From: "mart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Message----- Original Message -----
From: Miroslav Antic
Sent: Wednesday, January 02,
2002 11:00 PM
Subject: Bush's Enron Ties
---------------------------
Bush's Enron Ties 
Edward B. Winslow, AlterNet
January 2, 2002

Almost 30 years have elapsed since the "third rate burglary" of the
Democratic National Committee headquarters on June 17, 1972 that opened the
dam of the Watergate scandal. The press and members of Congress largely
ignored the crime, as then President Richard M. Nixon kept the nation's
focus on the war in Vietnam.

Similarly, with the press and Congress distracted by President George W.
Bush's war in Afghanistan, they are ignoring another scandal. No third rate
burglary, the Enron Corp. scandal involves millions of dollars in campaign
contributions to Bush, U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm and other members of Congress.
The cozy relationship between the Bush White House and Enron enabled Kenneth
L. Lay, then Enron's CEO, to meet in secret with Vice President Richard
Cheney to help mold the nation's energy policy. Bush's presidential campaign
received $1.14 million from Enron.

Shortly after taking office, President Bush waged a battle against the
imposition of federal price controls in California that allowed Enron to
price-gouge consumers by extending the energy crisis in California, costing
the state billions of dollars. Enron reported increased revenues of almost
$70 billion from the previous year.

Bush also resisted attempts to crack down on Enron's utilization of its
2,830 offshore subsidiaries in countries with lax banking-regulation laws.
The consumer-rights watchdog organization Public Citizen alleges that some
of these offshore havens helped Enron defraud its stockholders.

Moreover, while Sen. Gramm was working the Congress to pass legislation
favorable to Enron (and collecting nearly $260,000 in campaign contributions
from the company), his wife Wendy Gramm first was chairperson of a
regulatory committee overseeing Enron's business activities and later a paid
member of that company's board of directors. Enron paid her between $915,000
and $1.85 million, according Public Citizen. Sen. Gramm has announced his
decision not to seek reelection for another term in the senate.

Enron, whose stock price plummeted from almost $85 per share to $0.25 per
share within one year, forced its employees to invest their retirement plans
in the company stock while corporate executives were free to make out like
bandits by selling their stock when it was near its peak before anyone
caught wind of the company's impending collapse. Jeffrey K. Skilling, who
resigned his position as Enron's chief executive in August, sold more than
$30 million worth of his stock in the company this year. Lay, who was
Skilling's predecessor, was able to unload about $23 million worth of his
Enron stock. 

Meanwhile, employees, who invested in Enron stock through their company's
401(k) plan, were prohibited in diversifying into other securities. They
lost their shirts while 500 of the company's top executives divided up $55
million worth of bonuses. The remaining 20,000 employees were given
severance packages of not more than $4,500 each.

Eventually, during the Watergate scandal, members of Congress began to take
a closer look at what first appeared to be an event that was unrelated to
the White House. Armed with much more evidence of a White House conflict of
interest than Watergate, Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) has opened a
Congressional investigation on the Enron matter. In a letter dated Dec. 4,
2001 to Vice President Cheney, Waxman expresses concern about the
administration's secret meetings with Lay and the company's subsequent
failure.   

Waxman also mentions "the fact that senior Enron executives were enriching
themselves at the same time that Enron was lavishing large campaign
contributions on President Bush and the Republican Party and apparently
influencing the administration's energy policies."

Public Citizen urged Congress to bring Sen. Gramm and Wendy Gramm along with
Secretary of the Treasury Paul O'Neill to give sworn testimony about what
they know about possible accounting fraud and the use of offshore tax and
bank regulation havens. The consumer-rights organization also called for
President Bush, Vice President Cheney and political adviser Karl Rove to
answer questions about whether discussions involving energy price controls,
energy regulations or tax havens took place with Enron executives.

Specifically, what investigators need to determine is who knew what and when
did they know it? As Waxman wrote in his letter to the vice president, "It
is appropriate to ask whether Enron communicated to (Cheney) or others
affiliated with (his) task force information about its precarious financial
position. This is especially important since this information was apparently
hidden from investors and the public...."

Edward B. Winslow 
2239 Meade St. 
Denver, CO 80211 
303-964-0820 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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