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Ex-Enron Exec Apparent Suicide

01/25/2002 2:10 PM EST By KRISTEN HAYS

HOUSTON (AP) - A former Enron Corp. executive who reportedly challenged the company's questionable financial practices and resigned last May was found shot to death in a car Friday, an apparent suicide.

Police in Sugar Land, a Houston suburb, confirmed the death of 43-year-old J. Clifford Baxter, a former Enron vice chairman. He was shot in the head.

A suicide note was found, police said, but its contents were not disclosed.

"We are deeply saddened by the tragic loss of our friend and colleague, Cliff Baxter. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends," the company said in a statement. Spokesman Mark Palmer had no additional comment.

Baxter was vice chairman of Enron when he resigned in May 2001, several months before the energy company's collapse.

Baxter was identified by name in the explosive warning that Enron executive Sherron Watkins wrote last August to company chairman Ken Lay.

"Cliff Baxter complained mightily to (then-CEO Jeff) Skilling and all who would listen about the inappropriateness of our transactions with LJM," Watkins wrote. LJM is one of the partnerships that kept hundreds of millions of dollars in debt off Enron's books.

Watkins identified Baxter in a section of her letter stating there is "a veil of secrecy around LJM and Raptor," another entity involved in the partnerships.

Watkins' letter to Lay stated that "we will implode in a wave of accounting scandals" unless the company changed its ways.

Enron's public downfall began in mid-October with the announcement of a $618 million third-quarter loss and a $1.2 billion reduction in the company's equity. Then the partnerships that kept debt off the books were revealed.

The company - once No. 7 on the Fortune magazine list of the 500 largest companies - rapidly descended into bankruptcy, the largest in history, on Dec. 2. Its chairman, Kenneth Lay, resigned this week. He has been one of President Bush's strongest supporters over the years.

Baxter's body was found around 2:30 a.m. Friday by a police officer checking on a Mercedes-Benz parked in a residential area not far from his home in Sugar Land. He was in the driver's seat. He had been shot with a revolver. Identification he was carrying indicated he worked for Enron.

Jim Richard, a Fort Bend County justice of the peace, ruled Baxter's death a suicide. He ordered an autopsy as a precaution.

Baxter's family could not be reached for comment. A woman answering the phone at the home hung up.

Baxter was one of 29 former and current Enron executives and board members named as defendants in a federal lawsuit. Plaintiffs' lawyers said the executives made $1.1 billion by selling Enron stock between October 1998 and November 2001.

It said Baxter had sold 577,436 shares for $35.2 million.

At the time his resignation was announced, Skilling said Baxter had made "a tremendous contribution to Enron's evolution, particularly as a member of the team that built Enron's wholesale business."

It said his primary reason for resigning was to spend more time with his family.

Skilling himself abruptly resigned in August, citing personal reasons.

Skillling was "absolutely devastated at the loss of a very good friend," said Judy Leon, Skilling's spokeswoman. She declined to elaborate.

Baxter had joined Enron in 1991 and was chairman and CEO of Enron North America prior to being named chief strategy officer for Enron Corp. in June 2000 and vice chairman in October 2000, the company said.

He was born in 1958 in Amityville, N.Y., and graduated from New York University in 1980. He was a captain in the U.S. Air Force from 1980-85 and received an MBA from Columbia University in 1987, according to the company.

-- Anonymous, January 25, 2002

Answers

Ahhh, the potential witness deaths now start. Where will they end? I learned, or sensed, a long time ago that it doesn't pay in the end to become involved in the deeply negative/evil/selfish side of life.

-- Anonymous, January 25, 2002

It will be interesting to see if there are any more 'suicides' related to this debacle.

-- Anonymous, January 25, 2002

I think it is really sad.............all that money and all those brains and he shoots himself at such a young age. I am poor, fat, and old, but I love life.......go figure.

-- Anonymous, January 25, 2002

The LDotters call it "Arkancide."

-- Anonymous, January 25, 2002

I'm such a skeptic about these sort of things that I don't accept it was a suicide at this point. I have seen too many people that have been involved in high level politics/business declared to have died of suicide. Later, other evidence suggests it was a sophisticated setup to eliminate a person who could do too much damage. I guess in the end you just have to decide whether suicides can be created/framed by certain dark side players working for secret forces.

-- Anonymous, January 26, 2002


Yes, I'll be waiting for the body count, as well. When that much money is involved, it becomes cheaper for the main players to take out the wittnesses than to buy their way out, although in this case, they may have to do both.

What happened with Enron is deplorable but not an isolated incident, I'm sure. I suspect other large companies are on thin ice, as well.

-- Anonymous, January 26, 2002


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