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History in a Hurry. (Comment).


As scandals go, the Enron mess has been tough for the general press to sink its teeth into. No doubt this is a huge business story, arguably the biggest corporate meltdown in a generation, but any blockbuster news event (the kind of story that merits its own title on the cable news channels) must be easy to understand and reach some resolution. Just as Hollywood would do it. And up until last week, Enron was anything but script-friendly; reporters were having a hard time just explaining what the Texas-based company did, much less how its honchos might have misled investors.

Which is why Sherron Watkins Sherron Watkins (born August 28, 1959 in Tomball, Texas) was Vice President of Corporate Development at the Enron Corporation. She is considered by many to be the whistleblower who helped to uncover the Enron scandal in 2001.  was just what the script doctor ordered. Courageous Sherron Watkins, as the TV folks will christen chris·ten  
tr.v. chris·tened, chris·ten·ing, chris·tens
1.
a. To baptize into a Christian church.

b. To give a name to at baptism.

2.
a.
 her, was the Enron vice president who last August sent a lengthy memo to Chairman and Chief Executive Kenneth Lay Kenneth Lee "Ken" Lay (April 15, 1942 – July 5, 2006) was an American businessman, best known for his role in the widely-reported corruption scandal that led to the downfall of Enron Corporation.  warning of improper accounting practices that threatened to bring down the ship. This was, of course, several months before the bankruptcy filing and the 4,000 layoffs and the criminal investigations.

As a snapshot, the Watkins memo reminds oldsters of White House Counsel John Dean's famous warning to Richard Nixon that Watergate-related misdeeds were creating a "cancer on the presidency" -- an event that Dean dramatically recounted during Senate testimony and which became the scandal's most bone-crunching sound bite sound bite
n.
A brief statement, as by a politician, taken from an audiotape or videotape and broadcast especially during a news report: "The box has been spitting forth maddening nine-second sound bites" 
.

Likewise now, we have Watkins daring to alert the powerful Lay of Enron's cancerous condition. She specifically noted those off balance sheet private partnerships that kept massive amounts of debt off the books not recorded in the official financial records of a business; - usually used of payments made in cash to fraudulently avoid payment of taxes or of employment benefits.

See also: Book
, and the potential conflicts of interest involving then Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow Andrew Stuart Fastow (born 22 December 1961) was the chief financial officer of Enron Corporation until the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission opened an investigation into his conduct in 2001. , who had stakes in said partnerships. The Watkins memo was delivered at the time Lay and other executives were still touting the company's prospects.

Suddenly, Watkins became the heroic protagonist that until now the story lacked. That meant instant profiles relying heavily on unnamed sources and vaguely resembling those quick-and-dirty sidebars about arrested serial killers. The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times described Watkins as "tough and sharp' with one former unnamed colleague telling the paper that she was "a bull in the china shop" and others mistaking the Texan for a brusque brusque also brusk  
adj.
Abrupt and curt in manner or speech; discourteously blunt. See Synonyms at gruff.



[French, lively, fierce, from Italian brusco, coarse, rough
 New Yorker.

In fairness, there's a great temptation to crank out this kind of story-behind-the-story stuff, if for no other reason than to humanize hu·man·ize  
tr.v. hu·man·ized, hu·man·iz·ing, hu·man·iz·es
1. To portray or endow with human characteristics or attributes; make human: humanized the puppets with great skill.

2.
 a scandal that centers on grayer-than-gray accountants. But I'd be willing to bet that Enron's turning point was not Sherron Watkins.

The Wall Street Journal last week reported that as early as February 2001, six months before the Watkins memo, Arthur Anderson Arthur Anderson may refer to:
  • Arthur Anderson (businessman) (1792–1868), Scottish businessman and co-founder of the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O)
  • Arthur J. O.
 officials discussed Enron's questionable accounting. Another Journal story spoke of a power struggle within Enron in which senior executive Jeffrey McMahon took his concerns about the partnerships to company president Jeffrey Skilling (the guy who suddenly resigned last summer for personal reasons). McMahon, who has since become chief financial officer, knew Watkins and urged her to identify herself in the memo to Lay. (She initially sent it anonymously.) This has led to speculation, denied by Watkins' attorney, that McMahon and Watkins were somehow plotting against Fastow.

Got that straight? It's just the beginning of what will be months of sorting out various claims of who knew what when -- and then, what they did about it. Before handing out any medals, perhaps it's best to wait until we get the story straight.
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Title Annotation:Enron Corp. case history
Comment:History in a Hurry. (Comment).(Enron Corp. case history)
Author:Lacter, Mark
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 21, 2002
Words:552
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