Enron Reps Met With Cheney 6 Times
January 8, 2002
Enron Reps Met With Cheney 6 Times
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 4:59 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Enron Corp. representatives
met six times with Vice President Dick Cheney or his aides on the nation's energy policy,
including a discussion in mid-October just before the company's sudden collapse.
In a letter to Congress, vice presidential
counsel David Addington disclosed the number of meetings between the Bush White House and
the former energy giant whose CEO, Ken Lay, has been among President Bush's top political
supporters. The company became the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history on Dec. 2.
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., released the
White House's Jan. 3 letter on Tuesday. He is seeking details of the meetings and
information about any telephone calls or e-mails between the vice president's office and
Enron.
``An employee of the vice president's staff
... met on Oct. 10, 2001, with Enron representatives and reports that they discussed
energy policy matters and did not discuss information concerning the financial position of
the Enron Corp.,'' the letter from Cheney's counsel said.
On Oct. 16, Enron announced huge losses, the
first in a series of admissions that eventually drove down the price of the company's
stock to less than a dollar a share.
Addington said Enron's financial condition
wasn't discussed at any of the earlier five meetings.
Cheney met with Lay for half an hour on April
17 to discuss ``energy policy matters, including the energy crisis in California,'' said
the letter, citing the only previously publicized meeting between Enron and the vice
president or his staff.
The day after meeting with Cheney, Lay said
the Bush administration would not support price caps on wholesale energy sales in
California, Waxman noted.
``These meetings began on Feb. 22, just over a
month after the start of the Bush administration,'' he said. ``They ended on Oct. 10, just
six days before Enron announced the $1.2 billion in reduction in shareholder equity.''
The White House letter says the other meetings
between Cheney's aides and Enron officials occurred on March 7, April 9 and Aug. 7. The
April 9 meeting was with two dozen representatives of utilities, including Enron. The Aug.
7 meeting was with officials of an Enron German subsidiary.
Some of the Enron meetings coincided with the
work of Cheney's energy task force, which last May recommended expanded oil and gas
drilling on public land and a rejuvenated nuclear power system.
For the past nine months, Cheney has refused
to tell congressional Democrats Waxman and Rep. John Dingell of Michigan which power
industry executives and lobbyists met with the task force.
The White House disclosures about Enron were
prompted by a Dec. 4 letter from Waxman.
Enron sought protection from its creditors in
bankruptcy court Dec. 2 amid revelations that questionable partnerships had helped keep
billions of dollars in debt off its books. The company acknowledged it overstated profits
for four years.
One official on the Cheney energy task force,
Lawrence Lindsay, served on an Enron advisory board in 2000, and Bush political adviser
Karl Rove sold stock in the company in June.
Lindsay received $50,000 from Enron, according
to his financial disclosure form.
Rove owned $68,000 worth of Enron stock when
he spoke to Lay about a prospective appointee to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
The Center for Public Integrity says that Bush
received $146,500 from Enron executives during his two races for Texas governor, with Lay
responsible for $122,500 of the total. Enron directors and employees have given $623,000
to Bush during his political career, the center adds. Lay was one of Bush's ``Pioneers''
who raised at least $100,000 for the candidate during the presidential campaign. Lay
contributed to the Florida recount and gave $100,000 to the Bush Inaugural.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section
107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)
<Back to ENRON-BUSH-HARVARD-WTC-OIL-CONNECTION