DECEMBER 18, 20:31 ET 

Enron Workers Detail Loss to Senate 

By MARCY GORDON 
AP Business Writer 

WASHINGTON (AP) - An employee and retirees of collapsed Enron Corp. told
a Senate hearing Tuesday that their life savings were wiped out as the
company's stock price plunged and the company barred them from selling
Enron shares from retirement accounts. 

The employees disputed Enron officials' assertion that they were locked
out of their accounts for 10 business days this fall, saying it was much
longer - increasing their losses. 

``This is a tragedy for many, including the workers and investors who
... have been cheated out of billions of dollars,'' said Sen. Byron
Dorgan, D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Commerce subcommittee on consumer
affairs. 

Among the witnesses: Charles Prestwood, who retired after 33 1/2 years
in the natural gas business, mostly with Enron, and lost nearly all his
$1.3 million in savings; Janice Farmer, a retiree who had nearly
$700,000 in Enron stock and is now getting a $63 monthly pension check
from a previous job. 

``We have been lied to and we have been cheated,'' Farmer declared at
the hearing, held to examine one of the biggest corporate failures ever.


With the energy-trading company's stock having hemorrhaged more than $60
billion in value in recent months, Dorgan said, ``Some at the top of the
pyramid got rich and many at the bottom lost everything. It appears to
me to be a combination of incompetence, greed, rampant speculation with
investors' money and perhaps some criminal behavior.'' 

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., was more blunt, telling reporters: ``I
personally hope some of these people wind up in jail.'' 

The Justice Department is investigating Houston-based Enron for possible
criminal conduct. The Labor Department and the Securities and Exchange
Commission are conducting civil investigations. 

While ordinary employees were prohibited from selling company stock from
their Enron-heavy 401(k) accounts, Enron executives cashed out more than
$1 billion in stock when it was near its peak, lawmakers say. 

And nearly 600 employees deemed critical to Enron's operations received
more than $100 million in bonuses last month as the company faced a
merger that unraveled and then went into bankruptcy. 

Worth more than $80 a year ago, Enron's stock has tumbled to less than a
dollar a share. 

In addition to retirees and some 4,500 out-of-work employees, countless
investors around the country have been burned by Enron's rapid descent
into federal bankruptcy court in recent weeks. 

Enron, which was the nation's seventh-biggest company in revenue and
admired by Wall Street as a technological innovator, has acknowledged it
overstated profits for four years. 

The chief executive of its longtime auditor, Arthur Andersen LLP, told a
House hearing last week that the accounting firm notified Enron's audit
committee on Nov. 2 of ``possible illegal acts within the company.'' 

For the second time in less than a week, no Enron officials were present
at a congressional hearing to defend the company's actions. Chairman and
CEO Kenneth Lay declined an invitation to testify but told the Senate
panel he would attend a future hearing. He is a friend of President Bush
and a big campaign contributor. 

-- 

On the Net: 

Senate Commerce Committee: http://commerce.senate.gov 

THE END

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