Enron Trial Avoids the Real Rip-Off
By Jason Leopold
t r u t h o u t | Report
Monday 27 February 2006
More than 400 pages of documents released by federal energy
regulators suggest that former Enron chairman Ken Lay and
former chief executive Jeff Skilling were aware that the
company's west coast traders may have broken the law by
using manipulative trading tactics in California to boost
Enron's profits during the height of the state's power
crisis.
Skilling and Lay are being prosecuted for securities fraud
and numerous other charges in a federal courthouse in
Houston. A judge has prohibited prosecutors from introducing
recorded evidence related to the California energy crisis in
the case against Skilling and Lay, saying it's too
"prejudicial."
The transcripts are from recorded conversations between
Enron traders, company attorneys and Enron's public and
governmental affairs departments that took place at the
height of the California electricity crisis in 2000 and
2001. The material provides the most vivid portrait to date
of the company's questionable trading practices that ignited
California's power crisis, and led to a financial meltdown
at the company which Lay and Skilling hid from securities
regulators and investors, and which both men are now being
prosecuted for.
In the spring of 2001, one of Enron's most powerful
Washington lobbyists met with several members of the Bush
administration to talk about Enron's opposition to price
controls on electricity sales in California.
The lobbyist was told by Tim Belden, the mastermind behind
Enron's notorious trading scams, less than a year earlier
that Belden and other Enron traders who worked in Portland,
Oregon, spent the better part of 2000 and 2001 breaking the
rules governing California's power market "when
opportunities presented themselves to make money."
"There's really two - two things that happened - two areas
... in terms of things blowing up," Belden told Richard
Shapiro, Enron's vice president of regulatory affairs and
one of the company's lobbyists, in August 2000. "One is our
day-ahead scheduling practices and then the other is our
real-time operations. Um, we've been doing and have been
doing for two years a lot of activity in, you know, there's
black, there's white and there's gray. Um, we have been
endeavoring into the gray area when opportunities present
themselves to make money. We have now moved out of the gray
area into the clearly what's legal area ... not even legal,
but what's, um, there's like the letter of the law, the
letter of the rules and the spirit of the rules. Um, we've
been exploiting the letter of the rules - or literally
interpreted - interpreting the rules, um, in California when
we can make money ..."
California's electricity crisis wreaked havoc on consumers
and businesses from the summer of 2000 to June of 2001,
resulting in three days of rolling blackouts and hundreds of
emergency power alerts and forcing the state's largest
utility, Pacific Gas & Electric, into bankruptcy. The crisis
cost the state more than $70 billion.
In the conversation between Shapiro and Belden, Shapiro
urged Belden to pull back on his trading schemes in
California - such as artificially clogging transmission
lines, sending power out of state and submitting false data
to the state's grid operator - and to begin working more
closely within the law because of the severe political risk
associated with Enron and the billions of dollars the
company reaped from California's electricity crisis to fill
its coffers.
But despite the fact that Shapiro was in the know about
Enron's questionable trading practices, he continued to
lobby powerful Washington lawmakers, urging them not to fix
the market problems in California, saying the crisis was the
state's fault for not building enough power plants,
according to public documents from the House Governmental
Affairs Committee.
Belden, however, told Shapiro that he would continue to
exploit the rules in California, even though he might be
breaking the law, as long as it didn't cause the lights to
go out in the state. He added that if Skilling were forced
to testify before a commission about the inner workings of
the West Coast trading desk it could hurt Belden's career.
"I know there's a lot of political risk and I know that we
got a ton of money in our book and then - if Jeff Skilling
ah, has to go in front of some commission and explain the
activities of the West Power Group, that's probably not so
great for my career," Belden told Shapiro, according to the
transcripts.
This is the first revelation that an Enron lobbyist was
briefed on the company's manipulative trading practices, and
it appears likely that other executives were also in the
know. Shapiro wielded enormous influence with members of the
Bush administration. On May 23, 2001, he met with White
House economic adviser Robert McNally and Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham's chief of staff about Bush's National
Energy Policy and Enron's opposition to price controls in
California.
The meeting between Shapiro and McNally came at a crucial
time for Enron. The company's most senior executives
recognized that Enron stood to lose hundreds of millions in
profits and its standing on Wall Street if California
lawmakers were successful in getting federal energy
regulators to rewrite the rules in California's power
market. Judging by the events that followed, it appears that
Bush and Cheney were in Enron's corner.
Six days before Shapiro met with McNally and Abraham's
staff, on May 17, 2001, Vice President Dick Cheney was
interviewed by the television news program Frontline. When
asked if companies like Enron were behaving like a "cartel"
and manipulating the California power market, Cheney
responded with a resounding "No."
"The problem you had in California was caused by a
combination of things - an unwise regulatory scheme, because
they didn't really deregulate. Now they're trapped from
unwise regulatory schemes, plus not having addressed the
supply side of the issue. They've obviously created major
problems for themselves ..."
That same day, May 17, 2001, Cheney and Bush unveiled the
details of the National Energy Policy, in which Cheney
adopted seven of Ken Lay's suggestions, according to
published reports. Had the intimate details of Enron's
trading schemes been known to California officials, it most
certainly would have derailed Bush's energy policy, which
called for keeping many of deregulation's key components in
place.
A few months earlier, Sue Mara, an Enron governmental
affairs employee, phoned Bob Badeer, an Enron trader, with a
question from Ken Lay. Following public comments by Governor
Gray Davis about the state of California's energy crisis,
Mara said Lay personally wanted to know if Davis's comments
had affected the price of power in the forward market. That
Lay would be interested in such minute details contradicts
the former chairman's public statements that he had no idea
about the shenanigans taking place inside Enron.
California signed an unprecedented $42 billion in long-term
electricity contracts with more than two-dozen energy
companies to put the brakes on skyrocketing wholesale power
prices. The state no longer bought the bulk of its power
needs in the open market, where companies like Enron earned
its windfall.
In June 2001, shortly after the details of the long-term
contracts were revealed, Skilling and Lay summoned Belden to
Houston to discuss the company's West Coast trading
division, which Belden said in one recorded conversation
accounted for 80 percent of Enron's profits in 2000 and
2001, to determine if anything could be done to salvage the
operation, according to one person working with the Justice
Department on the investigation.
It's unclear what came out of that meeting, but two months
later Jeff Skilling resigned from Enron. Just three months
earlier, on March 9, 2001, he flew to Portland to take
Belden and other senior traders out to dinner at Higgins
restaurant to celebrate Enron's successful first quarter
earnings. In the transcripts released by FERC, traders said
they made upwards of $10 million a day in 2000 by utilizing
many of the trading scams developed by Belden.
What's surprising about those scams Enron traders pulled in
California is how well-known it was within the company's
Houston headquarters, according to the transcripts. Indeed,
one public affairs official at Enron instructed a trader
based in the company's Portland, Oregon trading division to
lie to a Wall Street Journal reporter who wanted to write a
story about Enron's lucrative trading desk.
"The thing is anything they'd ask you, you'd have to lie
because you wouldn't want to tell them the truth," an
unidentified Enron employee in the company's governmental
affairs department said to an Enron trader. The governmental
affairs employee then attempts to talk the trader out of
doing the interview with the Journal. "I wouldn't do it (the
interview). 'Cause first of all, you'd have to tell 'em a
lot of lies, cause if you told 'em the truth..."
"I'd get in trouble," the trader says, interrupting the
governmental affairs employee.
"You'd get in trouble," the governmental affairs employee
said.
Perhaps the most prescient part of the transcript is when
John Forney, a senior Enron trader who worked closely with
Belden and was indicted on conspiracy charges, fears that he
may be sent to jail.
In a conversation Forney had with Belden, Forney seems to
have misgivings about one scheme he just pulled that
involved California and Canada.
Belden seems to brush off Forney's concerns, according to
the transcripts, and Forney says he can't believe that none
of his Enron colleagues seem to be concerned about the
possibility of going to jail as a result of the schemes he
and other traders have pulled.
"I only want to go to jail once," Forney says.
"Yeah," Belden says. "Once in this country."
-------------------------------------------------

ENRON-BUSH-HARVARD-9/11-OIL-CONNECTION
CLICK:
Whether Skilling and Lay join their one-time trading star
remains to be seen.
Jason Leopold spent two years covering California's
electricity crisis as Los Angeles bureau chief of Dow Jones
Newswires. Jason has spent the last year cultivating sources
close to the CIA leak investigation, and is a regular
contributor to t r u t h o u t.

BUSH'S ENRONGATE
http://www.apfn.org/enron/enrongate.htm
Enron Fallout
http://www.dyncorp-sucks.com/enron.htm
Enron (NYSE:ENE) Sued In Class Action Suit
on Behalf of Employees and Former Employees
http://www.enronerisa.com/news/news112101-3.html
Enron Oil & Gas names President
and CEO and board-members
http://www.apfn.org/enron/CEO.htm
Enron Prize for Distinguished Public Service
http://www.apfn.org/enron/prize.htm
Cheney Led Halliburton To Feast at Federal Trough State
Department Questioned Deal With Firm Linked to Russian Mob
http://www.apfn.org/enron/halliburton.htm
WHO PROFITS FROM A LONG WAR?
FLASHBACK: Halliburton Profits from War Without End 2/24
http://www.halliburton.com/KBR/KBRNWS/KBRNWS_121701.asp
Dick Cheney's Halliburton Also Profits from the Permanent
War 2/23
http://www.southernstudies.org/issmain.shtml#Commentary1
United Defense gets $1.8 billion Army contract
WASHINGTON, Feb 1 (Reuters) - United Defense LP, a unit of
United Defense Industries Inc. (NYSE:UDI - news), has been
awarded a $1.8 billon contract for further development of
the Army's next-generation self-propelled Crusader artillery
system, the service said Friday.
The award, which had been expected based on a sole-source
contract initiated in July 1994, calls for work to be
completed by April 30, 2003. The Pentagon projects Crusader
purchases rising to $1 billion by 2007.
United Defense's largest backer is Carlyle Group Inc., an
investment firm whose chairman is Frank Carlucci, a
secretary of defense under President Ronald Reagan.
The Army ultimately plans to spend $11.1 billion developing,
buying and supporting 480 Crusaders -- a 155mm howitzer
operated by a three-person crew that will operate with
another three-person vehicle carrying spare shells and fuel.
http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/020201/n01166761_1.html
----
HOW TO CREATE A PHONY POWER CRISIS: THE BUSH-ENRON
CONNECTION
http://www.apfn.org/enron/phoney.htm
Enron as "Bush’s Whitewater"; And "Worse" Than Whitewater;
To CNN,
Arafat is the Victim; Kinsley Insulted Goldberg as "Dense"
http://www.mrc.org/news/cyberalert/2002/cyb20020111.asp
Henry A. Waxman | GAO v. Cheney
"Everyone in our government--even the Vice President--should
be
accountable to the American people..."
http://www.truthout.com/02.24B.Waxman.Responds.htm
"THE ENRON BLACK MAGIC, PART ONE"
by Sherman H. Skolnick 12/02/01
http://www.skolnicksreport.com/tebm1.html
Connect the Enron Dots to Bush
by Robert Scheer
http://www.zmag.org/scheerenron.htm
THE STORY OF ENRON - Sightings from The Catbird Seat.
http://www.the-catbird-seat.net/ENRON.htm
The Roots of the Bush-Cheney's Oil Government
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/bush-cheney.htm