defrauded investors by deliberately withholding or falsifying crucial financial information. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has been investigating Enron since October 2001. A number of civil suits have already been filed against Enron, which declared bankruptcy in December 2001. (DJ)
Jan 10, 2002: Bush's first big lie about Enrongate. ("Dallas Morning News: Lay
gave more to Bush --President had said Enron chief was Richards
supporter",http://www.dallasnews.com/texas_southwest
/1Atxenron_12tex.ART0.d1e8.html ) AUSTIN – In
/1Atxenron_12tex.ART0.d1e8.html ) AUSTIN – In
distancing
himself from Enron, President Bush said that CEO Kenneth Lay "was a
supporter" of Democrat Ann Richards in his first race for Texas governor
in 1994. But records and interviews with people involved in the Richards
campaign show that he was a far bigger Bush supporter.
Jan. 10, 2002 - In a call from a speaker phone in open court, attorneys for Mike
Vreeland call the Pentagon's switchboard operator, who confirms that Vreeland
is indeed a naval lieutenant on active duty. She provides an office number and
a direct dial phone extension to his office in the Pentagon. [Source: Attorney
Rocco Galati; Toronto Superior Court records]
On Sept.
14, 2001 Canadian jailers open the sealed envelope from Mike Vreeland in Toronto
and see that is describes attacks against the WTC and Pentagon. The U.S. Navy
subsequently states that Vreeland was discharged as a seaman in 1986 for
unsatisfactory performance and has never worked in intelligence. [Source: The
Toronto Star, Oct. 23, 2001; Toronto Superior Court records]
Jan. 10, 2002 - Attorney General John Ashcroft recuses himself from the Enron
investigation because Enron had been a major campaign donor in his 2000 Senate
race. He fails to recuse himself from involvement in two sitting federal grand
juries investigating bribery and corruption charges against ExxonMobil and BP
Amoco, which have massive oil interests in Central Asia. Both were major
Ashcroft donors in 2000. [Source: CNN, Jan. 10, 2002; FTW, "The Elephant in the Living Room, Part I," April 4,
2002,
http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/04_04_02_elephant.html]
http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/04_04_02_elephant.html]
January 10 The U.S. Department of Energy recommends construction of the Yucca
Mountain nuclear waste storage facility in Nevada. The project is expected to
cost $40 to $50 billion and be able to store 77,000 tons of radioactive waste.
The final decision still requires President Bush’s approval and, if vetoed by
the governor of Nevada, Congressional approval. (WP, NYT)
January 10 Kuwait creates a new company, Kuwait Gulf Oil Company, to handle the
country’s interests in the Neutral Zone, a border area shared with Saudi
Arabia. The new company will take over when Japan's Arabian Oil Company’s
40-year concession in the Neutral Zone expires in January 2003. Oil production
from the Neutral Zone (by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait combined) was about 640,000
barrels per day in 2001. (Reuters)
Jan 10, 2002: (Sniper) Malvo's preliminary hearing begins as Virginia tries to show
why he should be tried as an adult. The judge allows the hearing to be open to
the public, despite arguments future jury pools could be tainted. [CBC News]
Jan. 13, 2002: Bush appears in public with bruises on his face. The official story is
that a pretzel stimulated his vagus nerve, causing him to lose consciousness.
(ref) or maybe that’s not salt on those pretzles
January 14 According to preliminary data reported today by the U.S. Energy
Information Administration, Mexico was the leading source for U.S. crude oil
imports in November 2001 for the second consecutive month, having displaced
Saudi Arabia from the top spot in October. Saudi Arabia had been the leading
supplier since February 2000. (OD)
Jan. 14, 2002 almost two months after
microbiologist, Don Wileys disappearance and mysterious death, Shelby County
Medical Examiner O.C. Smith
announced that his department had ruled Wiley s death to be "accidental;"
the result of massive injuries suffered in a fall from the Hernando de Soto
Bridge. Smith said there were paint marks on Wiley's rental car similar to the
paint used on construction signs on the bridge, and that the car's right front
hubcap was missing. There has been no report as to which construction signs
Wiley hit. There is also no explanation as to why this evidence did not move
the Memphis police to consider possibilities other than a "missing
person."
Jan 15, 2002 it was announced that Surgeon General David Satcher is also resigning
Jan 17, 2002: The White House again refuses to turn over documents demanded by
Congress as part of an inquiry into workings of the administration's energy
task force, including records of a meeting that Vice President Dick Cheney had
with Ken Lay. ("Congress Rebuffed on Energy Documents",
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/18/business/18BUSH.html )
January 20, 2002: Evidence comes to light that a scientist named Lt. Col. Philip Zack had
a history of suspicious behavior in the nation's most classified anthrax
research center, USAMRIID. Zack was fired for unprofessional behavior centering
on numerous hateful attacks on his colleague Dr. Assaad (Zack is Jewish and
Assaad is Muslim, which may explain the enmity). Security cameras show Zack
came into the lab at night on occasion without permission, after being fired. [Hartford Courant, 1/20/02] There is also a
history of missing viruses, including anthrax and Ebola, that seem connected to
these incidents. [New York Times, 7/19/02, note that the Times
story mentions Hatfill (as "Dr. Z") in the article and not Zack, even
though Hatfill didn't join USAMRIID until years after these incidents] Dr.
Assaad received a letter just prior to the anthrax attacks in October that
appear to frame him. [Hartford Courant, 12/9/01] Zack seems a very
likely suspect, but has not been arrested (and wasn't even questioned for
months after the attacks).
Jan 21. 2002: It was announced Jan. 21 that the director of the CDC, Jeffrey Koplan,
is resigning effective March 31.
And there
is currently no director for the National Institutes of Health -- NIH is being
run by an acting director. The recent resignations leave the three most
significant medical positions in the federal government simultaneously vacant.
January 21 Gaz de France signs a 20-year deal with BG Group, Edison International,
the Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation, and the Egyptian Natural Gas
Holding Company to import 3.6 million metric tons of liquefied natural gas
(LNG) per year for 20 years starting in 2005. This is Egypt’s second major LNG
export deal. As part of the deal, a $900 million liquefaction plant will be
constructed at Idku, near Alexandria. (Reuters)
January 22, 2002: ex-CIA director Woolsey participated in a CFR (Council on Foreign
Relations) Project run as a war-game simulation at its Manhattan headquarters.
For the simulation, the CFR enlisted 75 people, including bankers, former
Treasury Secretaries, and former State Department officials.
January 22, 2002 Four senior Senators urged GAO to continue investigating the energy task
force, saying that "Americans have the right to know how the
Administration's energy policy was developed." The letter was signed by
Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Joseph I. Lieberman, Commerce Committee
Chairman Ernest F. Hollings, Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl M. Levin,
who is also chairman of the Governmental Affairs investigations subcommittee,
and Byron L. Dorgan, chairman of the Commerce Committee's consumer affairs
subcommittee
January 22 The U.S. Department of Energy opens the bidding process for oil
companies to deliver 22 million barrels of crude oil to the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve instead of making cash royalty payments. The royalty-in-kind oil is the
first phase of the Bush administration's plan, announced last November, to fill
the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to its capacity of 700 million barrels.
(Reuters)
January 23, 2002 CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) Meeting
"India-Pakistan: Crisis Averted or Just Postponed?"
Speaker: Akbar Ahmed Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies, American University's School of International Service
Speaker: Dennis Kux Senior Scholar, Asia Program, The Woodrow Wilson Center
Presider: Teresita Sch affer Director, South Asia Program, Center for Strategic and International and Studies
"India-Pakistan: Crisis Averted or Just Postponed?"
Speaker: Akbar Ahmed Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies, American University's School of International Service
Speaker: Dennis Kux Senior Scholar, Asia Program, The Woodrow Wilson Center
Presider: Teresita Sch affer Director, South Asia Program, Center for Strategic and International and Studies
[www.cfr.org]
January 23, 2002: recent meetings between U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan Wendy Chamberlain
and that country's oil minister Usman Aminuddin indicate the pipeline project
is international Project Number One for the Bush administration. Chamberlain,
who maintains close ties to the Saudi ambassador to Pakistan (a one-time chief
money conduit for the Taliban), has been pushing Pakistan to begin work on its
Arabian Sea oil terminus for the pipeline… U.S. troops will remain in
Afghanistan….guarding pipeline construction … Karzai's ties with UNOCAL and the
Bush administration are..why the CIA pushed him for Afghan leader over rival
Abdul Haq, the assassinated former mujaheddin leader from Jalalabad, and the
leadership of the Northern Alliance, seen by Langley as being too close to the
Russians and Iranians. Haq had no apparent close ties to the U.S. oil industry
and, as both a Pushtun and a northern Afghani, was popular with a wide
cross-section of the Afghan people, including the Northern Alliance. Those
credentials likely sealed his fate. (Centre for Research on Globalisation (CRG)
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/MAD201A.html
January 23, 2002 Reps. Waxman and Dingell sent a letter urging GAO to proceed with a lawsuit as a result of the Administration's continued refusal to cooperate with its investigation. Ken Lay resigns as Enron chairman and CEO of Enron. He remains on the Board of Directors.
January 23 An U.S. official states that the United States and Libya have held
"positive" negotiations that could lead to the lifting of United
Nations sanctions against Libya. The official stated that "If the Libyans
comply with the U.N. Security Council resolutions, then the U.N. Security
Council will look at lifting the U.N. sanctions on Libya." In August,
President Bush signed a five-year extension of the Iran Libya Sanctions Act
(ILSA). ILSA sanctions foreign companies that provide new investments of over
$40 million for the development of petroleum resources in Iran or Libya, or
that violate existing United Nations prohibitions against trade with Libya. (Reuters)
January 25, 2002: Enron Vice Chairman John Clifford Baxter (dead) body is found on 25
January 2002.
January 25, 2002—Former Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Chairman Curtis
Hebert, Jr.--says Ken Lay, CEO of Enron—the largest contributor to George
Walker Bush—made improper demands. Lay threatened that--Bush would fire Hebert
unless he obeyed, Hebert refused. Bush fired Hebert in August 2001. Hebert says
Bush also let Lay interview him and other candidates for FERC chairman in the first
place! In a nutshell: Enron gave Bush millions to sponsor his rise from a
losing candidate for the US House to the "leader of the free world."
In return, Bush gave Enron "hire and fire" authority over the FERC,
and performed other favors in return for money. This directly and personally
ties Bush to the Enrongate scandal in all its illegality--Enron and accountants
at Anderson have been destroying evidence by the box load. We must know what
Bush did, and why he did it. Other top GOP officials like VP Dick Cheney, White
House advisor Karl Rove, House Leader Dick Armey and Sen. Phil Gramm also
helped Enron plunder and evade regulation. They helped Enron rip off consumers,
investors and employees. www.apfn.org/enron/smoking_gun.htm
Smoking Gun in Enrongate - Let the impeachment begin?
January 26, 2002: Salon exposes details about the FBI's anthrax investigation. The FBI is
casting a wide net, approaching all 40,000 members of the American Society of
Microbiologists, (posting) flyers asking for information all over New Jersey.
Yet all evidence suggests the anthrax strain could only be made in USAMRIID in
Maryland or US Army's Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. Meanwhile, the FBI has not
yet subpoenaed employee records of the few labs that used the strain of anthrax
used in the attacks. Numerous anthrax experts express puzzlement. Barbara Hatch
Rosenberg, a biological arms control expert, believes the FBI is dragging its
heels for political reasons. She is convinced the FBI knows who mailed the
anthrax letters, but isn't arresting him, because he has been involved in
secret biological weapons research that the US does not want revealed.
"This guy knows too much, and knows things the US isn't very anxious to
publicize. Therefore, they don't want to get too close." [Salon, 1/26/02]
Jan. 27, 2002: Cheney again refuses to release records of meetings with company
executives to discuss energy policy.
Jan. 29, 2002 CNN reported: "President Bush personally asked Senate Majority
Leader Tom Daschle Tuesday to limit the congressional investigation into the events of
9/11/01. Democrats privately question why the White House fears a broader
investigation to determine culpability. (Daschle was also one of the few Anthax
letter targets)
January 29 U.S. President George Bush delivers his State of the Union address. In
his speech he identifies Iraq, Iran, and North Korea as part of an "axis
of evil" that supports terrorism. President Bush also states, "The
United States of America will not permit the world’s most dangerous regimes to
threaten us with the world’s most destructive weapons." (NYT)
January 30, 2002 CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) Meeting
"A Meeting with Hamid Karzai"
Speaker: Hamid Karzai Chairman, Afghan Interim Authority
Introductory Speaker: Robert E. Rubin U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Introductory Speaker: Peter G. Peterson The Blackstone Group
Moderator: Nancy E. Soderberg Vice-President for Multilateral Affairs, International Crisis Group-New York
"A Meeting with Hamid Karzai"
Speaker: Hamid Karzai Chairman, Afghan Interim Authority
Introductory Speaker: Robert E. Rubin U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Introductory Speaker: Peter G. Peterson The Blackstone Group
Moderator: Nancy E. Soderberg Vice-President for Multilateral Affairs, International Crisis Group-New York
(Hamid)
Karzai, the leader of the southern Afghan Pashtun Durrani tribe, was a member
of the mujaheddin that fought the Soviets during the 1980s. He was a top
contact for the CIA and maintained close relations with CIA Director William
Casey, Vice President George Bush, and their Pakistani Inter Service
Intelligence (ISID) Service interlocutors. Later, Karzai and a number of his
brothers moved to the United States under the auspices of the CIA. Karzai
continued to serve the agency's interests, as well as those of the Bush Family
and their oil friends in negotiating the CentGas deal, according to Middle East
and South Asian sources. . [The Blacklisted Journalist 4/1/02]
January 30. 2002 GAO announced it would sue the Administration to obtain access to
records of the energy task force. GAO reiterated that "Congress has a
right to the information we are seeking" and warned that "failure to
pursue this matter could lead to a pattern of records access denials that would
significantly undercut GAO's ability to assist Congress in exercising its legislative
and oversight authorities." That same day, in a 10-page letter to the Vice
President, Reps. Waxman and Dingell detailed the extensive precedent for GAO's
requests for the records. The letter cited "12 recent precedents where
exactly the kind of information about the White House energy task force being
sought by GAO was provided to Congress."
January 30 Data released by the U.S. Energy Information Administration today shows
that U.S. refinery capacity utilization has decreased by 5.4 percentage points
in the past two weeks, dropping to just 86.8% in the week ended January 25.
This is a result of poor petroleum product demand, low refinery profit margins,
and more than adequate product supply. (Reuters)
January 30 The state oil companies of Kuwait and Qatar and ExxonMobil Middle East
Gas Marketing sign an agreement for natural gas to be transported by pipeline
from Qatar to Kuwait for use in power plants. First shipments are expected to
arrive in 2005, and total value of the deal is expected to be about $2 billion.
Details of the deal are expected to be finalized by mid-2002. (OD, Reuters)
January 30 Petro-Canada states that it has agreed to buy the international oil and
natural gas operations of Veba Oil & Gas from Veba Oel AG and its parent company
BP, for about $2.0 billion. Petro-Canada will acquire production and
exploration interests mainly in the North Sea, North Africa, and northern Latin
America, expanding the company beyond its current interests, which are almost
exclusively in Canada and the United States. The deal is expected to close
between May and September 2002. The combined firm would have production of
400,000 barrels per day of oil equivalent. (DJ)
January 31 Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov signs a resolution that reduces
the export duty on fuel oil in order to ease a glut on Russia’s domestic market
following Russia’s December decision to cooperate with OPEC by trimming
exports. (Reuters)
January 31 In response to President Bush’s State of the Union address two days
earlier, former Iranian President Rafsanjani calls on Muslim oil-exporting
countries to boycott the United States. Iran currently does not export oil to
the United States because of sanctions. (WMRC)
Jan 31 - Feb 4, 2002, WEF (World Economic Forum) meeting in NYC The World
Economic Forum is a private member organization comprising representatives from
1,000 of the world's largest corporations including Boeing, Goldman-Sachs,
Enron (until recently), Ayala Land, The New York Stock Exchange, Pfizer, and
Chevron-Texaco. The exclusive meeting is open to members, who pay upwards of
$30,000 in annual dues, as well as selected politicians, journalists and
academics. George W. Bush and Philippine President Gloria Arroyo are expected
to be in attendance. While the WEF helps set global economic and trade agendas
that affect the entire world, the group predominantly includes European and
American businesses.
February 2002, CIA Director Tenet claims the 9/11 plot was "in the heads of
three or four people" and even most of the hijackers didn't know the
targets or that it would be a suicide attack until just before the attack.
Feb 1, 2002: U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan orders Cheney's energy task force
to explain why handing over information about its meetings to Judicial Watch
would violate the Constitution. ("Court Orders Cheney to Explain
Constitutional Claim",
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20020201/pl/enron_energy_cheney_dc_1.html
) Directly contradicting a statement by Ken Lay, Cheney claims he never saw the
memo Lay says he used to brief Cheney on 17 April 2001. Mary Matalin, counsel
to Cheney, labels as "ridiculous" Sen. Barbara Boxer's (D-CA)
statement that the memo provides the "smoking gun" linking Lay to
White House energy policy. In a telephone interview, Matalin describes as
"absurd" a statement by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, (D-CA), that Lay had
been able to discuss energy policy
February 1 An explosion and fire occur at an oil-gathering center near Kuwait's
northern Rawdatain oil field, killing four workers and injuring seventeen. As a
result, about 600,000 barrels per day of crude oil production go offline.
However, Kuwait's Oil Minister, Adel al-Subaih, declares that the use of oil
from stockpiles and increased production from other fields will mean that
exports will be unaffected in the next two weeks. Some production in the area
gradually returns throughout the month as repairs proceed. The Kuwait Petroleum
Corporation declares force majeure on liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) exports
because of damage to the LPG booster station. Oil Minister al-Subaih resigns
later in the month, taking responsibility for the incident, though reportedly
also in protest of cost cutting and political interference in Kuwait's oil
industry. (WSJ, DJ)
February 4 PetroChina, China's largest oil and natural gas producer, announces
that it has reached an agreement with a consortium led by Royal Dutch/Shell,
and including Gazprom and Hong Kong & China Gas, to build a 2,600-mile
natural gas pipeline from the natural gas-producing Tarim basin in western
China to Shanghai on the coast, with deliveries to start in 2004. The cost of
the pipeline is expected to be about $18 billion. Chinese authorities also give
Shell the right to discuss investment opportunities in the natural gas pipeline
project with ExxonMobil. (Reuters, OD)
Feb. 5, 2002: Whistleblower Robin Hosea, an accountant with Enron's employee benefits
department from August 2000 until she was laid off in December, tells a press
conference that she discovered items that were outside her department's scope
and without its approval being paid from the benefits accounts, items that were
suspicious monthly payments to outside consultants. When
she
questioned her superiors about it, she was told, "that it was a payment to
friends of executives, and to leave it." She personally saw four of these
checks, one totaling $20,000. Hosea saw thousands of such entries in the
accounting system that totaled about $15 million at the end of 2000. She says
now she is receiving regular telephone threats. "I believe the wording has
become 'This is Robin's daily warning'."[ www.cbsnews.com
AP news]
February 6 Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Abdullah states that Saudi Arabia is facing
a "suffocating" economic downturn and that government spending must
be cut. The Saudi American Bank (SAMBA) forecasts a 2% decline in gross
domestic product (GDP) in Saudi Arabia in 2002, due in large part to low world
oil prices. (Reuters)
Feb. 8, 2002: Afghanistan's interim leader Hamid Karzai says he and Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf have agreed to revive a plan for a trans-Afghan gas
pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pakistan. A consortium led by Unocal had
originally aimed to build the $1.9 billion, 1,400-km (875-mile) pipeline to run
from gas-rich Turkmenistan via northern Afghanistan. But in August 1998 Unocal
halted development of the project after U.S. forces fired missiles at guerrilla
camps in Afghanistan in the wake of bomb attacks on two U.S. embassies in Africa.
("Pakistan, Afghan leaders agree to revive pipeline",
http://www.afgha.com/article.php?sid=12243&mode=thread&order=0
)
February 8 The U.S. Minerals Management Service announces that it has awarded the
first four contracts to deliver royalty-in-kind crude oil to the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve. The contracts were awarded to ChevronTexaco, Williams,
Equiva, and ExxonMobil for some 60,000 barrels per day of royalty oil from
federal properties in the Gulf of Mexico. (OD)
Feb. 8, 2002: Vladimir Korshunov, 56, was found dead on a Moscow street. Victor
Korshunov head of the microbiology sub-faculty at the Russian State Medical
University and an expert in intestinal bacteria. Pravda.ru reported that Victor
Korshunov had been killed. At the time, Korshunov was head of the microbiology
sub-facility at the Russian State Medical University. He was found dead in the
entrance to his home with a cranial injury. Pravda reports that Korshunov had
probably invented either a vaccine to protect against biological weapons, or a
weapon itself.
February 8, 2002: Rockefeller Scientist Discovers Molecular Messengers That Rescue Cells
from Death
Cells on the Verge of Suicide http://
www.rockefeller.edu/pubinfo/news_notes/nn020702.pdf
February 9, 2002: Pakistani President Musharraf and Afghan leader Hamid Karzai announce
agreement to "cooperate in all spheres of activity" including the
proposed Central Asian (remember the US Unocal, CIA, Enron) pipeline, which
they call "in the interest of both countries." [Irish Times, 2/9/02] FTW Hamid Karzai, the leader of the southern
Afghan Pashtun Durrani tribe, was a member of the mujaheddin that fought the
Soviets during the 1980s. He was a top contact for the CIA and maintained close
relations with CIA Director William Casey, (then Vice President) George Bush
(Sr), and their Pakistani Inter Service Intelligence (ISID) Service
interlocutors. Later, Karzai and a number of his brothers moved to the United
States under the auspices of the CIA. Karzai continued to serve the agency's
interests, as well as those of the Bush Family and their oil friends in
negotiating the CentGas deal, according to Middle East and South Asian sources.
. [The Blacklisted Journalist 4/1/02]
Feb. 9, 2002: "I also find it to be 'extraordinary circumstances' when a top
(Enron) executive commits suicide,voluminous documents are shredded and witness
after witness takes the Fifth Amendment. And in my 35 years in the Senate, I
have never witnessed a corporation so extraordinarily committed to buying
government." In a New York Times editorial, Senator Ernest Hollings
(D-SC), calls for a special counsel to be appointed to investigate Enron.
("Time for a Special Counsel", nytimes.com)
February 9 Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez replaces General Guaicaipuro Lameda
with central bank Vice President Gaston Parra as the head of the state-owned
Petroleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PdVSA), South America's largest oil company.
General Lameda's replacement comes amidst public expression of discontent by
several military officers with President Chavez's leftist government. On
February 20, the Ministry of Energy and Mines announces the replacement of five
of the seven members of the board of directors of PdVSA with new board members
more closely aligned with President Chavez. This move sparks daily protests by
PdVSA employees. (Reuters, DJ, OD)
February 9, 2002 (B): Dead microbiologist: Victor Korshunov, 56, is bashed
over the head and killed at the entrance of his home in Moscow, Russia. He was
the head of the microbiology sub-faculty at the Russian State Medical
University and an expert in intestinal bacteria. [Pravda, 2/9/02, Globe and Mail, 5/4/02]
February 10, 2002: Katherine Smith is killed a day before appearing in court on charges
she helped five Muslim terrorists get illegal drivers licenses. Her car
supposedly hit a tree and then caught on fire. The FBI later determined that
gasoline was poured on her clothing before she died in an arson fire. A suicide
note was found, but prosecutors say they are looking for murder suspects. One
of the five Muslims, Sakhera Hammad, was found with a visitor's pass for the
WTC, dated September 5, 2001, in his wallet. Hammad claims he was a plumber and
worked on the WTC's sprinkler system. Smith was being investigated by the FBI;
the five later plead guilty of fraud. [AP, 2/13/02, Reuters, 2/15/02, Go Memphis, 2/12/02, Memphis Commercial Appeal, 2/21/02]
February 11, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Dr. Ian Langford, 40, is found dead, partially
naked and wedged under a chair in his home in Norwich, England. When found, his
house was described as "blood-spattered and apparently ransacked." He
was an expert in environmental risks and disease and a senior Fellow at the
University of East Anglia's Centre for Social and Economic Research on the
Global Environment. One of his colleagues states: "Ian was without doubt
one of Europe's leading experts on environmental risk, specializing in links
between human health and environmental risk... He was one of the most brilliant
colleagues I have ever had." [London Times, 2/13/02, Globe and Mail, 5/4/02] on Feb. 12, 2002 Ian Langford expert in environmental risks and
disease and a senior Fellow at the University of East Anglia's Centre for
Social and Economic Research on the Global Environment. One of his colleagues
states: "Ian was without doubt one of Europe's leading experts on
environmental risk, specializing in links between human health and environmental
risk... He was one of the most brilliant colleagues I have ever had. Feb. 12,
2002 a newspaper in Norwich, England reported the previous day's death of Ian
Langford, a senior researcher at the University of East Anglia. The story went
on to say that police "were not treating the death as suspicious."
The next day, Britain's The Times reported that Langford was found wedged under
a chair "at his blood-spattered and apparently ransacked home."
February 11 Oil prices rise to a one-month high as rumors of a very large purchase
of Brent crude by Royal Dutch/Shell trading subsidiary Equiva for the U.S.
Department of Energy's Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) stoke fears that there
could be a supply shortage for Brent crude oil in March. Brent crude oil for
March delivery settles $1.63 per barrel higher, at $21.35 per barrel. However,
oil prices ease somewhat the next day, with Brent falling 32 cents per barrel.
As Equiva has the option to deliver the 18.6 million barrels of sweet crude oil
to the SPR between April 1, 2002 and May 1, 2003, it is not clear that the
company will meet its commitment by taking most of the Brent-for-March-delivery
market, though a Shell executive states that the company sees "potential
demand for all the Brents in March." (Reuters, OD)
February 12 A spokesman for Marathon Oil announces that the U.S. State Department
has given Marathon, as well as Conoco and Amerada Hess, permission to begin
renegotiating dormant oil field contracts with Libya. The approval was issued
January 22, 2002. In September 2001, Libya's Foreign Minister announced that
U.S. companies would be given one year to resume oil operations in the country
before Libya decides whether their licenses should be revoked and given to
other firms. Current U.S. sanctions forbid U.S. companies from operating in
Libya. (LAT, Reuters)
February 13 Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez decides to let the Venezuelan bolivar
float against the U.S. dollar. The bolivar loses 19% of its value on its first
day of trading under the new system. The decision comes as part of a package of
fiscal and monetary reforms that are aimed at closing a projected government
budget deficit. Low world oil prices have reduced projected government revenues
for 2002. Oil revenues account for about half of government revenues and about
one third of Venezuela's gross domestic product (GDP). (DJ)
February 13 Iraq says that it will not allow United Nations (U.N.) arms inspectors
to return to Iraq. Iraqi Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan states, "There
is no need for the spies of the [U.N.] inspection teams to return to Iraq since
Iraq is free of weapons of mass destruction." The United States has hinted
that actions may be taken against the Iraqi government if U.N. arms inspectors
are not allowed to return. (Reuters)
February 13 The government of Argentina announces a 20% tax on energy exports.
Argentina exports over 300,000 barrels per day of oil, as well as some natural
gas, worth about $2.4 billion and $637 million, respectively, in 2001. The
companies most affected include Repsol-YPF, ChevronTexaco, Perez Companc, and
U.S. Pan American Energy. (WSJ, OD)
February 13 El Paso Energy announces that it will build a $450 million, 380-mile,
500,000-barrel-per-day oil pipeline from the western Gulf of Mexico to Port
Arthur and Texas City, Texas. The pipeline is expected to begin functioning in
the third quarter of 2004. (OD)
February 13 The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) agrees to launch a
probe into whether Enron and other energy traders deliberately inflated
electricity prices during the California power crisis. FERC has come under
pressure from Democratic legislators from the West Coast to undertake such a
probe. (OD)
February 14, 2002: The Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv astutely notes: "If one looks at the
map of the big American bases created [in the Afghan war], one is struck by the
fact that they are completely identical to the route of the projected oil
pipeline to the Indian Ocean." Ma'ariv also states, "Osama bin Laden
did not comprehend that his actions serve American interests... If I were a
believer in conspiracy theory, I would think that bin Laden is an American
agent. Not being one I can only wonder at the coincidence." [Chicago Tribune, 3/18/02] FTW
February 14 The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission announces that it is increasing
security at U.S. nuclear facilities, including 104 reactors. The new measures
are the result of a review by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission of nuclear
plant security that was undertaken in response to the September 11 terrorist
attacks. (DJ)
February 14 U.S. President George Bush announces a plan that addresses the issue of
"greenhouse gas" emissions, linked by many scientists to global
warming. The plan proposes spending on research and new technology, plus tax
incentives to promote voluntary (as opposed to mandatory) reductions. The plan
links reductions in carbon emissions to U.S. economic output, focusing on
emissions intensity per unit of GDP rather than on fixed targets. (WP)
February 15 U.S. President George Bush authorizes the construction a large,
centralized site for the storage of nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain, Nevada,
after the Department of Energy recommends its construction. In his letter
notifying the U.S. Congress of his decision, Bush states, "Proceeding with
the repository program [at Yucca Mountain] is necessary to protect public
safety, health, and the nation's security." Nevada Governor Kenny Guinn
has indicated that he will oppose the project, so Yucca Mountain will require
congressional approval to go forward. The site's selection is also being
challenged in court. (WP)
February 18 ExxonMobil signs an agreement with the government of Papua New Guinea
for the construction of a $3.5 billion sub-sea natural gas pipeline from that
country to Queensland, Australia. The other partners in the project include:
ChevronTexaco, Oil Search, Orogen Minerals, and Japan PNG Developments, as well
as Mineral Resources Development Company, which represents the interests of
local landholders. The 1,988-mile pipeline would transport natural gas from the
Hides and Kutubu gas fields in the Central Highlands of Papua New Guinea, to a
coastal processing facility and then via a section of sub-sea pipeline to
northern Australia. The pipeline would supply Australia with around 6 trillion
cubic feet of natural gas over a thirty-year period. (WMRC)
Feb. 18, 2002 - The Financial Times reports that the estimated opium harvest in
Afghanistan in the late-spring 2002 will reach a world record 4,500 metric
tons.
February 19, 2002: News organizations report that the Defense
Department’s new "Office of Strategic Influence," created to try
influence public opinion abroad, plans to plant disinformation in foreign and
U.S. media. (Mar 2002: Homefront Confidential:
How the
War on Terrorism Affects Access to Information and the Public ’s Right to
KnowThe Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press)
February 20, 2002 The United States Supreme Court
declines to consider an appeal by five major oil companies against Unocal's patent on production of
cleaner "reformulated" gasoline sold in California, allowing a lower
court ruling in favor of Unocal to stand. The ruling may eventually have
effects beyond the California market, as tighter environmental standards for
fuels take effect across much of the country. (DJ, WSJ) "Unocal patents…provide no… benefit to the
industry or consumers. The huge royalties…are far in excess of the cost of even
the reformulated gasoline program…may..cost consumers over $200 million per
year….reduce supply and eliminate all incentive for overcompliance with
environmental regulations….The patent will make it even harder to use ethanol
in gasoline where ozone problems during summer months" (Bush-Cheney energy
Task Force notes)
(Some
people call this a dirty patent, is it to help Unocal recover moneys spent the
trans-Afghan pipeline that went sour?)
February 20, 2002: Rumsfeld announces..the Office of Strategic Influence
will not lie to the public or plant disinformation in the foreign or U.S.
media. (Everything I say is a lie. I will not lie)
February 20 Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh asserts that Iran will proceed with
oil and natural gas projects in the Caspian Sea, despite a lack of demarcation
of sectors among the five littoral states. Zanganeh adds, "[We] will
prevent the activities of others in the parts we consider to be ours."
(OD)
February 20 Colombian President Andres Pastrana breaks off peace talks with the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas and orders the
Colombian army to re-enter FARC's demilitarized area. President Pastrana takes
the action after FARC guerrillas hijack an aircraft carrying 34 people and
kidnap Senator Jorge Gechem, president of a Senate peace talks committee. The
following day, the Colombian air force bombs FARC targets in the former
demilitarized zone, marking an intensification in the conflict in Colombia.
(Reuters)
February 21 Moody's Investors Service puts the long-term debt of AES Corporation on
review for a possible downgrade as the energy company's shares drop 11%. AES,
once the 17th-largest publicly-traded energy company in the world in terms of
market value, with 181 electricity generating facilities and 19 million
customers, has lost over 90% of its stock value in the past 52 weeks, including
36% on February 15. On February 6, AES announced plans to sell up to $1 billion
in assets in order to raise cash. Credit analysts are concerned that AES has
insufficient cash flow to pay its debt of $22.3 billion. (WP, DJ)
February 21 The California Public Utilities Commission reaches an accord with the
California Department of Water Resources that allows California to sell up to
$11.1 billion in bonds to repay the State's considerable debt from purchasing
power during the State's power crisis. The electricity rate agreement assures a
revenue flow to the state agency, but requires the agency to attempt to
renegotiate long-term contracts that were locked in when rates were higher than
they now are. On February 24, State officials announce their intention to ask
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to void over $40 billion in
long-term contracts signed when, according to these officials, the market was
being manipulated by sellers. (LAT, WSJ)
February 22, 2002: GAO filed suit in the U.S. District Court in
Washington, D.C., to obtain access to information about the task force's
contacts with outside parties. This is the first time that GAO has filed suit
against a federal official in order to obtain access to records. In a statement
released the same day, GAO said that it took this step "reluctantly"
but added that "given GAO's responsibility to Congress and the American
people, we have no other choice."
February 22 Angolan rebel leader Jonas Savimbi is killed by government troops,
possibly presaging an end to a 30-year conflict that has displaced 4 million
people in the country. With most of Angola's 900,000-barrel-per-day oil
production located offshore, the fighting had little effect on the petroleum
industry, but proceeds from the oil have been diverted to fight the civil war
rather than being used for economic development. (DJ)
February 25 Venezuela declares force majeure on some crude oil loadings in order to
comply with the OPEC quota cuts begun on January 1. Venezuela had agreed to
reduce its quota by 170,000 barrels per day. (Reuters)
February 26, 2002: Rumsfeld closes the Office of Strategic Influence
March 2002 The first known (September 11th) warning was FBI agent Robert Wright.
He tried to warn his superiors three months before September 11th that
Americans were in danger of terrorist attacks at home. No one listened to
Wright and he finally blew the whistle… but didn't make much news coverage.
March 1, 2002 For unknown reasons, Barry Mawn retired at the FBI
http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel00/mawn.htm
He said,
he was "saddened and angered by the charges" Before Mawn was one of
the favourites to replace FBI interior director Tom Pickard and assistant
director Neil Gallagher. (the other favourites: FBIHQ-Assistant Director Reuben
Garcia and Bruce Gephardt, the special agent in charge in San Francisco)
March 1, 2002: Some even think ..ex-CIA director Woolsey.. is also member of the
so-called shadow government, "to ensure survival of federal rule after
catastrophic attack", the existence of which was confirmed by Bush on
March 1st, 2002.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/717680.asp?cp1=1 Woolsey is a master strategist. It is well known that he wanted a war against the Taliban for years, but was even more interested in a war against Iraq. The Iraqi National Congress, the exiled group that opposes Saddam Hussein, said in October 2001 that it held meetings in London with Mr Woolsey. Administration sources have said his trip was funded and approved by Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy Defense secretary. But Woolsey made no comment about the exact nature of his brief. He told The Telegraph: "I was in London and that's it." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2001%2F10%2F26%2Fwirq26.xml
http://www.msnbc.com/news/717680.asp?cp1=1 Woolsey is a master strategist. It is well known that he wanted a war against the Taliban for years, but was even more interested in a war against Iraq. The Iraqi National Congress, the exiled group that opposes Saddam Hussein, said in October 2001 that it held meetings in London with Mr Woolsey. Administration sources have said his trip was funded and approved by Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy Defense secretary. But Woolsey made no comment about the exact nature of his brief. He told The Telegraph: "I was in London and that's it." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2001%2F10%2F26%2Fwirq26.xml
Early March 2002 (B): William Patrick (see February 1999)
is interviewed by the FBI in relation to the anthrax attacks. He is surprised
that the FBI didn't interview him earlier. [BBC, 3/14/02] After passing a lie detector test,
the FBI invites him to join the inner circle of technical advisers to the
anthrax investigation. [Baltimore Sun, 6/27/02] It is later noted that
"many of the experts the FBI has turned to for help are also, almost by
definition, potential suspects. That has put FBI agents in the uncomfortable
position of having to subject their scientist-consultants to polygraph tests,
and then, afterward, ask those same experts to help analyze evidence." [Hartford Courant, 9/7/02]
March 4 Strikes and demonstrations over Ecuador's 450,000-barrel-per-day heavy
crude oil (OCP) pipeline that is currently under construction, largely from
environmental and indigenous groups, come to an end as the government and the
pipeline builder agree to provide millions of dollars in local development
assistance. The area had lost about 40,000 barrels per day of oil production
out of a total of 190,000 barrels per day over a 54-day period from already
completed projects that were also blocked, and the pipeline builder lost about
$2 million because of delays. (OD)
barrels
per day. This is the highest level since November 2001. (Reuters)
March 5 The Energy Ministry of the United Kingdom sets new rules for investment
in the country's North Sea oil and natural gas sector. The rules, which are
intended to slow declining output, set new investment deadlines on existing
licenses, make trading licenses between companies more transparent, and set
shorter investment deadlines in new concessions. (Reuters)
March 5, 2002: A second federal judge orders seven federal agencies, including the
Department of Energy, to release records from Cheny’s Energy Task Force March 5 The United Nations announces
that Iraqi oil exports for the previous week rose 1 million barrels per day to
2.49 million barrels per day, taking the four-week average to 1.9 million
barrels per day. This is the highest level since November 2001. (Reuters)
March 6 At a joint news conference, oil ministers of major non-OPEC oil
exporters Mexico and Norway announce that they plan to maintain their
respective export and production cuts through the end of the second quarter of
2002. This same day, non-OPEC Persian Gulf exporter Oman announces that it is willing
to maintain its relatively small production cut through the end of the year.
(Reuters)
March 7 Light, sweet crude oil for April delivery on the NYMEX closes at $23.71,
the highest price since September 21, 2001, when oil prices had temporarily spiked
because of the September 11 terrorist attack. Oil prices have been on the rise
because of OPEC and non-OPEC production cuts, an improving U.S. economy, and
concern over U.S. intentions toward Iraq. (OD)
March 8 Administrative workers of Venezuela's state oil company PdVSA, who have
been holding protests for a week, stage a four-hour work stoppage. The stoppage
does not affect exports, but signals rising tensions between PdVSA employees
and the government of President Hugo Chavez, who replaced PdVSA's board of
directors in February, a move unpopular with employees. (Reuters)
March 8 A team of scientists reports in the journal Science that small-scale
nuclear fusion has been achieved using a new technique. However, only a
miniscule amount of energy is produced and the technique's prospects as a means
or step towards using fusion as a practical energy source are still unclear.
(NYT)
March 11 The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) releases the results
of its weekly survey of gasoline prices, showing that the average price
nationwide rose 7.9 cents per gallon in the previous week. This is the
second-highest one-week increase in the past 10 years. Gasoline prices continue
rising for the remainder of the month. (LAT)
March 11 Employees at Venezuelan state oil company PdVSA stage a work slowdown,
including a halt to overtime work. It is unclear how long the work slowdown
will continue. (Reuters)
March 12 Shareholders of Conoco and Phillips Petroleum approve a proposed
$15.6-billion merger of the two major oil companies. The new company would be
the third-largest oil company in the United States and the sixth-largest
investor-owned oil company in the world. The company would also be the largest
oil refiner in the United States. Joint reserves of the two companies are about
8.7 billion barrels of oil equivalent. (AP)
March 13 The U.S. Senate rejects a bill that would have raised the Corporate
Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards from the current 24 miles per gallon to
36 miles per gallon by 2016. Congress last increased fuel economy standards in
1975. (NYT)
March 13, 2002: A bomb and two smaller explosive-type devices are found and defused in
the stairwell outside of the Shelby County Regional Forensic Center, Memphis,
Tennessee, where county medical examiner Dr. O. C. Smith works. Smith states,
"We have done several high-profile cases from (missing Harvard researcher)
Dr. (Don) Wiley to Katherine Smith but there has been no indication that we
offended anyone... We just don't know if we were the intended target or not.''
The police state, "It potentially could have been a large blast if
exploded." The mystery gets deeper: in June, Dr. Smith is attacked, bound
with barbed wire and left with a bomb tied to his body (see June 1, 2002). [Memphis Commercial Appeal, 3/14/02]
March 13, 2002
The most
important thing is for us to find Osama bin Laden. It is our : number one
priority and we will not rest until we find him. : ~ George Bush Jr. Sept 13,
2001 : "I don't know where he is. I
have no idea and I really don't care. It's : not that important. It's not our
priority" : ~ George Bush Jr. March 13, 2002
March 15 OPEC oil ministers meeting in Vienna decide to maintain their quota
restrictions, established January 1, 2002, through the end of the second
quarter of the year. On January 1, 2002, OPEC cut its crude oil production
quotas by an aggregate 1.5 million barrels per day. (NYT)
March 15 Syrian Oil Minister Ibrahim Haddad confirms that Syria is receiving
Iraqi oil through a pipeline between the two countries. However, the minister
states that the pipeline is only being tested and is functioning irregularly
due to damage. According to Syria, the pipeline is pumping less than 100,000
barrels per day when at maximum. However, data on Syrian exports loadings for
March show an increase of about 115,000 barrels per day. (Reuters)
March 15 California Governor Gray Davis issues an executive order delaying the
implementation of a statewide ban on methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) in
gasoline for one year. MTBE was to have been banned as of January 1, 2003
because of leakage of the chemical, a possible carcinogen, into the groundwater
from underground storage tanks. MTBE is added to gasoline in order to make it
burn cleaner in areas susceptible to smog. The alternative to MTBE, ethanol,
was viewed by the governor as problematic because suppliers would not be able
to adequately replace MTBE with ethanol, creating supply problems and leading
to price increases. (OD, WSJ)
March 17 Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez threatens to have the military take
over operations of state oil company PdVSA if the company's operations are
halted by a strike. Spokesmen for groups representing employees assert that
such a military takeover of the company's operations would not be possible.
White-collar PdVSA employees do stage a voluntary one-day strike on March 21,
but the company's operations are not seriously affected. (Reuters)
March 18 NYMEX crude futures settle above $25 per barrel for the first time
since September 26, 2001, with crude oil for April delivery settling at $25.11
per barrel. Crude oil prices have been rising during the month of March and
continue to post six-month highs later in the month. (Reuters)
March 19 Bulgaria's government announces that it has reached an agreement with
Greece for an equal stake with Greece and Russia in a joint company to be set
up to manage a planned oil pipeline from the Black Sea to the Aegean Sea. This
resolves what had been a key sticking point in negotiations for over six years.
The project envisages carrying 700,000 barrels per day of crude oil from the
Russian port of Novorossisk by tanker to the Bulgarian Black Sea port of
Bourgas, from where the underground pipeline would transfer the oil to the port
of Alexandropoulis in northeastern Greece. This would enable crude oil to reach
the Mediterranean without having to pass through the congested Bosporus Strait.
(Reuters)
March 20 Central Gulf Lease Sale 182 takes place, with over 70 companies bidding
for oil and natural gas leases in the Gulf of Mexico offshore Louisiana,
Mississippi, and Alabama. About $363 million in high bids are received by the
U.S. Minerals Management Service, which managed the sale. The Gulf of Mexico
currently accounts for about one-fourth of U.S. oil and natural gas production.
(OD)
March 20 Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov announces that Russia will
extend its voluntary crude oil export cuts of 150,000 barrels per day through
the end of the second quarter of 2002. Russia, the biggest non-OPEC oil
exporter, had agreed to implement the cuts beginning on January 1, 2002 as a
cooperative move with OPEC. Many analysts question whether Russia has complied
at all with its pledged cuts, and some data actually points to Russian exports
rising since the beginning of January. (NYT)
March 21 OPEC announces that its members, excluding Iraq, produced 779,000
barrels of crude oil per day above the agreed production quota of 21.7 million
barrels per day during the month of February. This is a 65,000-barrel-per-day
decline from January's output. (Reuters)
March 21 United Nations (U.N.) Security Council permanent member Russia blocks
attempts by other members of the U.N. Sanctions Committee to either set out a
stricter pricing mechanism or eliminate middlemen from Iraq's oil trade. The
U.N. suspects that many middlemen pay surcharges to the Iraqi government, in
violation of U.N. rules. Russian companies have been the largest lifters of
Iraqi crude oil since the start of the U.N. "oil-for-food" program.
(OD)
March 22 The U.S. Senate passes a bill that will require utilities to produce
10% of their power from renewable energy sources such as wind, solar, and
geothermal by 2020. On March 14, the U.S. Senate had rejected a bill that would
have required 20% of U.S. electricity to be produced from renewable sources by 2020.
There are 14 states that already require a percentage of their state's energy
to be from renewable sources. (LAT)
March 22 Germany's largest utility, RWE, announces that British power company
Innogy has accepted its $4.42-billion takeover bid. The purchase of Innogy will
be RWE's first foothold in a major electricity market outside of Germany. (DJ)
March 22, 2002 (B): US officials claim to have found an al-Qaeda
biological weapons lab near Kandahar, Afghanistan. But the lab was incomplete,
and "there is still no indication that al-Qaeda ever succeeded in
producing biological agents." [New York Times, 3/22/02]
March 24, 2002 (C): Dead microbiologist: David Wynn-Williams, 55, is hit
by a car while jogging near his home in Cambridge, England. He was an
astrobiologist with the Antarctic Astrobiology Project and the NASA Ames
Research Center. He was studying the capability of microbes to adapt to
environmental extremes, including the bombardment of ultraviolet rays and
global warming. [London Times, 3/27/02, Globe and Mail, 5/4/02]
March 25, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Steven Mostow, 63, dies when the airplane he was
piloting crashes near Denver, Colorado. He worked at the Colorado Health
Sciences Centre and was known as "Dr. Flu" for his expertise in
treating influenza, and expertise on bioterrorism. Mostow was "one of the
country's leading infectious disease experts" and was associate dean at
the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. Three others died in the crash.
Mostow's death bring the total number of leading microbiologists killed in a
six-month period to at least 15. [KUSA
TV, 3/26/02, Globe and Mail, 5/4/02]
March 25, 2002 Kroll Inc. and the law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld,
L.L.P. today announced the formation of a joint venture to provide clients with
a new interactive legal, risk management and regulatory compliance product. The
product - Business Intelligence Access - provides a secure, password-protected
Internet platform that enables users to gain access to a wide range of
investigative, compliance and legal services from a desktop or laptop computer,
anywhere in the world, 24 hours a day. Steven Rucker, executive managing
director in Kroll's New York office, said, "Business Intelligence Access
provides clients with their first line of compliance and corporate security, delivering
legal, investigative and risk consulting services through a single
medium." Mark MacDougall, a partner in Akin Gump's Washington, D.C.,
office, added, "Along with Kroll, we developed Business Intelligence
Access to be easy to use and fully interactive, providing a critical tool for
compliance directors, in-house counsel and managers at every level."
Business Intelligence Access, a retainer-based product located at
www.krollakin.com, permits clients to engage a full range of legal and risk management
functions on-line, including:
Background
Checks - on customers, employees, contractors and business partners.
Identity
Searches - of suspected terrorists, narcotics traffickers, sanctioned
organizations, and others designated by the United States government and
international law enforcement agencies.
Travel
Watch - safety and security reports on 300 cities worldwide.
Visa
Advisor - providing interactive clearance of INS status.
Corporate
Compliance - on-line compliance programs ranging from anti-money laundering to
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
Public
Policy Advisor - instant access to legislative and regulatory developments from
antiterrorism to INS reform and campaign finance.
Founded in
1972, Kroll is the world's leading independent risk consulting firm, with more
than 55 offices on six continents. Its 1,600 employees and consultants have
extensive professional backgrounds in business intelligence and investigations,
security consulting, computer forensics, forensic accounting, business valuation,
financial due diligence, and asset tracing and recovery.
Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P., founded in 1945, is a leading international law firm with more than 1,050 lawyers in offices in the United States and Europe. The firm supports more than 50 practice groups representing regional, national and international clients.
Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P., founded in 1945, is a leading international law firm with more than 1,050 lawyers in offices in the United States and Europe. The firm supports more than 50 practice groups representing regional, national and international clients.
March 25 Mexican state oil company PEMEX reports that Mexican crude oil exports
in February were at 1.575 million barrels per day, well below non-OPEC Mexico's
export cap of 1.66 million barrels per day agreed to with OPEC and implemented
on January1, 2002. This is also lower than January's crude oil exports, which
were 1.591 million barrels per day, according to PEMEX. (Reuters)
March 25 Oil exports resume at the Turkish port of Ceyhan, following a two-week
stoppage that resulted from declining Iraqi exports since the beginning of the
month. Iraqi oil exports have been increasingly irregular since after-the-fact
pricing was implemented in early 2001. This makes the payment of surcharges to
Iraq's government more difficult, but many purchasers now wait until the last
few days of the month to load their cargos. (OD)
March 25 Sudanese rebel leader John Garang states that rebels of the Sudan
People's Liberation Movement and Army (SPLM/SPLA) will continue to attack oil
installations in the center of the country despite an agreement to protect
civilians and civilian targets. Sudan produces about 210,000 barrels of oil per
day, and exports about 175,000 barrels per day. (Reuters)
March 26, 2002 CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) Meeting
"Commanding Heights: the Battle for the World Economy"
Speaker: Frederick W. Smith Chairman & CEO, FDX Corporation
Speaker: Lawrence B. Lindsey Assistant to the President for Economic Policy
Speaker: Daniel H. Yergin Author, Commanding Heights
Summary: Based on the book by Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw, this new series explores the great debate over the impact of globalization. Filmed on five continents, it offers a compelling, in-depth narrative of the powerful forces shaping the economy and society in the 21st century.
[www.cfr.org]
"Commanding Heights: the Battle for the World Economy"
Speaker: Frederick W. Smith Chairman & CEO, FDX Corporation
Speaker: Lawrence B. Lindsey Assistant to the President for Economic Policy
Speaker: Daniel H. Yergin Author, Commanding Heights
Summary: Based on the book by Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw, this new series explores the great debate over the impact of globalization. Filmed on five continents, it offers a compelling, in-depth narrative of the powerful forces shaping the economy and society in the 21st century.
[www.cfr.org]
March 26 Angola and Congo (Brazzaville) sign an agreement delineating the
countries' maritime border. This allows U.S. major ChevronTexaco to pursue exploration
in the formerly disputed border area offshore. The two countries are among
Africa's largest oil exporters, with most of that production coming from
offshore areas. (OD)
March 27 At an Arab summit meeting in Beirut, Iraq pledges
"non-interference" in Kuwait's internal affairs and recognition of
Kuwait's borders. Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri states, "We are for
the prosperity and independence of the state of Kuwait and also for the
normalization of ties, diplomatic, economic, political." On March 28,
delegates at the meeting endorse a peace plan for Israel/Palestine put forward
by the Saudi delegation. (Reuters)
March 27 Royal Dutch/Shell confirms that it will build a $500 million liquefied
natural gas (LNG) regasification terminal in Baja California with a send-out
capacity of 1.3 billion cubic feet per day. Shell intends to source LNG for the
project from the Asia-Pacific region, and sell it to power plants and other
Mexican and Californian consumers. Completion is expected in 2006. (OD)
March 28 A U.S. District Court ruling restricts underground coal mining beneath
national parks, inhabited residences, and other protected areas. The court
rules in favor of the Citizens Coal Council, an environmental advocacy group,
in its suit challenging the way the U.S. Department of the Interior has allowed
permitting of underground coal mining that may cause ground subsidence in
specified protected areas. The National Mining Association and the U.S.
Department of the Interior pledge to appeal the ruling.
March 28 The Russian Foreign Ministry reports that it has reached a basic
agreement with the United States on revisions of the United Nation's (U.N.)
"oil-for-food" program. The draft documents will now be sent forward
to the U.N. Security Council for consideration. Of particular importance is
that Russia and the United States appear to have reached an agreement
concerning a "goods review list" of supplies that cannot be exported
to Iraq without approval by the Security Council. (Reuters)
March 29 A U.S. Geological Survey study concludes that opening Alaska's Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling could harm caribou and other wildlife.
The U.S. Senate will take up debate in April on whether to open the refuge to
drilling. (Reuters)
April 1 Iraq calls for an oil embargo by Arab oil exporters to punish the
United States and other countries for their support of Israel. This, along with
intensification of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, contributes to oil prices
reaching new six-month highs. (Reuters)
April 1 India liberalizes its oil and natural gas sector by putting in place a
series of market reforms, including: the end of government-fixed prices for
gasoline and diesel; the end of subsidized cooking gas and kerosene prices;
market competition for state-run downstream companies; and assigning the Oil
Ministry the role of energy watchdog. (Reuters)
April 2 Royal Dutch/Shell agrees to buy Enterprise Oil for $5 billion in cash.
This will increase Royal Dutch/Shell's production in the North Sea by 30% and
overall production by 6%, according to the company. The acquisition will also
add 1.5 billion barrels of oil to Royal Dutch/Shell's reserves. The company is
also assuming $1.15 billion in Enterprise's debt. (NYT)
April 3 Venezuela sends out its first commercial shipment of 550,000 barrels of
synthetic crude to a U.S. Gulf Coast refinery. Venezuela's Sincor heavy crude
upgrade plant, which was inaugurated last month, refines ultra-heavy crude oil
into 32 degree API syncrude. (Reuters)
April 4, 2002: Dr. David Franz, a former commander of USAMRIID, says of the anthrax
attacks: "I think a lot of good has come from it. From a biological or a
medical standpoint, we've now five people who have died, but we've put about $6
billion in our budget into defending against bioterrorism." Plentiful
evidence suggests that the anthrax came from USAMRIID, but investigators say
they have no suspects at all. They also say they have come up "against
some closely held military secrets" which are slowing down the
investigation. [ABC News, 4/4/02] Did the anthrax attacker(s) use
similar logic as Franz, reasoning that the attacks would serve as a wake up
call to protect the US against bioterror attacks?
April 4 The Angolan army signs a ceasefire accord with rebels of the National
Union for the Total Independence of Angola (Unita). The agreement includes
amnesty for former Unita soldiers and their demobilization and reintegration
into society. The civil war, which began in 1975, has killed thousands of
Angolans and taken much of the government's revenues from Angola's substantial
oil production and exports. (NYT)
April 5 Thousands of workers at Venezuelan state oil company PdVSA stay home,
close gates of facilities, and engage in protests. This is the largest
disruption of PdVSA's operations in 2002, though it is not a full-blown strike
by all PdVSA workers. Oil production and refining slows, and two of Venezuela's
five main oil export terminals are unable to operate. The government of
President Hugo Chavez threatens to militarize PdVSA's operations. (AP)
April 5 Nigeria's Supreme Court rules that the federal government, not state or
regional authorities, has control over offshore oil and natural gas. Six
southern states had threatened to take control of natural resources in their
territories, which could have meant rules changes for operators in the areas
and a concentration in hydrocarbon revenues in those states. (Reuters)
April 5 Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, joins Iraq in calling for an
oil embargo against countries supporting Israel. However, other Iranian
government officials indicate that Iran will not go ahead with any embargo
without support from all Muslim major oil exporters. On April 7, the Libyan
government also calls for an embargo, but with the provision that such an
embargo would have to include all Muslim oil exporters. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait
reject these proposals. (WP, Reuters)
April 6 A BP pipeline near Little Lake, Louisiana ruptures, spilling 90,000
gallons of oil into marshland and coastal waters. Clean-up crews are sent to
the area and some of the oil is recovered the following day. (WSJ)
April 7 Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announces that he has fired seven
executives of state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PdVSA) and sent 12
others into early retirement. This action comes in response to the executives
leading protests and work stoppages that have intensified since April 5. These
protests began after President Chavez installed new PdVSA board members on
February 20, 2002. (LAT)
April 8 Nevada Governor Kenny Guinn vetoes the use of the Yucca Mountain
facility as a repository for high-level nuclear waste. Under a 1982 federal law
on nuclear waste policy, a governor can file a "notice of
disapproval" to reject a president's selection of a site in his state.
This gives the U.S. Congress 90 legislative days to debate and vote on the
issue. Simple majorities in both chambers can override the veto. (LAT)
April 8 Iraq announces that it will halt its "oil-for-food" exports
for 30 days as a "gesture of support" for the Palestinians' struggle
with Israel. Iraq also requests that other OPEC countries do not raise
production to make up for lost Iraqi exports. Iraqi "oil-for-food"
exports had averaged about 1.7 million barrels per day to date in 2002. Major
Arab OPEC exporters Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Qatar have expressed
unwillingness to join in any embargo. (WSJ)
April 9 A general strike begins in Venezuela, shutting down many stores and
factories and nearly halting oil production, refining, and export terminals.
Strike organizers decide to extend the strike through April 10. (WP)
April 9 California Attorney General Bill Lockyer files suit against four power
companies, charging them with profiteering during the power crisis of
2000-2001. The attorney general claims that companies could face penalties of
as much as $1 billion. (WSJ)
April 9, 2002 Barry Mawn (now ex-FBI) is one of the favourites for Massport as a
security chief for $250,000 a year.
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/local_regional/port04092002.htm
April 11 2002 GAO filed a motion seeking an expedited decision from the judge hearing
its lawsuit against the Vice President. GAO's motion for summary judgment
argued that, since there are no factual disagreements, the suit should be
decided on its legal merits in favor of GAO.
April 12 Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is ousted by the country's military
after three consecutive days of general strikes during which oil production,
refining, and exports-the mainstays of the Venezuelan economy-were seriously
affected. After at least a dozen protesters are killed, high-ranking military
officers, including the army commander general, request President Chavez to
step down. (WSJ)
April 12 Pedro Carmona is named interim President of Venezuela by the military
high command. He dissolves the National Assembly and Supreme Court. PdVSA
operations that had been halted start up again, but rioting begins again the
following day. (Reuters)
April 14 Interim President Pedro Carmona announces that he has resigned
following large, and sometimes violent, pro-Chavez protests and a lack of
support among many military officers. Carmona also loses support of Venezuela's
largest labor group. Several hours later, Hugo Chavez returns to power in
Caracas and claims that he never resigned the presidency. Chavez announces that
PdVSA's Board of Directors had submitted its resignation on April 11. (AP)
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