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Mon, Feb 04, 2002 - Page 21 News List

Enron may have hid US$1bn in losses

LEGAL TIGHTROPE A report by a Texas law school dean says that the company's management, the board, an outside law firm and auditors pressed the limits of the law

BLOOMBERG , NEW YORK

Enron Corp executives amassed fortunes by creating affiliated partnerships that hid at least US$1 billion in losses, part of "a deeper and more serious problem" that experts hired by the bankrupt energy trader found.

A report on Saturday by a three-member team headed by University of Texas Law School Dean William Powers stops short of accusing Enron officials of illegality, while placing blame on management, the board, an outside law firm and auditors Arthur Andersen LLP.

With its wealth of new detail, the 203-page report could give more ammunition to Enron critics, putting former Chairman Kenneth Lay and Andersen officials on the spot when they testify Monday before congressional committees investigating Enron's collapse in the largest bankruptcy in US history.

"As the Enron story unravels, the more outraged I become," said Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Harvey Pitt, who represented Andersen and other top accounting firms while in private practice. He is considered sympathetic to the industry.

Enron lawyer Robert Bennett said the report, commissioned by Enron's board, was "thorough and honorable," demonstrating a commitment to get to the facts and showing that earlier "the board was not provided a great deal of information that it should have had."

Andersen spokesman Patrick Dorton called the report "self-serving" in playing down the board's responsibility. "The authors, whose independence is already in question, were handpicked by Enron's board," Dorton said. "The authors failed to consult with Andersen in any substantial way."

The report said the board's audit committee shared in the blame for inadequate disclosures in Enron's public filings, along with management, Andersen and the company's longtime Houston law firm, Vinson & Elkins.

"We were told by more than one person that the company spent considerable time and effort working to say as little as possible about the LJM transactions in the disclosure documents," the report said.

"That impulse to avoid public exposure, coupled with the significance of the transactions for Enron's income statements and balance sheets, should have raised red flags for senior management, as well as for Enron's outside auditors and lawyers. Unfortunately, it apparently did not."

Lay, a major contributor to President George W. Bush, "bears significant responsibility" for "flawed decisions" in approving some transactions, the report said.

Enron employees involved with affiliated partnerships, known as special purpose entities, enriched themselves "by tens of millions of dollars they should never have received," the report said. Former Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow made at least US$30 million, former General Manager Michael Kopper got at least US$10 million, and two other employees made at least US$1 million each, the report said.

"This personal enrichment of Enron employees, however, was merely one aspect of a deeper and more serious problem," the report said. "These partnerships -- Chewco, LJM1 and LJM2 -- were used by Enron management to enter into transactions that it could not, or would not, do with unrelated commercial entities."

Transactions used to hide debts and offset losses didn't follow accounting rules and were implemented "improperly," the report said. The transactions resulted in Enron overstating earnings from the third quarter of 2000 through the third quarter of last year by about US$1 billion, the report said.

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