industry and has known Enron's chairman since he was governor of Texas, appeared to distance himself from Lay, saying he never discussed Enron's financial difficulties with him and last met the executive last spring.
``I have never discussed with Mr. Lay the financial problems of the company,'' Bush said, adding that the last time he had seen Lay was last spring at a literacy fund-raising event organized by his mother, former first lady Barbara Bush.
PHONE CALLS
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer (news - web sites) disclosed on Thursday that Lay telephoned O'Neill and Evans last autumn saying his company might not be able to meet its obligations.
Fleischer said Lay suggested the possibility of using the case of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM), a hedge fund which benefited from a private bailout orchestrated by the New York Federal Reserve in September 1998, as model for his company.
After studying the matter and concluding that Enron's problems would not have the kind of systemic effects on the economy that were feared in LTCM's case, O'Neill and Evans decided against taking any action.
``They both agreed no action should be taken to intervene,'' Fleischer said, adding that Bush was not informed of the decision but believes O'Neill and Evans acted ``wisely.''
At his daily briefing, the spokesman fended off questions about why Bush was not informed of the decision, the propriety and timing of Enron contacting top government officials about its problems, and whether Evans and O'Neill acted properly.
``Communication is not a wrong-doing. What took place here was they received phone calls and took no action,'' Fleischer said. ``The charge has been did the government take any action, and the answer from these two officials is no.''
Treasury spokeswoman Michele Davis said Lay called O'Neill on Oct. 28 and Nov. 8 -- after Enron's key Oct. 16 disclosure that it was taking huge charges related to its partnerships, which provided the first hint of its spectacular unraveling.
Speaking to reporters after meeting with economic advisers on Thursday, Bush placed the emphasis on workers and investors who suffered as a result of Enron's troubles and ordered two reviews to recommend how to better protect them in the future.
He said the first review, by the Treasury, Commerce and Labor departments, would analyze pension and 401(k) rules and recommend ways to reform them so that ``people are not exposed to losing their life savings as a result of a bankruptcy.''
The review of disclosure rules would be conducted by the Presidential Working Group on Financial Markets, which includes the Treasury Department (news - web sites), Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web sites), Federal Reserve and Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Once the world's largest energy trader, Enron slid in mere weeks last year from Wall Street stardom to the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history on Dec. 2. Its downfall, after withdrawal of a rescue takeover bid by rival Dynegy Inc., threw thousands out of work and hammered investors.
The episode sapped the life savings of many Enron employees who held large amounts of company stock in their 401(k) retirement plans, while top executives allegedly pocketed fat profits by selling before a plunge in Enron's share price.
``I have great concerns for ... (those) who put their life savings aside and, for whatever reason, based upon some rule or regulation, got trapped in this awful bankruptcy and have lost life savings,'' Bush told reporters at the White House, saying the groups would take a ``good hard look'' at the matter.
Earlier Stories
Bush Reviews Pension, Disclosure Rules After Enron (January 10)
Bush Orders Pension Rules Review After Enron Woes (January 10)
Bush Orders Treasury to Review Pension Rules (January 10)
Enron Called Bush Cabinet Officers Before Bankruptcy
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20020110/ts/bush_enron_dc_7.html
It's terrible that the officers sold their stock first if it was illegal. I wait to hear what was illeagal. It does merit investigation though.
I just watched Brian Williaims' entire report on MSNBC.........not ONE mention of ONE Democrat, but lots of scornful and worried looks while he was talking to Howard Finneman about how bad this was going to be for Bush.
Sure they met at the White House with Cheney; so did a LOT of other energy and business heads.
They are like sharks in the water. Even Finneman said that!
Excuse me whilst I call B$ on this part of the article.
The media wants so desparately for there to be something like Whitewater that they can tie on to Bush. Sorry folks, you're dealing with a different character than x42. For example, Dubya HAS character, x42 didn't.
I saw that as well. When Brian Williams did not mention one DemocRAT, I hit the remote. All that I could think about was Bernie Goldberg's "Bias". I don't have time for these liberal DemocRAT media types - Fineman included.
BTW - Arshad Mohammed is one of the worst Algore flunkies at Rueters.
I saw that hatchet job by Williams and Fineman as well. Bias? What bias? Their discussion was purely to plant the notion that Bush bilked average Americans out of their life savings, which is crap.
Business heads, union leaders, and all sorts of special interest lobbies meet with both Democrats and Republicans in Washington ALL THE TIME.
So what?
I'm STILL waiting to see what Cheney or anyone in the Bush administration did that was so unusual, or illegal.
So far this entire "scandal" seems like a lot of hot air to me.
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