Enron Mail

From:randal.maffett@enron.com
To:raymond.bowen@enron.com, randy.petersen@enron.com
Subject:Berkeley Memo to Price Waterhouse
Cc:dan.lyons@enron.com, richard.sanders@enron.com
Bcc:dan.lyons@enron.com, richard.sanders@enron.com
Date:Thu, 24 Aug 2000 06:59:00 -0700 (PDT)

Is this something we should respond to, both to clarify and defend our
actions. There are a lot of untruths in their memo including their "lack of
support" of what they call "Enron's actions" which were in fact the Board's
and/or Executive Committee's actions. They were consulted on most if not all
of the major issues, including the removal of senior management, financial
restructuring, etc... In any event, ENA never acted in a vacuum. Everything
was done in concert with the Board of Directors and/or the Executive
Committee (Milt Datsopoulos, Linda Murdoch and myself) appointed by the Board.

On Aug 1 we had a meeting in Vancouver when I resigned off the Board and Ray
Bowen informed them ENA would not fund any longer. The attendees were: Ray
Bowen, Randy Petersen and myself (all from ENA), Ken Swaisland (shareholder),
Richard Bullock (Berkeley), Linda Murdoch (CFO of Kafus and member of the
Board) and Milt Datsopoulos (Chairman of the Board). Once informed of ENA's
decision, Ken Swaisland immediately replied that this would put the company
into bankruptcy and immediately began trying to cut a deal offering ENA all
of Kafus' stock in CanFibre in exchange for its stock in Kafus and full
forgiveness of all debt at the Kafus level. We told Ken that ENA was not
interested in such a deal but was open to discussing alternative
restructuring proposals and encouraged them to bring ideas, restructuring
plans, refinancings, etc... to us. Back as early as May of this year
(possibly even earlier although my involvement only goes back to May), Mike
McCabe and Tony Valentine came to us stating they were working on a
restructuring/refinancing plan. Such a plan was never presented, although
they did submit a very broad (i.e., very few specifics) "cost cutting"
plan. In Berkeley's memo of 23, they again ask for an opportunity to present
a "plan." Where's the beef?

What I'd like to see their reaction to is questions re: the trading of Kafus
stock within the first hour after we informed them of ENA's decision not to
fund the company any more at our Aug 1 meeting in Vancouver. The volume
which normally traded in the 50,000 shares/d range had shot up to 150,000
shares/d the two weeks preceding our Aug 1 meeting and on that very day over
500,000 shares were sold. Per Tony Francel, the IR guy at Kafus, all of the
sales appeared to be coming in thru 3rd party agents from Europe. Per Tony,
whoever was executing the trades was taking careful steps to disguise their
identity. Chris Helfrich has a chart of the Aug 1 stock volume activity
broken down into 15 min intervals and I noted on the same chart the timing
and progress of our meeting that day in Vancouver including who was in the
room at all times, when specific people left the room, etc..... Based on the
volumes being traded, there are only 3 people who could've been dumping that
much stock over that short a period: Swaisland, Berkeley and ENA. We have
confirmed that ENA has NOT sold any of its stock.

It's also important to note that preceding all of this, Berkeley had tried to
get a couple of transactions "pushed thru" the Board including Kafus
International (KIDG) and Hyaton. In both cases, the Board rejected their
proposals for two reasons: 1) the value being offered by Berkeley for each
asset was very suspect to the relative market value and 2) the proposals were
structured as "forgiveness" of Kafus debt to Berkeley, i.e., non-cash
transactions.