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Enron executive pleads guilty
By Joseph Kay
27 August 2002
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Michael Kopper, a former financial executive at collapsed energy
giant Enron, pleaded guilty on August 21 to charges of conspiracy
to commit money laundering and conspiracy to commit fraud. He
is the first Enron executive to admit guilt in connection with
the corruption scandal that broke last winter, and is the first
to be indicted on criminal charges by the Justice Department.
Kopper has acknowledged that he defrauded investors by illegally
using Enrons off-balance sheet partnerships for his personal
gain. These partnerships had originally been designed to hide
company debt and boost earnings. Kopper also faces civil charges
of security code violations that have been filed separately by
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
It has been nearly 10 months since Enron declared bankruptcy,
and the government has come under intense pressure to proceed
with prosecution of those involved in the scandal. It is widely
suspected that the government will strike a deal with Kopper to
treat him lightly in exchange for his help in prosecuting Enrons
former chief financial officer, Andrew Fastow. All of the partnerships
involved in Koppers plea were managed by Fastow, and Kopper
has said that on at least two occasions Fastow was given kickbacks
in connection with the partnership activity.
The criminal charges carry a maximum jail term of 15 years,
and Kopper has agreed to hand over $12 million that he acquired
illegally. The Justice Department is also seeking to seize $14
million from Fastow that was gained in connection with the three
partnershipsknown as Chewco, Southampton and RADRcited
in Koppers plea.
Enron and the Bush administration
Enron has become synonymous with corporate criminality, its
spectacular demise occurring amidst allegations of accounting
manipulation, insider trading, bribery and fraud. Accompanying
Koppers plea have been more revelations concerning the methods
used by top Enron executives to steal millions of dollars from
their corporation at the expense of employees and shareholders.
Since December, there has been a continuous stream of news on
different aspects of corruption at the company. Thousands of workers
have lost their jobs and have been left with decimated retirement
savings due to the collapse of Enrons share price. Investors,
both big and small, have lost billions of dollars.
Under these conditions, the Bush administration has had no
choice but to mount prosecutions. However, the government has
thus far acted in a manner calculated to contain the scandal within
strict limits. The prosecution began with a trial and conviction
of Enrons auditor Arthur Andersen, deflecting attention
from Enron itself. Now with Koppers plea, the government
seems to be directing its attention to Fastow and perhaps former
CEO Jeffrey Skilling. Prosecution of the former chairman and leader
of the company, Kenneth Laywho is well known for his close
ties with President Bushhas been forestalled for now, and
perhaps indefinitely delayed.
The general argument given for going after Kopper and Fastow
first is that they are more closely tied to the day-to-day operations
of the company, and that it would be extremely difficult to prove
that Lay had knowledge of any illicit operations.
This position has been repeated by the media and the political
establishment as a whole. The New York Times, in its editorial
of August 22, declared, Mr. Kopper may prove especially
helpful in the effort to build cases against the companys
former chief financial officer, Andrew Fastow; its former chief
executive officer, Jeffrey Skilling; and possibly even
its former chairman, Kenneth Lay (emphasis added).
As though any thinking person could doubt that Lay was deeply
involved in the fraudulent practices being carried out by the
company he founded and headed! That the Times adopts such
a timid and cowardly tone, speaking of the prosecution of Lay
as some remote possibility, is indicative of its own role and
that of the so-called liberal establishment in propping up Bush
and lending credibility to his administration.
Why has Lay not been arrested and why is his role being downplayed?
Precisely because of his intimate political relationship with
George W. Bush.
Lay was for many years, beginning with the presidents
run for governor of Texas, Bushs largest financial benefactor.
He served as the financial chairman of the Bush inaugural. He
was closely involved in the development of the administrations
energy policy before his companys collapse. It has recently
been revealed that during the 2000 election, Lay and Enron helped
finance the Bush campaigns legal offensive to stop the counting
of votes in Floridaa dispute that eventually led to the
anti-democratic installation of Bush by the Supreme Court.
The connection between Lay and Bush is not the only tie between
the administration and Enron. This government includes in its
top personnel many individuals with the closest personal and financial
ties to Enron. Secretary of the Army Thomas White worked as a
top executive at the company. Vice President Richard Cheneys
chief of staff, Lewis Libby, had financial ties with the company,
and Attorney General John Ashcroft has recused himself from the
Enron investigation due to possible conflicts of interest. Bushs
top economic adviser, Lawrence Lindsey, is a former adviser to
Enron. These are only some of the ties between the company and
high-level Bush officials.
It its editorial, the Times does not even mention Bush
or possible implications for his administration. In this, the
newspaper is continuing its policy of cover-up, spelled out last
January in an editorial warning the Democrats against any attempt
to turn Enron into a political scandala warning, it should
be added, that hardly needed to be made.
Such circumspection stands in stark contrast to the way the
Times and the rest of the media handled the Clinton impeachment
scandal, where every piece of gossip was treated as a political
bombshell of monumental importance.
Koppers plea
Within this broader political context, the strategy of the
Justice Department becomes more clear: to proceed with some prosecutions,
while attempting to contain the fallout.
This is not to say that the revelations that have emerged in
association with the Kopper plea are insignificant. In fact, they
do much to concretize the corruption and criminality that became
Enrons specialty.
Kopper was managing director of Enron Global Finance, which
was directed by Chief Financial Officer Fastow. He was a close
associate of Fastow and participated in many of the financial
operations set up to boost Enrons profit while enriching
executives.
One of these operations involved a private partnership known
as RADR. RADR was set up in 1997 to solve a problem arising from
Enrons purchase of a utility, Portland General Electric
(PGE). At the time, Enron owned wind farms in California, which
allowed the company to sell energy at higher prices because it
qualified as an alternative energy provider. According
to California state utility regulations, however, the purchase
of the utility would invalidate these subsidies.
Enron wanted to keep both the utility and the wind farms, while
retaining the extra benefits accrued from energy produced by the
wind farms. To this end, Fastow arranged to sell the utility to
an ostensibly external partnership. According to business code,
a partnership is considered external as soon as 3
percent of the firm is owned by external investors. Fastow did
not even meet this requirement. The funds were lent by Fastow
to Kopper, who in turn lent it to friends and family of the two
executives to invest in RADR. This gave the appearance of an external
entity to what was wholly owned by Enron insiders.
While the deal served the immediate purpose of hiding Enrons
dual ownership of the wind farms and PGE, it had the equally significant
objective of personally enriching those involved. A portion of
the loaned money$2.7 millionwas repaid with considerable
interest to the friends and family who served as the outside
lenders. When Enron bought back the wind farms in 2000, the lenders
made an additional $1.8 million. According to Kopper, some of
this money was then transferred to Kopper and Fastow in the form
of kickbacks.
Similar manipulations were involved in the two other arrangements
cited in the governments case against Kopper: Chewco and
Southhampton. Chewco was designed to keep more than $700 million
in debt off of Enrons balance sheet. Again, in order to
keep Chewco off of Enrons books, it was necessary that it
be classified as an external partnership, i.e., 3 percent of its
equity had to come from outside investors.
Kopper arranged to secure an investment from a British bank,
Barclays BLC, but the banks insisted that the loan be partially
secured by an Enron affiliate, thus making the investment ultimately
dependent on Enrons own funds. Thus Chewco did not meet
the 3 percent requirement, though it was treated as external by
Enron, Fastow and Kopper. When Enron was forced to buy back the
partnership and write off its debt, Kopper and his domestic partner,
William Dodson, received $12.6 million.
Much of this money apparently found its way back to Fastow
when Kopper bought out Fastows share in other off-balance-sheet
partnerships for $16 million. One of these partnerships included
Southampton. Southampton served essentially as a method of transferring
millions of dollars in Enron funds to a few select employees,
including Kopper, who were allowed to invest in the firm before
it was bought out by Enron in 2000.
The real significance of these detailsand the Enron scandal
as a wholeis that they reveal the extent to which the Bush
administration rests on the most criminal layers of corporate
America.
See Also:
Senate investigation provides
a glimpse into Enrons audit sham
[29 July 2002]
Enron execs looted company
prior to bankruptcy
[22 June 2002]
Enron defrauded California
out of billions during energy crisis
[10 May 2002]
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