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Herman Cain Company, Aquila, Settled Lawsuits Over Retirement Plan, Gas Price Manipulation

Herman Cain Aquila Gas Utility

By RAY HENRY   11/21/11 03:47 AM ET   AP

ATLANTA -- Republican Herman Cain served on the board of a Midwest utility company that paid $10.5 million to settle claims it failed to protect the retirement savings of its employees and paid another $26.5 million over claims it manipulated gas prices, potentially embarrassing episodes for a candidate running for president on his business experience.

Cain sat on the board of directors for Aquila Inc., a Kansas City-based utility, from 1992 until it was acquired in 2008 by Great Plains Energy Inc. Employees alleged in a class-action lawsuit that they were pressured into investing their retirement funds and other savings into company stock. Cain has been forced to answer questions on the campaign trail about the lawsuit, which was reported by Mother Jones magazine in May.

Those employees said Cain and other company officials should have warned their employees that the stock was becoming increasingly risky as the firm floundered financially. The workers said the company's stock should have been eliminated as an investment option in the retirement fund. While Cain sat on the board, Aquila's stock price dropped from roughly $37.50 in 2001 to less than $5 before the company was acquired seven years later.

Cain denies any wrongdoing and takes credit for helping stave off a corporate bankruptcy.

"There's a degree of risk in all investments in all companies," Cain spokesman J.D. Gordon said. "The actions that the board took saved the company."

Cain shared responsibility for the company's overall direction as a member of the board. But attorney Fred Isquith, who represented eight workers who started the class-action lawsuit over the employees' retirement fund, said he was unaware of any evidence showing Cain was more culpable than others on the board. He said the utility was effectively run by members of the Green family, which founded it.

"Could the board have done something? Sure," Isquith said. "Was it run on a day-to-day basis by the Green family? Absolutely. It was the board's responsibility collectively, and Mr. Cain was a member of the board."

Federal records show Isquith has made thousands of dollars in political donations, predominantly to the Democratic Party and its candidates. He said he does not have a preference for a candidate in the Republican presidential primary.

Lawyers for the workers said Aquila started out as a relatively conservative investment. As a traditional utility, the company produced predictable – though not necessarily large – returns and offered a dependable dividend payment.

And the company encouraged its employees to invest. Workers enrolled in the company's investment plan could buy Aquila stock, among other options. It matched employee contributions into the plan fund with company stock. It granted stock options to nearly all its employees and allowed them to purchase up to $10,000 monthly in stock at advantageous prices. Workers could also use their dividend payments to buy even more Aquila stock at a discount.

The lawsuit alleged that the company sent internal publications and set up meetings where employees were encouraged to invest even more. Starting in 1994, the company's annual report listed workers whose stock in the firm was worth at least twice their annual pay.

By the middle of 2001, Aquila stock accounted for two-thirds of the retirement plan's value, lawyers said.

The root of the company's trouble came when it decided to expand into the energy trading business. The utility, then called UtiliCorp United Inc., started the process of spinning off its trading arm, called Aquila, into a separately traded stock. The timing couldn't have been worse.

A major blow came with the 2001 collapse of Enron, a major energy trader, in one of the biggest corporate scandals in U.S. history. It led to investigations of shady energy trading practices that, according to federal authorities, included parts of Aquila.

The utility eventually agreed in a settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to pay $26.5 million over claims that two of its subsidiaries manipulated natural gas prices by providing false prices and other financial details to trade publications. The parent company was the sole or majority owner of those subsidiaries for most of their existence.

A report from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission identified Aquila as one of several firms that had manipulated energy prices in Western states. A wholly owned subsidiary of Aquila later agreed to pay nearly $76,000 to settle related complaints. The company denied wrongdoing and said it paid to avoid the cost of litigation.

Rocked by the turmoil, Aquila called off plans to spin off its energy trading unit. Its stock price plummeted as the company suffered repeated downgrades to its credit rating and fell under the scrutiny of investigators. It laid off workers to save cash and stopped paying dividends. Company executives announced they would exit the energy trading business and focus on being a traditional utility.

"I feel that they had the knowledge and the ability to know that the company was getting in a shaky position, and it was their responsibility," Sharon Lee Arr, a former Aquila worker who was laid off, said during a 2005 deposition. "They were to be looking out for the stockholders and it was their responsibility to have invested and done things differently."

The employees who sued alleged the company did not fully disclose the extent of its problems. Former Aquila worker Robert C. Goodson said employees were shown videos where company executives blamed the stock fluctuations on broader troubles in the market and financial unease following the Sept. 11 terror attacks. He said Aquila stock had been the "foundation of my retirement."

"It wasn't just a gradual decline. It was not even close to that," Goodson said in a 2005 deposition. "That stock dumped fast."

A lawyer representing the utility quizzed Goodson on why he did not sell off his shares as troubles mounted for the company. At the time, the stock was trading for less than $4.

"At least if you converted it right now you'd be in a profitable position?" Aquila attorney Timothy O'Brien said.

"Yeah, make a few bucks," Goodson said. "I'd be able to buy a 12-pack."

___

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ATLANTA -- Republican Herman Cain served on the board of a Midwest utility company that paid $10.5 million to settle claims it failed to protect the retirement savings of its employees and paid anothe...
ATLANTA -- Republican Herman Cain served on the board of a Midwest utility company that paid $10.5 million to settle claims it failed to protect the retirement savings of its employees and paid anothe...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miketothad
trollslayer
07:23 PM on 11/22/2011
Herman who?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
12:37 PM on 11/22/2011
If this guy ever did get elected, we'd have to kjeep him home or his aggravating behavior would start a world war.
11:09 AM on 11/22/2011
Sounds to me like Mr. Cain made his money the old-fashioned way... He stole it!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Costanza
11:08 AM on 11/22/2011
Cain couldn't have cared less about the retirement savings of those who worked for a company while he served upon its board. Big surprise.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:10 AM on 11/22/2011
The name Herman Cain is becoming synonymous with the word embarrasment.
04:45 AM on 11/22/2011
So, he used money from the retirement fund to prop up the price of the stock which kept his salary and bonus as high as possible....

No wonder so many Americans how used to have stable retirement funds are now unable to retire, or afraid they'll run out of money.

Some of these same people, the ones who were skrewed out of their retirement by these cads, will still vote for the people who did it to them.

Who ever said this could apply it to the entire republican line up - 'he's a stupid man's idea of what a smart man sounds like'
04:33 AM on 11/22/2011
He'll do the same thing to America and then say he saved us from the brink of a complete collapse.

Is it time for the caucuses yet? I'm starting to feel sorry for people who admit they are Republicans.
02:50 AM on 11/22/2011
I have a friend who likes to sing but has a terrible singing voice, she thinks she has the voice of an angels yet I say nothing. Herman Cain must be thinking he must be a great business man but he just sucks... what am I saying is that I should tell my friend her singing voice makes angels suicidal, but I dont think Herman Cain has a friend who can do the same for him...
02:45 AM on 11/22/2011
Cain must be glad it is not another sexual harassment scandal.
02:42 AM on 11/22/2011
"Cain denies any wrongdoing and takes credit for helping stave off a corporate bankruptcy."

In short: The needs of the rich outweighs the needs of the workers.
01:28 AM on 11/22/2011
Where's da white wimmins at?
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01:11 AM on 11/22/2011
Bush was the only oil man to never find oil in Texas and was bailed out by Bin Ladins.
Didnt hurt him.

Cheney was CEO of Haliberton when they pleadsguilty to criminal charges of violating a U.S. ban on exports to Libya by selling Col. Qaddafi six pulse neutron generators, devices that can be used to detonate nuclear weapons.
Even with the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act in place, Halliburton continued to operate in Iran. It pays the Department of Commerce $15,000 to settle allegations that the company has broken anti-boycott provisions of the U.S. Export Administration Act for an Iran-related transaction, without admitting wrongdoing.13 Halliburton also continues to do business in Libya throughout Cheney's tenure.

Didnt hurt him either.

Republicans dont care about corruption they plead for it!!

Halliburton pays a $3.8 million penalty to settle alleged violations of the U.S. trade ban
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bowloforanges
"Je pense donc je suis"
12:10 AM on 11/22/2011
He's just a peach of a fellow...

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) against Friends of Herman Cain, Prosperity USA, Inc. and Mark J. Block, both personally and in his capacity as treasurer of Friends of Herman Cain. Based on internal financial records from Prosperity USA obtained by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, the complaint alleges Prosperity USA made illegal corporate contributions to Herman Cain’s presidential campaign by using $40,000 in corporate funds to buy iPads and pay for campaign trips to Iowa, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Houston and Dallas in February and March of 2011.

The complaint also alleges Mr. Block personally violated the Federal Election Campaign Act by authorizing the illegal corporate contributions as president of Prosperity USA, and then by accepting the illegal contributions as treasurer of Friends of Herman Cain. This makes Mr. Block the first person in the history of the Act to have both given and received the same illegal contributions. The complaint also alleges Mr. Block violated the Act by failing to disclose the Prosperity USA expenditures.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mistlesuede
I love Pembroke Welsh Corgis
11:10 PM on 11/21/2011
Has anyone heard anything of this before reading it here?
Darn "liberal" MSM. Haha.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
creese5
09:42 PM on 11/21/2011
I was an Aquila customer for a lot of years and they did a terrible job, the company was completely mismanaged and I'm not surprised to see that Cain was a member of the board.