Editor's note: Below is David Corn's article, posted on March 4,
2002, that first broke news of the Bush-Enron oil deal. An update
follows.
Did George W. Bush once have a financial relationship with Enron?
In 1986, according to a publicly available record, the two drilled
for oil together--at a time when Bush was a not-too-successful oil
man in Texas and his oil venture was in dire need of help. Bush's
business association with Enron, it seems, has not previously been
reported.
In 1986, Spectrum 7, a privately owned oil company chaired by Bush
faced serious trouble. Two years earlier, Bush had merged his
failing Bush Exploration Company (previously known as Arbusto--the
Spanish word for shrub) with the profitable Spectrum 7, and he was
named chief executive and director of the company. Bush was paid
$75,000 a year and handed 1.1 million shares, according to "First
Son," Bill Minutaglio's biography of Bush. Under this deal, Bush
ended up owning about 15 percent of Spectrum 7. By the end of
1985, Spectrum's fortunes had reversed. With oil prices falling,
the company was losing money and on the verge of collapse. To save
the firm, Bush began negotiations to sell Spectrum 7 to Harken
Energy, a large Dallas-based energy firm owned mostly by
billionaire George Soros, Saudi businessman Abdullah Taha Baksh
and the Harvard Management Corporation.
The deal took months to work out. In September of 1986, Spectrum 7
and Harken announced they had reached an agreement. Spectrum 7
shareholders, under the plan, would receive Harken stock. Bush
publicly said that Spectrum 7 would continue to operate in
Midland, Texas, as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Harken and that he
would become an active member of Harken's board of directors. As
Minutaglio noted, the deal would give Bush about $600,000 in
Harken shares and $50,000 to $120,000 a year in consultant's fees.
It also would provide $2.25 million in Harken stock for a company
with a net value close to $1.8 million.
As the details of the Spectrum-Harken acquisition--which Bush
badly needed--were being finalized, Enron Oil and Gas Company, a
subsidiary of Enron Corporation, announced on October 16, 1986,
that it had completed a well producing both oil and natural gas in
Martin County, Texas. An Enron Oil and Gas press release reported
the well was producing 24,000 cubic feet of natural gas and 411
barrels of oil per day in the Belspec Fusselman Field, 15 miles
northeast of Midland. Enron held 52 percent interest in the well.
According to the company's announcement, 10 percent belonged to
Spectrum 7. At that point, Spectrum 7 was still Bush's company.
Harken's completion of the Spectrum 7 acquisition was announced in
early November.
To spell it out: George W. Bush and Enron Oil and Gas were in
business together in 1986--when Ken Lay was head of Enron. (Lay
was named Enron chairman in February of that year.) How did this
deal come about? Was this the only project in which Bush and Enron
were partners? A call placed to the White House produced no
response. Karen Denne, an Enron spokeswoman, says "I can't
tell you anything about" that project, explaining Enron "sold all
its domestic exploration and production assets about two years
ago to EOG Reources" and probably did not retain records regarding
that well. As for the possibility Spectrum 7 invested in other
Enron ventures, she notes, "You're referencing something that
happened in 1986. I can check, but we're pretty short-staffed
now." Elizabeth Ivers, a spokeswoman for EOG Resources (formerly
Enron Oil and Gas), says, "If we did have any records on that
well, it would be nothing that we would share with the public. We
do not disclose the details or specifics of who we have well
interests with."
After the Enron affair began generating front-page headlines, Bush
attempted to distance himself from Enron and Lay. In early
January, the President claimed he and Lay had not always been
close pals. "He was a supporter of [Texas Governor] Ann Richards
in my run [against her] in 1994," Bush asserted, noting he did not
get "to know Ken" and work with him until after he won that
election. But campaign records show Lay donated three times as
much money to Bush in that race as he did to Richards. Moreover,
contacts between Lay and the Bush family pre-dated that campaign.
In 1992, Lay chaired the host committee for the 1992 Republican
convention in Houston, where Bush's father won his second
presidential nomination. And Lay was a sleepover guest at the
White House of President George H.W. Bush.
The Enron-George W. Bush connection goes back further than the
President has suggested. But does that mean the relationship
between the younger Bush and Lay stretches to the mid-1980s? The
deal could have happened without contact between Lay and Bush. But
most company heads would be interested to know that the son of the
sitting vice-president had invested in one of their enterprises.
If Lay had been aware of the partnership, that would not prove the
two were pals or that Bush and Spectrum 7 had received undue
consideration from Enron. But given Enron's penchant to use
political ties to win and protect business opportunities, it is
tough not to wonder if this Bush-Enron venture involved special
arrangements. This is certainly one more Enron partnership that
deserves scrutiny--especially since George W. Bush has yet to
acknowledge it. The Spectrum-Enron deal is either an odd
historical coincidence or an indication there's more to learn
about the Bush-Enron association.
NOW FOR AN UPDATE ON THE BUSH-ENRON OIL DEAL:
On March 6, two days after this story was first posted, "The New
York Times" ran on the front page of its business section a story
headlined, "Bush Joined Unit of Enron In '86 Venture To Seek Oil."
The article, written by Jim Yardley, essentially reported the
facts noted above. Halfway into the piece, it noted, "A columnist
in The Nation, the liberal political journal,...wrote about the
deal this week in its online edition."
While the Bush White House did not respond to a request from "The
Nation" for information, White House spokesman Dan Bartlett told
the "Times" the President "has no recollection of this specific
deal." Bartlett maintained that in 1986 Spectrum 7 was involved in
more than 175 wells. Ted Collins Jr., who was president of Enron
Oil and Gas at the time, told the newspaper that Bush did not have
"a special relationship" with the company. Collins also asserted
that Lay back then "wouldn't have known who Spectrum 7 was and
that George W. Bush had anything to do with a company called
Spectrum 7."
Since the story was originally posted, I have found records
suggesting that Bush's Spectrum 7 had a second partnership with
Enron. In May of 1985, a subsidiary of InterNorth, an Omaha-based
energy company, announced the completion of a well in Martin
County, Texas. According to "PR Newswire," the company said that
Spectrum 7 owned an 18.75 percent interest in the well. (The rest
was held by the InterNorth subsidiary.) The well, like the one
mentioned above, was located at the Belspec Fusselman Field. That
same month, InterNorth merged with Houston Natural Gas
(HNG)--which gave birth to Enron. HNG/InterNorth changed its name
to Enron in 1986, and the InterNorth subsidiary that had invested
in the well with Spectrum 7 became part of Enron Oil and Gas. If
Spectrum 7 and Enron Oil and Gas had retained their interests in
the well, that would mean that Bush's oil company was in
partnership with Enron before the deal reported above. Since Bush,
according to his spokesperson, does not have a memory for such
details and EOG Resources says it will not release any information
about wells it has owned, it will be tough to confirm that the
InterNorth-Spectrum 7 venture became an Enron-Spectrum 7
enterprise.
On another, more important, Enron-Bush point: Way back in 1994, I
reported that Rodolfo Terragno, a former Argentine cabinet
minister, had claimed that when he headed the Public Works and
Services Department in 1988, George W. Bush, whom Terragno did not
know, called him and pressured Terragno to award a pipeline
contract worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Enron. (See
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20020204&s=corn.) Terragno,
who said he resisted this and subsequent importuning, could not
provide proof that the call had occurred. (How can you prove you
were phoned by the son of the Vice-President?) Bush's aides denied
Terragno's account. But it's worth taking a second look at those
denials.
At the time I was pursuing the Terragno story, Bush was running
for Texas governor, and I asked the campaign whether Bush had
spoken to Terragno about the pipeline project and whether he had
any business relationship with Enron. Bush aide Karen Hughes faxed
me a terse statement: "The answer to your questions are no and
none. Your questions are apparently addressed to the wrong
person." An Enron spokesperson said, "Enron has not had any
business dealings with George W. Bush, and we don't have any
knowledge that he was involved in a pipeline project in
Argentina."
The recent news about the 1986 Enron-Bush venture in the Belspec
Fusselman Field undermines (to be polite about it) those 1994
statements from Bush and Enron denying any business relationship
between the scion and the company. The existence of this oil
partnership in 1986 (or one in 1985) has no bearing on the
veracity of Terragno's tale. But it shows the credibility of the
Bush gang and that of Enron deserve questioning when either one is
talking about the other.
© 2002 The Nation Company, L.P.
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