Lay gave list of favored names to White House for energy panel

Feb. 1, 2002, 12:12PM
Lay gave list of favored names to White House for energy panel
By MARCY GORDON
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- A few months after the White House got a list of recommended candidates from
former Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay, a friend and backer of President Bush, two of them were
appointed to a federal energy commission.
Lay gave the list of names to Clay Johnson, Bush's personnel director, White House
spokeswoman Anne Womack said Thursday. Among the eight or so names were Pat Wood, now
chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and Nora Brownell, a member of the
commission.
"It was one of many, many recommendations that he (Johnson) received" from
industry executives, members of Congress and state officials, Womack said in an interview.
Confirmation of Lay's recommendations to the White House last spring comes as
congressional panels investigate the relationship between Houston-based Enron Corp., which
filed for bankruptcy Dec. 2, and the Bush administration.
Bush will ask Congress to revamp pension laws to give workers greater flexibility to
diversify their company savings accounts, a response to the Enron failure that cost
workers their life's savings and created a political problem for the White House.
The Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating
Enron's complex accounting and what role its auditor, Arthur Andersen, played in the
company's collapse. Andersen has acknowledged destroying Enron-related documents.
A senator leading an investigation said Thursday that Enron had not cooperated in
providing important information on the complex web of partnerships used by the company to
conceal massive debts. The company's attorney said it doesn't have the documents sought.
As head of a major campaign donor, Enron, wielding significant influence in Washington,
Lay enjoyed access to top government officials of both parties. The White House has
acknowledged that Lay met once privately last year with Vice President Dick Cheney, who
headed a task force that formulated the administration's national energy policy.
Lay disclosed the existence of the list of Enron favorites in an interview being broadcast
today on PBS' "NOW with Bill Moyers."
"I brought a list, we certainly presented a list. ... As I recall, I signed a letter
which in fact had some recommendations as to people that we thought would be good (FERC)
commissioners," Lay said in the interview, which was taped in May but never aired.
Bush, as Texas governor, had appointed Wood in 1995 as head of the state's Public
Utilities Commission. Wood has been an advocate of market-oriented regulation of
utilities, a position espoused by Enron, a big, aggressive energy trader that had become a
favorite of Wall Street.
Bush appointed Wood as FERC chairman in August, replacing Curt Hebert.
Hebert said in the PBS interview that Lay "has asked me to take certain positions but
I've had those conversations with Ken Lay for a long time. And have disagreed with him for
a long time."
Brownell, a member of Pennsylvania's Public Utility Commission, was nominated by Bush in
March. During her time on the state commission, Brownell helped oversee Pennsylvania's
electricity deregulation.
Lay will be the star witness next week as a blizzard of hearings by several congressional
panels put the Enron collapse under intense public scrutiny.
Enron officials "just simply have not cooperated" in providing the documents
sought, said Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., chairman of a Senate Commerce subcommittee.
"We again renew our request."
An estimated 3,000 partnerships, some with names of "Star Wars" characters such
as Jedi, were created by Enron, which took a 97 percent stake in each of them and brought
in outside investors for the remainder. The partnerships were kept off Enron's books and
helped create the accounting debacle that pushed the company into the biggest U.S.
corporate bankruptcy filing ever.
Dorgan said the committee had no immediate plan to subpoena the documents from the
company.
Robert Bennett, a Washington attorney representing Enron, said, "We have been fully
cooperating with them."
Bennett said the committee has asked Enron for documents that the company doesn't have and
must be obtained from the partnerships or people representing them.
"We are exercising enormous good faith in cooperating with that committee," the
attorney said in a telephone interview.
In a related dispute between Congress and the Bush administration, investigators at the
General Accounting Office told the White House on Wednesday they would sue to make
officials identify the industry executives, including some from Enron, who met last year
with Cheney's energy task force.
Associated Press White House Correspondent Ron Fournier contributed to this report.
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/special/enron/1235498
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