Enron Corp. was an Oregon corporation with its headquarters in Houston, Texas. Among other businesses, Enron was engaged in the purchase and sale of natural gas and power, construction and ownership of pipelines, power facilities and energy-related businesses, provision of telecommunications services, and trading in contracts to buy and sell various commodities. Before it filed for bankruptcy on December 2,2001, Enron was the seventh largest corporation in the United States. Enron was a publicly traded company whose shares were listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
Documents in this extraordinary collection:
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT – Over two hundred Department of Justice documents relating to the investigation of Enron and the prosecution cases against officers and executives of the firm, along with reports from the Corporate Fraud Task Force.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT – A major collection of document reproductions released under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) by the Treasury Department from March 2002 to March 2004.
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION (FERC) – Over 140 Enron-related references and documents, including information on its role in western energy markets.
SEC FILINGS - The history of Enron is covered by its SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) filings since 1994, including quarterly and annual reports for the 18 unique entities comprising the Enron empire.
SEC STATEMENTS, LITIGATION, NEWS, AND REGULATORY ACTION – A thorough collection of SEC documents on the investigation of the Enron collapse.
CONGRESSIONAL OVERSIGHT – There are thousands of pages of Congressional hearing testimony and internal corporate documents. There are hearing records from the House Committee on Energy and Commerce (chaired by Billy Tauzin), the Senate Finance Committee, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, and the Senate Committee on Government Affairs. The shredding of documents by the Arthur Andersen accounting firm is covered, along with the impact of Enron's collapse on auditing standards and pensions.
This CD-ROM has nearly 70,000 pages reproduced using Adobe Acrobat PDF software - allowing direct viewing on Windows and Macintosh systems, and Reader software is included. The Acrobat cataloging technology adds enormous value and uncommon functionality to this impressive collection of government documents and material. There is no other reference that is as fast, convenient, comprehensive, and portable!
Our CD-ROMs are privately-compiled collections of official public domain U.S. government files and documents - they are not produced by the federal government. They are designed to provide a convenient user-friendly reference work, utilizing the benefits of the Acrobat format to uniformly present thousands of pages that can be rapidly reviewed or printed without untold hours of tedious searching and downloading. Vast archives of important public domain government information that might otherwise remain inaccessible are available for instant review no matter where you are. This book-on-a-disc makes a great reference work and educational tool.