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The strange and convenient death of J. Clifford BaxterEnron
executive found shot to death
By Patrick Martin
28 January 2002
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Without anything that can be called a serious investigation,
local authorities in a wealthy Houston suburb have whitewashed
the death of former Enron vice chairman J. Clifford Baxter, calling
it a suicide. Baxter, 43, was found shot to death in his Mercedes
Benz in the early hours of Friday morning, January 25, near his
home in Sugar Land.
Baxters body was discovered inside his Mercedes Benz,
which was parked in a turnaround on a street near his home. Officials
in Sugar Land moved swiftly to label Baxters death a suicide.
Local Justice of the Peace Jim Richard initially declared that
Baxter died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound and no further inquiry
was required. But within hours he reversed himself, citing the
intense public interest in the death, and ordered an autopsy.
Harris County Medical Examiner Joye Carter conducted the autopsy
and found the cause of death to be suicide by a penetrating
gunshot to the head. The weapon was a .38 caliber revolver
which was found in Baxters car, next to his body.
Neither the perfunctory official probe nor the media coverage
has addressed the obvious suspicions aroused by the death of a
critically important witness in the investigation into the criminal
activities at Enron, the biggest corporate fraud in American history.
Baxter quit as vice chairman of the company last May, after reportedly
come into conflict with other top executives over the phony accounting
gimmicks used to plunder billions of dollars.
The most disturbing account of Baxters last days comes
from a former business associate who spoke to the New York
Times but was not identified by the newspaper. This person
spoke with the former Enron vice chairman two days before his
death and congratulated him for being named among those
people who complained about Enron.
According to the Times account, the unnamed associate
added that Baxter was talking about perhaps needing a bodyguard,
though Im not sure where that idea came from.
That a man only two days away from suicide would be considering
hiring a bodyguard defies belief. But neither the Times
nor any other media outlet has raised the possibility that Baxter
felt his life to be in danger because of what he knew and could
divulge about the internal affairs of Enron. Men have been killed
for much less.
Baxter was named in a memorandum submitted by Enron Vice President
Sheron Watkins last August to Chairman and CEO Kenneth Lay. Watkins
warned Lay that dubious off-the-books transactions with private
partnerships set up by top Enron officials might cause the company
to collapse in a welter of accounting scandals. She
cited Baxters opposition to one of these partnerships, set
up by then-CEO Jeffrey Skilling, writing, Cliff Baxter complained
mightily to Skilling and all who would listen about the inappropriateness
of our transactions with LJM.
Baxter received a subpoena from the Senate Government Affairs
Subcommittee on Permanent Oversight and Investigation, along with
48 other people linked to Enron and Andersen. Investigators from
the House Energy and Commerce Committee had told Baxters
lawyer that they wished to interview him, but had not yet issued
a subpoena.
Representative James C. Greenwood, Republican of Pennsylvania
and chairman of the committees Oversight and Investigations
Subcommittee, said, It seemed to us that he was a pretty
highly placed insider at Enron who had understood exactly what
was wrong there.
Both Enron and its accountant and business adviser, Andersen,
have been engaged in massive, illegal shredding of documents and
deletion of computer files. Billions of dollars are at stake in
the collapse. The highest levels of the Bush administration are
implicated in the corruption of the financial and political system
that Enron exemplified.
Under such conditions, the sudden death of a crucial witness
inevitably raises the suspicion that it is not just pieces of
paper and computer data that are being destroyed to protect the
corporate and political gangsters at the top, but human lives
as well.
Given the organized shredding operation, a systematic effort
to destroy incriminating documents, Baxters evidence would
be all the more critical, since he could testify, from the perspective
of the highest levels of the company, what information Enron and
Andersen were so afraid of. How can one not assume that Baxter,
too, was shredded to prevent him from taking the witness
stand?
A potential whistle-blower dies less than two weeks after his
name first comes to public attention. What message does that send
to others who might be considering testifying against Enron? And
on top of that, the local police immediately declare his death
a suicide. If there was foul play, those responsible have carried
it out with impunity.
It is, of course, possible that Baxter actually took his own
life. But no confidence can be placed in such a finding without
a thorough investigation, and no such investigation can be expected
from the local authorities in Houston, a metropolitan area where
Enron was by far the most influential corporate power. (As one
indication of its dominance, all the federal prosecutors in the
US Attorneys office in Houston have had to recuse themselves
from the Enron investigation because of financial or family ties
to Enron.)
The circumstances of Baxters life cast doubt on the verdict
of suicide. He is not known to have been suffering from depression
or any other mental health problem. He was a multimillionaire,
having netted $30 million from the sale of his stock in the company
before and after his departure from Enron last May. His family
life was apparently happy, and he leaves a wife and two children,
a 16-year-old son and 11-year-old daughter.
Far from being the target of media vilification, Baxters
name had been linked to the Enron affair in a way that was largely
favorable. His first appearance in the coverage of Enron came
when the Watkins memo was made public, presenting him as an opponent
of corporate fraud.
Friends and business associates interviewed by the press expressed
shock and surprise at his reported suicide, although there were
conflicting accounts of his state of mind after the bankruptcy
of Enron.
An executive of Portland Gas & Electric, a subsidiary which
Enron acquired in a takeover organized by Baxter, told the New
York Times: My impression of Cliff Baxter was that this
was an enormously confident guy who came up here to get the thing
done, and he did. The image I had of him at the time is totally
at odds with the tragedy today. I mean, he was self assured, he
was very friendly. This was practically the last person in the
world youd ever expect to commit suicide.
See Also:
Enron and the Bush administration: kindred
spirits in fraud and criminality
[18 January 2002]
New York Times defends Bush on
links to Enron corporate fraud
[10 January 2002]
Enron: The real face
of the new economy
[6 December 2001]
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