Dick Cheney's slimy business trail
He may take to his bunker to hide from the SEC and Congress, not Osama
bin Laden, as the probe into Halliburton's accounting tricks heats up.
By Robert Scheer
July 17, 2002
Vice President Dick Cheney has spent most of the past year in hiding,
ostensibly from terrorists, but increasingly it seems obvious that it
is Congress, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the media and the
public he fears. And for good reason: Cheney's business behavior could
serve as a textbook case of much of what's wrong with the way corporate
CEOs have come to play the game of business.
The game involves more than playing loose with accounting rules, as Halliburton
Co. is accused of doing while Cheney was the Texas-based energy company's
chief executive.
On Sunday, SEC chairman Harvey Pitt, whom Cheney pushed for the job,
reluctantly turned on his sponsor and announced a vigorous investigation
of Halliburton's accounting violations. Recent business scandals, however,
are also the product of legal loopholes that allow firms to scoop up billions
in unregulated profits.
It was just such loopholes that allowed the rise and subsequent fall
of Enron and telecom heavyweights like WorldCom -- in the process making
CEOs like Dick Cheney very, very rich.
Recall that Cheney was a political hack for most of his professional
life, first as a staffer in the Ford White House, then as a congressman
for a decade and after that as secretary of defense under the current
president's father.
During the Clinton years, however, Cheney took an extremely lucrative
five-year cruise into the private sector as chief executive of Halliburton.
After deciding, following an extensive search, that he would be George
W. Bush's best candidate for vice president, Cheney resigned from the
energy services company with a $36 million payoff for his final year of
corporate service.
This journey from the public payroll to the corporate towers and back
left a slimy trail of conflict-of-interest questions. For example, Secretary
of Defense Cheney conveniently changed the rules restricting private contractors
doing work on U.S. military bases, allowing the Kellogg Brown & Root
subsidiary of his future employer Halliburton to receive the first of
$2.5 billion in contracts over the next decade. When Cheney left to become
CEO of the entire company, he recruited his Pentagon military aide, Joe
Lopez, to become senior vice president in charge of Pentagon dealings,
which ultimately formed the most lucrative part of the otherwise ailing
company's business.
Since returning to public office, these disturbing patterns have continued.
In a scathing expos? of Halliburton's military contracts, for example,
the New York Times revealed that the vice president's old company had
been the main beneficiary of the Pentagon's rush to build anti-terrorism
military bases around the world. This new work will cost taxpayers many
billions, and, according to Pentagon investigators' estimates, without
any cost controls the final bill will be considerably higher than if the
military's own construction units do the work.
Cheney denies having a role in securing those recent contracts, as he
denies any knowledge of Halliburton's alleged accounting improprieties.
Unfortunately for Halliburton's stockholders and employees, parlaying
his Pentagon contacts into profit has proved to be Cheney's only major
business success.
In fact, CEO Cheney put Halliburton's future in doubt by engineering
the acquisition of rival Dresser Industries, a move ballyhooed at the
time as justification of his $2.2 million annual salary and massive stock
options.
But the acquisition has proved to be a disaster because Halliburton assumed
Dresser's long-term liability under asbestos lawsuits.
Even without the Dresser acquisition, Cheney was running a failing operation
at Halliburton.
The company, despite the government gravy garnered, had earnings well
below Wall Street's expectations --until it suddenly changed its accounting
rules. By assuming it would be able to collect on cost overruns on myriad
construction projects, Cheney's Halliburton was able to inflate profits
by $234 million over a four-year period.
Halliburton failed to disclose its accounting shenanigans to the SEC
or the company's investors for more than a year afterward, leading to
more than a dozen lawsuits alleging fraud, including one by Judicial Watch.
And why are we not surprised that Halliburton's accounting firm was Arthur
Andersen, earlier this year convicted of obstruction of justice for shredding
documents in connection with Enron?
Andersen's dubious methods have become the disgrace of American accounting.
Cheney, however, was sufficiently enamored with it that in 1996 he glowingly
endorsed the accounting firm in a video, thanking it for going "over and
above the just-sort-of-normal, by-the-books audit arrangement."
Of course, ordinary investors did not know they were getting less than
"by-the-books" auditing.
It is especially ugly that the president and vice president -- men in
a position to know just how sketchy the accounting practices of public
companies are -- were so eager to make our Social Security system a vehicle
for pouring individuals' retirement money into a stock market they knew
to be a house of cards.
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About the writer
Robert Scheer is a syndicated columnist.
source: http://www.salon.com/news/col/scheer/2002/07/17/cheney/print.html
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