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To: Askel5; OKCSubmariner
Business ssociates profit during Bush's term as governor - Network of investors makes millions in dealings with state
In addition to the retirement system activities, since Bush has been governor, the state's Permanent School Fund has invested more than $10 million in Crescent stock.

The Permanent University Fund, a separate fund that manages money for the state's universities, has investments in Crescent exceeding $8.9 million. The $9 billion university fund's investments are managed by the University of Texas Investment Management Co., whose chairman is Tom Hicks, owner of the Texas Rangers.

Haddock said such investments are minor compared with some institutional investors that have bought more than $500 million in Crescent stock.

In addition to the Crescent/Crow deal, the Teacher Retirement System also was involved in another real estate transaction involving the Crows and a private investment fund managed by one of Bush 's former business associates from Harken Energy Corp., the oil company Bush helped manage.

TRS had financed the expansion of the Anatole Hotel in Dallas for one of the Crow family partnerships. TRS took possession of the hotel tower in 1991 when the Crow partnership defaulted on more than $73 million in loans for its constructions. The Loews Hotel Corp., on contract to the Crows, continued to manage the entire hotel.

After foreclosing on the hotel tower, TRS invested almost $11 million in upgrades.

A series of negotiations began in 1994 over whether the hotel should be resold to the Crows or sold on the open market. After Bush became governor, TRS sold the hotel tower without taking bids to a partnership made up of the Crow family and the Harvard Management Co.

Harvard Management is the investment arm of Harvard University. Harvard's venture capital company is headed by Michael Eisenson, who served on the board of directors of Harken Energy with Bush . Harvard had become a major investor in Harken less than 60 days after Harken bought out Bush 's oil company in 1986.

TRS sold the Anatole tower to the Crow/Harvard partnership for $27 million less than the retirement system had invested in the building. But TRS officials said the system made a profit of $54 million when the building's sale price is added to loan income before default and operating income received from the hotel after default.

Steinhart seconded the motion to sell the property to the Crow/Harvard partnership.

Steinhart became one of the state's leading bankers in the late 1980s and early 1990s through a firm called Team Bank. Team Bank grew rapidly by purchasing the assets of failed banks from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which at the time was under the administration of President Bush.

Steinhart's activities with Team Bank were financed in part by a $27 million investment from the Harvard Management capital venture firm headed by Eisenson. Harvard made a $47 million profit when Steinhart merged Team Bank with Bank One in 1992.

...the SEC chairman had been appointed by President Bush in August 1989. The SEC general counsel had represented the younger Bush in the purchase of the Texas Rangers.

Texas Platform - Conduct of Public Officials

Excerpt from the 2000 Texas Republican Party Platform:

- Conduct of Public Officials -

The Party believes the president of the United States and all members of the Executive, Legislature and Judicial branches of the federal and state governments shall be held to the same standards of conduct as other law-abiding citzens. We call for the investigation and, if appropriate, prosecution of any and all members of the Clinton administration that have committed crimes, up to and including possible treason against the United States of America, without respect to the office served.

Records reveal Bush sold Harken Energy's stock during cash 'crisis'

52 posted on 01/20/2002 11:31:47 PM PST by Uncle Bill
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To: OKCSubmariner; Askel5

Investigative Report
Bush Violated Security Laws
Four Times, SEC Report Says

By Knut Royce
The Public I
October 4, 2000

(Washington, Oct. 4) George W. Bush violated federal securities laws at least four times when he was a director of a Texas oil firm in the late 1980s and early 1990s, according to an internal government report.

The document was prepared by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1991 during its well-publicized investigation into whether Bush had benefited from insider information when he sold Harken Energy Corp. stock before its value plummeted, and then failed to promptly report the transaction to the SEC in violation of federal law. Bush’s stake in Harken helped make him a multimillionaire.

The internal SEC memorandum, prepared by the commission’s enforcement division and obtained by The Public i from sources, discloses what was previously not known--that Bush also had been tardy in reporting three other transactions involving stock in Harken, on whose board he sat as director.

(This report was prepared in collaboration with Talk magazine, whose article, "George W. Bush . . . And the Horse He Rode In On," appears in the magazine's November issue.)

The Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 requires company insiders to disclose publicly, in a report called a Form 4, all stock purchases and sales by the 10th day of the month following the transaction.

 A former SEC official who asked not to be further identified said that he could recall at least one instance—involving the late stock manipulator Alexander Guterma, who began a three-year prison term in 1960 for a variety of securities offenses — where a prison sentence was imposed for failure to report a transaction. More commonly, he said, the SEC has obtained court injunctions barring frequent violators from repeating the offense. But he said that instances of insiders filing late disclosures were “fairly common’’ and that the SEC, with a limited staff, seldom pursued those cases.

The filing requirements are not a trivial matter. Insider transactions can sometimes alert outside investors that corporate officers or directors are nervous about the company’s earnings or growth. They can also alert the SEC that an officer or director benefited from information that only an insider could have known, a violation of securities laws.

Related Reports

- Bush’s Insider Connections Preceded Huge Profit On Stock Deal (April 4, 2000)

- Overnight Guests at Governor’s Mansion Added $2.2 Million to Bush Campaign. (March 15, 2000)

- Under the Influence --George W. Bush: Pragmatic, with Ties to Corporate America (Feb, 28, 2000)

- How George W. Bush Scored Big with the Texas Rangers (Jan. 28, 2000)

Bush, the SEC memo noted, had on four occasions filed late Form 4s involving Harken stock worth more than $1 million. The tardiest—34 weeks late—was his Form 4 report disclosing that he had sold $848,560 of Harken stock on June 22, 1990, just weeks before the company filed a quarterly report revealing that it had hemorrhaged $23 million during that period. Bush had sold his stock for $4 a share. By the end of the year it was trading not much above $1.

The Public i in April reported that Harken had been bleeding profusely in 1989, before Bush sold his stock, but masked the losses by claiming in its annual report a capital gain on the sale of a subsidiary even though the transaction was through a seller-financed loan. Months after Bush sold the stock, the SEC directed Harken to recast its balance sheet to reflect a net loss of $12,566,000 for 1989.

The SEC did not press charges against Bush, even though the tardy disclosures had become something of a pattern, according to the memo, which was drafted for the files on April 9, 1991, by three enforcement investigators.

“The SEC never raised any missed deadlines with us,’’ Bush’s attorney in the matter, Robert Jordan, told Talk magazine, which analyzed the transactions in cooperation with The Public i. “It was either a trivial matter to the SEC, or everything was fine.”

That indeed appears to have been the SEC’s conclusion after it learned that between 1987 and 1989, Bush was about three months late on three other occasions in reporting the acquisition of Harken stock, including the shares he eventually sold in June 1990, the memo discloses.

Yet the memo also makes clear that Bush was aware of the requirement to report insider transactions. On June 25, 1984, the document reveals, he was timely in filing a report disclosing that he was a director of Silver Screen Management Inc., the managing partner of a movie production company, Silver Screen Partners; was prompt in reporting on Aug. 31, 1989, that he owned shares in Tom Brown, Inc., an energy company on whose board he served, and was only three days late in reporting on Jan. 6, 1984, that he owned stock in Lucky Chance Mining, where he also was a director.

In its book The Buying of the President 2000, the Center for Public Integrity reported that Bush had acquired the stock he sold in 1990 in a deal that made little economic sense. Bush had been chief executive officer of a tiny money-losing energy company called Spectrum 7. Harken acquired the firm in 1986 from Bush and two partners for $2 million in stock despite the fact that Spectrum 7 had posted losses of $400,000 six months before the purchase and carried a debt of $3 million.

“His name was George Bush,’’ Phil Kendrick, Harken’s founder, said of the purchase. “That was worth the money they paid him."

At about the same time Bush unloaded his Harken stock in 1990, he also sold nearly $700,000 worth of shares in four other companies. His accountant, according to a March 1992 SEC memo to the file, had been “bugging him to get liquid.” About $600,000 of the proceeds, the memo noted, went to pay off a bank loan he had taken a year earlier for his minority stake in the Texas Rangers baseball team. In 1998 Bush’s trust sold that stake for $16 million, catapulting him to the rank of multimillionaire.



If one violates federal securities laws four times, does one not go to prison in America? What good are the laws? How's it work? Just curious.

Never mind.

"A former SEC official who asked not to be further identified said that he could recall at least one instance—involving the late stock manipulator Alexander Guterma, who began a three-year prison term in 1960 for a variety of securities offenses — where a prison sentence was imposed for failure to report a transaction."

We're moving on, baby.

53 posted on 01/20/2002 11:55:08 PM PST by Uncle Bill
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