Prepared
Witness Testimony
The Committee on Energy and Commerce
W.J. "Billy" Tauzin, Chairman
Financial Collapse of Enron Corp
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
February 7, 2002
10:00 AM
2322 Rayburn House Office Building
Mr. Robert Jaedicke
Enron Board of Directors
Chairman of Audit and Compliance Committee Enron Corporation 1400 Smith Street
Houston, TX, 77002
Chairman
Greenwood, Congressman Deutsch, and Members of the Subcommittee.
Good afternoon, and thank you for the opportunity to address the
Subcommittee.
I
am the Chairman of the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors of Enron
Corporation. I have held that
position since the mid-1980s.
Let
me tell you about my background. I
joined the faculty of the Stanford Graduate School of Busness in 1961.
I served as Dean of the Business School from 1983 until 1990.
At that time, I returned to the faculty of the Business School, and
retired in 1992.
Throughout
my tenure as Chairman of the Enron Board's Audit Committee, I have been
committed to ensuring that it is an effective and actively functioning body.
Over the last few years, we undertook to review and strengthen our
already vigorous control systems. In
1999, we began a number of initiatives to ensure that we remained a "best
practices" Audit Committee. Throughout
2000 and into 2001, our committee worked with Arthur Andersen to make certain we
complied with the recommendations of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the
New York Stock Exchange, and the Blue Ribbon Committee on Improving the
Effectiveness of Corporate Audit Committees.
That effort culminated in February 2001, when the Audit Committee
finalized a new charter which was approved by the full Board.
Throughout that lengthy process, involving both Enron management and
Arthur Andersen, we implemented a series of further refinements to our corporate
policies and controls.
The
lifeblood of the work of any Audit Committee is the development and
implementation of adequate controls, many of which cross check each other.
And the oversight function of the Committee depends on the full and
complete reporting of information to it. Without
full and accurate information, an Audit Committee cannot be effective.
I
have now read the report of the Special Committee.
What comes across to me most clearly is that the controls the Board put
in place to monitor these transactions broke down.
Enron management, Arthur Andersen, the internal legal department-each
had a role in our systems of controls. The
Report of the Special Committee sets forth many instances where they did not
fulfill their duty to us. We put in
place multiple controls involving of numerous parties, because we are aware that
one check may not be sufficient. We
could not have predicted that all the controls would fail.
The
Special Committee concludes that the Audit Committee and the Board failed in
their duties to oversee these transactions, and that we were insufficiently
vigilant. I do not accept that
conclusion. As the Special
Committee found:
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The
Board understood that these were special transactions and we reviewed their
economic benefit to Enron. We
established numerous controls to ensure that these transactions were
properly structured, executed, reviewed, and reported, and the Board
reasonably believed that these controls were adequate and would work.
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The
Board was entitled to rely on these controls, and the successful
implementation of these controls turned on management's and outside
consultants' thorough evaluation and review of these transactions, and
fully reporting back to the Board.
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As
stated in the Report of the Special Committee, internal management and
outside advisors did not raise concerns with the Board; regularly assured us
that the transactions had been reviewed and that they were lawful and
appropriate.
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It
is now clear that management and the outside consultants failed to disclose
critical information about these transactions of which they were clearly
aware.
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After
reading the Report, I would like to add that if even some of the Board's
had controls worked as expected, I believe that we could have addressed
these issues and avoided this terrible tragedy.
A.
Role of the Audit Committee
There
has been much written of late about the role of Audit Committees, and about the
performance of the Enron Audit Committee in this matter.
I would like to comment about what we are and what we are not.
The Audit Committee's function is one of oversight.
Its responsibility is to receive reports from management and the outside
auditors, to review the adequacy of internal controls, and to oversee the filing
of financial statements. We do not
work full time in this job. None of
the members of the Audit Committee is an employee of Enron. We do not manage the
Company. We do not do the auditing.
We are not detectives.
We
held regular meetings, at which we received reports from a broad range of
management and Arthur Andersen. There
is an entire body of accounting literature known to Enron management and known
to Arthur Andersen about the duties of those two groups to provide information
to the Audit Committee and ultimately to the Board of Directors. We were entitled to rely on the representations made to us
about the appropriateness of the accounting for the partnerships, and the
adequacy of disclosure. We asked
questions. We provided oversight, and set direction based on the information we
received. I respectfully submit
that we did our job.
Arthur
Andersen representatives attended each meeting of the Audit Committee.
At each meeting, they made reports to us about issues of interest or
concern. Further, it was my
invariable practice to hold an executive session with the Arthur Andersen
representatives, or at the very minimum offer one, where they could meet with us
without management present. Arthur
Andersen was free to report to the Committee any matters regarding the
corporation and its financial affairs and records that made the auditors
uncomfortable, including; (1) whether the auditors had had any significant
disagreement with management; (2) whether the auditors had full cooperation of
management; (3) whether reasonably effective accounting systems and controls
were in place; (4) whether there are any material systems and controls that need
strengthening; and (5) whether Arthur Andersen had detected instances where
company policies had not been fully complied with.
At each of these sessions, Arthur Andersen was given the opportunity to
meet privately with the Committee outside the presence of management to discuss
any of these matters. It now
appears that Arthur Andersen had significant concern about Enron's financial
practices, at least as early as February 2001, but failed to raise those
concerns with the Audit Committee at that time.
Over
the last several weeks, through disclosures by this Committee, the media, and
the Report of the Special Committee of the Board of Directors, I have learned
that within the management of Enron and within Arthur Andersen, there was
substantial turmoil about the partnerships that are the subject of these
hearings. For example, until recently, I was unaware that:
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In
February 2001, Arthur Andersen officials met and raised concerns about the
accounting for the partnerships;
-
n
the summer of 2001, an Enron in-house attorney was sufficiently concerned
about the partnerships that he consulted with a separate law firm;
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In
September or early October 2001, Arthur Andersen retained outside counsel
and formed a consultative group regarding these partnerships;
-
In
October 2001, Arthur Andersen reportedly told a member of management of
Enron that Enron's soon to be released earnings statement for the third
quarter of 2001 could be fraudulent and could bring SEC enforcement action.
Contrast
what Arthur Andersen knew and was doing during at that time with what it was
telling the Audit Committee. In a
February 12, 2001 Audit Committee meeting, Arthur Andersen reported:
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That
Arthur Andersen's financial statement opinion for the 2000 financial
statements would be unqualified. The
2000 statements would cover the first full year of existence of the LJM
partnerships.
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That
Arthur Andersen's opinion on the company's internal controls would be
unqualified.
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That
the use of structured transactions and mark to market accounting required
significant judgment, but Arthur Andersen did not suggest that anything
about the judgments being made was inappropriate.
-
Arthur
Andersen specifically reviewed with us the related party transactions, and
did not indicate any impropriety with the accounting.
In
our October, 2001 Audit Committee meeting, Arthur Andersen told us that there
were no material weaknesses in our internal controls.
B.
The Report of the Enron Board's
Special Committee
Much of the focus of the
hearings this week has been on the Report of the Special Investigative
Committee, which was formed by Enron's Board of Directors to examine Related
Party transactions entered into by Enron Corp.
The Committee's investigation was both a thorough and impartial
investigation into the transactions in question.
In
reading the report, I was deeply disturbed to learn of the marked lack of candor
of both company management and our professional advisers concerning these
transactions. The lifeblood of an
effective Board is the ability to receive full and candid information by its
outside advisors and management. It
is clear now that substantial and critical information was in many instances
concealed from the Board-and in others was affirmatively misrepresented to
us-by both company management and its outside advisers. This lack of full disclosure severely undermined the
Board's effectiveness and oversight ability.
No Board can properly execute its duties or make informed decisions
without it.
I
want to highlight two critical pieces of information about these transactions
that the Report concluded management did not reveal to the Board.
First, the Special Committee determined in its Report that many Enron
employees never disclosed to the Board that employees other than Andrew Fastow
had acquired interests in, or become parties to, additional Related Party
transactions with Enron. This
dereliction of duty is a clear violation of the existing Code of Conduct
applicable to all Enron employees. Of
equal importance, as the Report makes clear, is that other Enron employees
apparently knew about-but did not report to the Board-the existence of these
undisclosed conflicts of interest. Neither
the conduct of the employees who acquired these interests, nor the conduct of
others who knew of it and failed to tell the Board, is in any way excusable.
It is
also apparent that Management's lack of candor was not limited simply to the
non-disclosure of conflicting interests. According
to the Report, many Enron employees believed that particular transactions with
the LJM entities were unfair to Enron, were an improper effort to manipulate the
company's financials, or were not properly being disclosed in Enron's proxy
statements and financial disclosures. These
are serious issues, and the Board was entitled to have them brought to its
attention. These officers and employees may have made their objections
known to other management, but that does not excuse their failure to bring these
problems to or to notify properly the Board so that it could address them.
This marked disregard for the Company's best interests-and for the
Board's directives-is deeply disturbing.
With
respect to the various transactions that were the subject of the Special
Committee Report, I would like to make a few comments about what the Board did,
why we did it, and what we knew at the time.
I want to first address the current criticism directed at Enron's use
of widely-accepted and well-established off balance sheet financing or special
purpose vehicles to raise money. This
practice is permitted by the accounting rules (if structured correctly).
Many companies use off- balance sheet financing every day. Enron's extensive use of off-balance sheet financing was
widely known and well-publicized.
Now,
let me begin with the earliest Enron transaction at issue, which was in 1997 and
involved an entity called Chewco.
1.
Chewco
The
Chewco transaction was part of Enron's restatement of its financial statements
last November, when it was determined by Enron and Arthur Andersen accountants
that Chewco was a related party that did not satisfy the accounting rules which
permit an entity to remain unconsolidated.
When the Board learned last fall that Chewco did not satisfy the SPE
rules and Enron's financial statements had to be restated because of it, we
were shocked. I do not recall the
Board ever being made aware that Chewco was an affiliated transaction until last
fall, and the Special Committee apparently found no evidence of anyone informing
the Board of this critical fact.
The
Board had relied on senior management and its external advisers, including
Arthur Andersen and Vinson & Elkins, to structure and account for the Chewco
transaction. The Board had no
reason to question the accounting for the Chewco transaction because, as far as
the Board knew, Chewco was entirely unaffiliated with Enron, and Enron's
internal and external auditors would ensure that it was properly accounted for.
Yet
these internal and external controls failed to bring to the Board's attention
the critical fact that Michael Kopper, an Enron employee, had a interest in
Chewco. To the contrary, the
representation made to the Board was that Chewco was a completely unaffiliated
third party. Those presenting this
transaction in 1997 had to know this was untrue, and they had an obligation
under Enron's Code of Conduct to disclose Mr. Kopper's involvement to the
Board. According to the Special
Committee Report, they did not. Had
they done so, I am confident that we would have taken appropriate steps to avoid
what ultimately happened.
2.
LJM
With
the benefit of hindsight, the Report of the Special Committee concludes that the
presence of extensive, Board-initiated controls over the LJM transactions should
have signaled that the LJM structures should never have been approved from the
outset. I disagree with this
conclusion
As
noted in the Report, LJM1 and LJM2 were presented to the Board as having
significant benefits to Enron. The
Office of the Chairman determined that the LJM structure - with Mr. Fastow as
the general partner of the LJMs- would not adversely affect the interests of
the company. Senior management
discussed with the Board the very real and substantial benefits to Enron of such
a structure. The Board thought,
based upon these presentations, that the LJM partnerships offered real business
benefits to Enron that outweighed the potential risks.
Even today, the Special Committee recognizes - as did the Board when it
approved the LJM structure - that significant and legitimate economic
benefits were presented to justify why Mr. Fastow should be permitted to assume
the role that we ultimately permitted him to assume.
The Special Committee can disagree with the Board's weighing of the
benefits and potential risks of the LJM structure, but it cannot fairly be
characterized as a decision that the Board was not entitled to make.
I first
want to note that the Board did not waive Enron's Code of Business Conduct
when it approved Mr. Fastow's participation in LJM.
Mr. Fastow was at all times bound by Enron's Code of Conduct, as well
as its Code of Ethics, and Mr. Fastow always owed a fiduciary duty to act in the
best interests of Enron Corporation. That
Code of Conduct allows a senior officer to participate in a transaction in which
he has a conflict of interest with Enron if the Office of the Chairman
determines that this would not adversely affect the interests of the Company.
Mr. Fastow was allowed to participate in LJM because the Office of the
Chairman made such a determination, and the Board ratified it.
This action had no affect whatsoever on Mr. Fastow's obligation to
comply with all other requirements of Enron's Code of Business Conduct and its
Code of Ethics as a senior officer and fiduciary of Enron, including the
requirement that all LJM transactions be on terms fair to Enron and in its best
interests
In
addition, the Board was certainly aware of the problems that could result from
Mr. Fastow transacting business with Enron as the general partner of LJM.
That is why the Board put in place an added layer of strict controls
specifically for transactions between Enron and LJM.
The controls established for LJM include the following:
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Enron
and LJM had no obligation to do business with each other.
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Enron's
Chief Accounting Officer, Mr. Fastow's equal in the corporate structure,
was to review and approve any transactions.
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Enron's
Chief Risk Officer, also Mr. Fastow's equal in the corporate structure,
was to review and approve any transactions.
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Jeff
Skilling, President and Chief Operating Officer, and Mr. Fastow's
superior, also was to review and approve any transactions.
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Arthur
Andersen was involved from the beginning in structuring and accounting for
these transactions to ensure that they were done properly.
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Once
a year the Audit Committee reviewed the transactions that had been completed
in the prior year.
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An
LJM Approval Process Checklist was to be filled out to ensure compliance
with the Board's directive for transacting with LJM, including questions
regarding alternative sales options, a determination that the transaction
was conducted at arms-length, and review of the transaction by Enron's
Office of the Chairman, Chief Accounting Officer and Chief Risk Officer.
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Enron
employees who reported to Mr. Fastow were not permitted to negotiate with
LJM on behalf of Enron.
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The
Commercial, Legal and Accounting departments of Enron Global Finance were to
monitor compliance with the procedures and controls, and were to regularly
update the Chief Accounting and Risk Officers.
-
Mr.
Fastow was not relieved of his fiduciary duties to Enron.
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The
Office of the Chairman or the Board could ask Mr. Fastow to resign from LJM
at any time.
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Mr.
Skilling was to review Mr. Fastow's economic interest in Enron and LJM.
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Enron's
internal and outside counsel were to regularly consult regarding disclosure
obligations concerning LJM, and were to
review any such disclosures.
These
are extraordinary controls. The
Audit Committee was repeatedly assured by senior management and by Arthur
Andersen that these controls were being followed.
The Board was told, and had every reason to believe, that Jeff Skilling,
Enron's President and Chief Operating Officer at the time, Richard Causey,
Enron's Chief Accounting Officer, Richard Buy, Enron's Chief Risk Officer,
and Arthur Andersen, Enron's auditor, were ensuring that the Board's
policies were followed and that any transactions with LJM were fair to Enron and
properly accounted for. The Board
relied on Enron's accounting staff, external auditors and legal counsel to
ensure the accuracy of Enron's disclosures in its proxy and financial
statements. Unfortunately, it is
now clear that our reliance-while reasonable and expected-was misplaced.
Despite
the existence of these controls, the Special Committee has found that numerous
critical and troubling facts about LJM1 and LJM2 do not appear to have been
brought to the attention of the Board or the Audit Committee, even though LJM
was generally discussed at almost every meeting and there was a formal
presentation and review once a year to the Audit and Finance Committees.
Some of the facts about LJM that the Special Committee found appear to
have been concealed from the Board are:
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As
with Chewco, the Board did not know that Michael Kopper was involved in LJM.
According to the Report, the Private Placement Memorandum - which
was reviewed by Enron's in-house lawyers and by Vinson & Elkins -
indicates that Michael Kopper would be involved in managing LJM's
day-to-day activities. Both
Enron's in-house lawyers and Vinson & Elkins, Enron's outside
counsel, apparently reviewed this memorandum, but failed to inform the Board
of what they learned.
-
The
Board was not informed of and did not approve any other Enron employees -
besides Mr. Fastow - working for or having a financial interest in LJM.
It turns out that a number of other employees - in violation of the
Enron Code of Conduct - did work for or took a financial interest in
LJM.
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The
Board was not told that Enron sold seven assets to LJM1 and LJM2 in the
third and fourth quarter of 1999, and then turned around and repurchased
five of those seven assets after the financial reporting period closed.
I do not believe any of those repurchase transactions were presented
to the Board for review.
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The
Board was not told that Enron agreed to protect LJM from losses on any of
its transactions with LJM.
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The
Board was not told that the requirement that only employees who did not
report to Fastow could negotiate with LJM on behalf of Enron was ignored.
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In
early 2001, the Board was not told that the Raptor transactions were several
hundred million dollars undercapitalized, or that management therefore
intended to restructure those transactions requiring issuance of some 800
million additional shares of Enron stock.
-
Finally,
the senior management and external advisors of Enron, on whom the Board
relied for information, never reported to the Board that any of the LJM
transactions were unfair to Enron, involved questionable terms, or violated
any accounting rules. Instead,
the Board and the Audit Committee were regularly told by those who had no
personal stake in LJM that all of the controls were functioning properly,
and that all of the transactions being done were properly accounted for,
were at arms length and were fair to Enron.
The
Report itself makes clear that the controls established by the Board were not
adequately executed, and important information was affirmatively concealed from
the Board. The Audit Committee
reviewed all of the LJM transactions with Enron's Chief Accounting Officer
each year, in the presence of Arthur Andersen, and was assured that all of the
transactions were done at arms length and were fair to Enron.
The Board and the Audit Committee had no reason not to trust the
assurances they received.
Some
now contend that we should have spent more time, and asked more questions.
I can assure you that the controls and the transactions were given more
than just a superficial review. Furthermore,
they were reviewed by two committees. Considering
the amount and seriousness of information that was concealed from us and
misrepresented to us, I am not confident as I sit here today that we would have
gotten to the truth with any amount of questioning and discussion.
Nobody seems to be saying that they did not have an opportunity to inform
us about the problems with Enron's related party transactions.
They had plenty of opportunity to tell us the complete truth, we imposed
numerous controls that required them to report to us fully and honestly-but
they chose not to do so.
The
Report recognizes that a Board of Directors can fulfill its duty to act with due
care either "through one of its Committees or through the use of outside
Consultants." The Board was, as the Report notes, repeatedly assured by its
outside auditors, Arthur Andersen, that all of the Related Party transactions
were on fair terms consistent with those available to Enron from Third Parties.
Importantly, this was an audited representation by Arthur Andersen-and
was made to the Board even in the face of significant, and undisclosed, internal
concerns at Arthur Andersen that the transactions were not in fact on arms'
length terms. During the relevant
period I cannot remember Arthur Andersen expressing any concerns to the Board
about the fairness or legitimacy of any of the related party transactions. Instead, Arthur Andersen repeatedly assured the Board, and
specifically the Audit Committee, that it had reviewed the structuring of the
transactions and that it was being proactive with respect to the accounting
issues involved. For example,
Arthur Andersen made the following assurances to the Board:
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In
October 1999, when LJM2 was approved, Arthur Andersen assured the Audit
Committee that it had spent considerable time during the third quarter
reviewing a joint venture Enron was forming to assist in monetizing
investments.
-
In
presenting LJM2 to the Finance Committee in October 1999, senior management
discussed the fact that Arthur Andersen had reviewed LJM2 and were fine with
it.
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In
May 2000, Arthur Andersen reported to the Audit Committee that Enron's
related party transactions were a high priority area, that Arthur Andersen
would be spending additional time specifically on Enron's structured
transactions and hedging vehicles, and that Arthur Andersen gets involved in
these structures at the front end to discuss applicable accounting issues.
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In
December 2000, Arthur Andersen reported to the Audit Committee that there
were no significant audit adjustments to be made, no disagreements with
management and no significant difficulties encountered during the audit.
Arthur
Andersen often mentioned that Enron was utilizing highly complex structured
transactions that required significant judgment in the application of the
accounting rules. Arthur Andersen
assured us that they were working with their experts in Chicago to make sure
that Enron properly accounted for those transactions.
All the
time that Arthur Andersen and senior management were assuring the Board that the
controls were all being followed and the transactions were being done at arms
length and were fair to Enron, many of the controls were in fact being
completely ignored. Perhaps the
most egregious example of this occurred in and around February 2001. According to the Report, sometime in the first quarter of
2001 it became clear to Enron management that the Raptor vehicles were no longer
creditworthy. That meant that Enron
was in danger of having to take an enormous charge to earnings.
Senior management, however, did not come to the Board with this extremely
serious problem. At the same time,
Arthur Andersen held an internal meeting involving Houston and Chicago
management on February 5, 2001, in which they discussed the fact that they had
serious concerns about Enron's accounting.
The next week, however, when Arthur Andersen came to meet with the Audit
Committee, the Report concludes that they did not mention even a single concern
to us. Instead, Arthur Andersen
simply reported that their financial statements opinion would be unqualified,
there were no significant accounting adjustments, there were no disagreements
with management and that their opinion on Enron's internal controls would be
unqualified and no material weaknesses had been identified.
We now
know that the Raptors were underwater by hundreds of millions of dollars in
early 2001, and nobody brought that to the immediate attention of the Board or
the Audit Committee. Instead,
senior management entered into a transaction to provide $800 million of Enron
stock in an attempt to prop up the failing Raptor structures.
The Board was not told about this transaction at the time.
I agree with the Report's conclusions that Arthur Andersen "failed to
provide the objective accounting judgment that should have prevented these
transactions from going forward." (Report,
p. 24-25).
C.
Findings of the Special Committee
Report
The
Report clearly recognizes that the controls implemented by the Board were "a
genuine effort by the Board to satisfy itself that Enron's interests would be
protected." (Report, p. 156).
Importantly, as I have discussed,
had the controls been adhered to-in particular the requirements that the terms
be fair to Enron and obtained at arms' length-none of the transactions
criticized in the Report would, or should, have occurred.
Under no circumstances should it ever have been the case that LJM was
guaranteed that it would never lose money.
(Report, p. 135) Under
no circumstances should a transaction have been approved that offered LJM2 the
"internal rates of return on the four Raptors of 193%, 278%, 2500% and a
projected 125% ." (Report , p. 128)
These returns were "far in excess of the 30% annualized rate of return
described in the May 1 2000 Finance Committee"-but none of the Enron
employees who knew these facts disclosed them to the Board.
(Report, p. 128-29) The
Board cannot be faulted for failing to act on information that was withheld from
it, nor can it be faulted for failing to respond to information that was
affirmatively misrepresented to it. (Report,
p. 156-58).
I
agree with the Report's conclusion that "[t]he evidence available to us
suggests that Andersen did not fulfill its professional responsibilities in
connection with its audits of Enron's financial statements, or its obligation
to bring to the attention of Enron's Board (or the Audit or Compliance
Committee) concerns about Enron's internal controls over the related-party
transactions." (Report, p. 20)
By necessity, Boards of Directors must rely - and the law allows them
to rely -- on outside advisers who are hired by the Board and owe their duties
to the Board. As the Report found,
Enron's Board of Directors "reasonably relied on the professional judgment
of Arthur Andersen concerning Enron's financial statements and the adequacy of
internal controls. Andersen failed
to meet its responsibility in both respects."
(Report, p. 25) The
Report's additional findings about Andersen's inexcusable failure to fulfill
its professional duties include the following:
-
"It
is particularly surprising that the accountants at Andersen, who should have
brought a measure of objectivity and perspective to [the transactions] did
not do so.and there is no question that Andersen accountants were in a
position to understand all the critical features of the Raptors and offer
advice on the appropriate accounting treatment..Indeed, there is
abundant evidence that Andersen in fact offered Enron advice at every
step, from inception through restructuring and ultimately to terminating the
Raptors. Enron followed
that advice." (Report, p. 132) (emphasis added)
-
"Enron's
outside auditors supposedly examined Enron's internal controls, but did
not identify or bring to the Audit Committee's attention the inadequacies
in their implementation." (Report,
p. 148).
-
"The
Board was entitled to rely on assurances it received that Enron's
internal accountants and Andersen had fully evaluated and approved the
accounting treatment of the [Raptor] transaction.The involvement of
Enron's internal accountants, and the reported (and actual) involvement of
Andersen, gave the Finance Committee and the Board reason to presume that
the transaction was proper. Raptor
was an extremely complex transaction, presented to the Committee by
advocates who conveyed confidence and assurance that the proposal was in
Enron's best interests. (Report,
p. 156-18)
-
"The
Board appears to have reasonably relied upon the professional judgment of
Andersen concerning Enron's financial statements and the adequacy of
controls for the related-party transactions."
(Report, p. 25)
These
statements establish, as the Report acknowledges, that the Board could and did
discharge its obligations to understand and evaluate these transactions
"through its Outside Consultants," Arthur Andersen.
That Andersen, in the words of the Report, "failed to meet its
responsibilities in both respects" cannot be laid at the feet of the Board.
II.
Conclusion
The
Board recognizes that these transactions had catastrophic consequences for
Enron-in an environment already made difficult by investments that were
otherwise performing poorly in its broadband, retail energy and water
businesses. In retrospect, and with
the knowledge of the duplicity of its employees and the failures of its
advisers, the Board deeply wishes that it had never agreed to these
transactions. The Board, however,
did not - and could not -- have foreseen that significant information about
these transactions would be withheld from it.
The
Board cannot be faulted for failing to respond to information that was concealed
from them, or that was actively misrepresented to them.
It is not accurate to suggest that the Board "did not effectively meet
its obligation with respect to the LJM transactions" when the record is
replete with evidence that-without Board approval-the most senior management
of Enron was willing to enrich itself at company expense, to deceive the Board
and to disregard its fiduciary obligations of candor to the Company and its
shareholders. Indeed, it seems
evident-from a review of the Chewco, Raptor and Southhampton
transactions-that no amount of process or oversight would or could have
prevented the actions of these employees.
Of
equal importance, there is absolutely no suggestion that the Board was in any
way personally interested in these transactions.
The Board acted at all times with a good faith belief that these
transactions-though they presented risks-were in the company's best
interests and were being carefully structured and reviewed by internal and
external professionals to ensure that they were done properly.
Finally,
the Board did consider these transactions carefully, attended to the risks
created by Mr. Fastow's conflict of interests, and was repeatedly assured by
company management and by the company's advisers that these transactions were
appropriate and in the Company's best interests.
While others may differ with that business judgment, it is incorrect to
imply that the Board's decision to authorize the transactions was reached
carelessly or without considered attention to, and good faith reliance upon, the
information made available to us at the time.
This is the proper role of a board of directors-but it simply was not
adequate to prevent the deliberate and improper actions of certain of the
Company's employees.
What
happened at Enron has been described as a systemic failure.
As it pertains to the Board, I see it instead as a cautionary reminder of
the limits of a director's role. We
served as directors of what was then the seventh largest corporation in America.
Our job as directors was necessarily limited by the nature of Enron's
enterprise-which was worldwide in scope, employed more than 20,000 people, and
engaged in a vast array of trading and development activities. By force of
necessity, we could not know personally all of the employees.
As we now know, key employees whom we thought we knew proved to be
dishonest or disloyal.
The
very magnitude of the enterprise requires directors to confine their control to
the broad policy decisions. That we
did this is clear from the record. At the meetings of the Board and its committees, in which all
of us participated, these questions were considered and decided on the basis of
summaries, reports and corporate records. These
we were entitled to rely upon. Directors
are also, as the Report recognizes, entitled to rely on the honesty and
integrity of their subordinates and advisers until something occurs to put them
on suspicion that something is wrong.
We
did all of this, and more. Sadly,
despite all that we tried to do, in the face of all the assurances we received,
we had no cause for suspicion until it was too late.
Thank you
The
Committee on Energy and Commerce
2125 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
(202) 225-2927
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