HOME
DV NEWS
SERVICE ARCHIVE SUBMISSIONS/CONTACT ABOUT DV
Arnold
Unplugged: It's Hasta la Vista to
$9
Billion if the Governator is Selected
by
Greg Palast
October
4, 2003
First
Published in Greg Palast.com
It's
not what Arnold Schwarzenegger did to the girls a decade back that should raise
an eyebrow. According to a series of
memoranda our office obtained today, it's his dalliance with the boys in a
hotel room just two years ago that's the real scandal.
The
wannabe governor has yet to deny that on May 17, 2001, at the Peninsula Hotel
in Los Angeles, he had consensual political intercourse with Enron chieftain
Kenneth Lay. Also frolicking with
Arnold and Ken was convicted stock swindler Mike Milken.
Now,
thirty-four pages of internal Enron memoranda have just come through this
reporter's fax machine tell all about the tryst between Maria's husband and the
corporate con men. It turns out that
Schwarzenegger knowingly joined the hush-hush encounter as part of a campaign
to sabotage a Davis-Bustamante plan to make Enron and other power pirates then
ravaging California pay back the $9 billion in illicit profits they carried
off.
Here's
the story Arnold doesn't want you to hear.
The biggest single threat to Ken Lay and the electricity lords is a
private lawsuit filed last year under California's unique Civil Code provision
17200, the "Unfair Business Practices Act." This litigation, heading to trial now in Los Angeles, would make
the power companies return the $9 billion they filched from California
electricity and gas customers.
It
takes real cojones to bring such a suit.
Who's the plaintiff taking on the bad guys? Cruz Bustamante, Lieutenant Governor and reluctant leading
candidate against Schwarzenegger.
Now
follow the action. One month after Cruz
brings suit, Enron's Lay calls an emergency secret meeting in L.A. of his
political buck-buddies, including Arnold.
Their plan, to undercut Davis (according to Enron memos) and
"solve" the energy crisis -- that is, make the Bustamante legal
threat go away.
How
can that be done? Follow the trail with
me.
While
Bustamante's kicking Enron butt in court, the Davis Administration is
simultaneously demanding that George Bush's energy regulators order the $9
billion refund. Don't hold your
breath: Bush's Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission is headed by a guy proposed by … Ken Lay.
But
Bush's boys on the commission have a problem.
The evidence against the electricity barons is rock solid: fraudulent reporting of sales transactions,
megawatt "laundering," fake power delivery scheduling and straight
out conspiracy (including meetings in hotel rooms).
So
the Bush commissioners cook up a terrific scheme: charge the companies with conspiracy but offer them, behind
closed doors, deals in which they have to pay only two cents on each dollar
they filched.
Problem: the slap-on-the-wrist refunds won't sail if
the Governor of California won't play along.
Solution: Re-call the Governor.
New
Problem: the guy most likely to replace
Davis is not Mr. Musclehead, but Cruz Bustamante, even a bigger threat to the power companies than Davis. Solution:
smear Cruz because -- heaven
forbid! -- he took donations from Injuns (instead of Ken Lay).
The
pay-off? Once Arnold is Governor, he
blesses the sweetheart settlements with the power companies. When that happens, Bustamante's court cases
are probably lost. There aren't many
judges who will let a case go to trial to protect a state if that a governor
has already allowed the matter to be "settled" by a regulatory
agency.
So
think about this. The state of California
is in the hole by $8 billion for the coming year. That's chump change next to the $8 TRILLION in deficits and
surplus losses planned and incurred by George Bush. Nevertheless, the $8 billion deficit is the hanging rope
California's right wing is using to lynch Governor Davis.
Yet
only Davis and Bustamante are taking direct against to get back the $9 billion
that was vacuumed out of the state by Enron, Reliant, Dynegy, Williams Company
and the other Texas bandits who squeezed the state by the bulbs.
But
if Arnold is selected, it's 'hasta la vista' to the $9 billion. When the electricity emperors whistle,
Arnold comes -- to the Peninsula Hotel or the Governor's mansion. The he-man turns pussycat and curls up in
their lap.
I
asked Mr. Muscle's PR people to comment on the new Enron memos -- and his
strange silence on Bustamante's suit or Davis' petition. But Arnold was too busy shaving off his
Hitlerian mustache to respond.
The
Enron memos were discovered by the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights,
Los Angeles,
Greg Palast is author of
the NY Times bestseller The Best Democracy Money Can Buy (Penguin USA
2003) and the worstseller, Democracy and Regulation, a guide to
electricity deregulation published by the United Nations (2003, written with T.
MacGregor and J. Oppenheim). See Greg Palast's award-winning reports for BBC
Television and the Guardian papers of Britain at www.GregPalast.com. Contact Palast at his New York office: media@gregpalast.com.