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- <text id=90TT1922>
- <link 91TT0066>
- <link 90TT2587>
- <link 90TT1452>
- <title>
- July 23, 1990: It's A Family Affair
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- The American Economy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- It's a Family Affair
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Democrats and Republicans scramble to escape blame for the
- S&L fiasco, the scandal acquires a human face: the President's
- son
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson/Washington--Reported by Gisela
- Bolte/Washington and Michael Duffy/Denver
- </p>
- <p> The savings and loan scandal did more than bring tears to
- the eyes of the President's third son last week. Suddenly,
- through the lens of one man's life, the larger saga of an
- industry gone corrupt snapped into sharp resolution. The grief
- that crossed the fresh, Boy Scout face of Neil Bush struck a
- human chord of sympathy. But it also created a moment of
- clarity, defining the situation.
- </p>
- <p> It was not thugs in ski masks who drained billions and
- billions of dollars from the nation's S&Ls. It was hundreds of
- (mostly) respected citizens in pinstripes who, seeing that
- deregulation had left the door to the vault wide open, walked
- in and grabbed what they could--or at the very least allowed
- others to do so.
- </p>
- <p> With the release of government documents spelling out the
- conflict-of-interest allegations, and reports that the Federal
- Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) might file a $200 million
- civil suit against him and the other officers and directors of
- Denver's Silverado Banking, Savings and Loan Association, Neil
- Bush replaced Charles Keating as the S&L poster boy. His father
- interrupted his final press conference at the Houston economic
- summit to defend the besieged 35-year-old Denver businessman.
- </p>
- <p>honor of his son?" asked the President as his voice cracked
- with emotion. "If the system finds he's done something wrong,
- he will be the first to step up and do what's right."
- </p>
- <p> Neil Bush may be the Velcro that Democrats have needed to
- attach blame for the S&L debacle to the President. Despite
- being in charge when the multibillion-dollar casino was opened,
- Republicans have been feigning shock--shock!--that any
- gambling was going on at all. The Administration has belatedly
- been making a great show of prosecuting the most egregious
- offenders. Just last week the government charged high-profile
- Dallas thrift owner Edwin McBirney III with 17 counts of bank
- fraud. Cleaning up the mess at his Sunbelt Savings Association
- of Texas, which was taken over by regulators in 1986, has so
- far cost $2 billion.
- </p>
- <p> But while the Administration was taking credit for nailing
- McBirney, it was attracting criticism for allowing yet another
- set of dealmakers to get rich. Last week Senate judiciary
- subcommittee chairman Howard Metzenbaum called on the
- government to tear up a deal made by M. Danny Wall, former
- chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, with Arizona
- insurance executive James Fail. In 1988 Wall allowed Fail to
- acquire 15 insolvent Texas S&Ls in exchange for $1,000 in cash
- and $70 million in borrowed money, and threw in $1.85 billion
- to cover the liabilities of the bankrupt thrifts. Fail in 1976
- had been indicted for securities fraud in Alabama. Though the
- charge against Fail was dropped, a company he controlled
- pleaded guilty to fraud. According to federal regulations, that
- should have disqualified Fail.
- </p>
- <p> At a G.O.P. convention in Chicago last week, Edward Rollins,
- co-chairman of the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee,
- described former Speaker Jim Wright, majority whip Tony Coelho
- and Congressman Fernand St. Germain, all of whom were forced
- out of the House because of their dealings with thrift
- operators, as "the Three Stooges of the S&L crisis." Democratic
- National Committee chairman Ron Brown shot back that
- Republicans can't escape the fact that "George Bush, Ronald
- Reagan and their high-roller friends ran the government,
- designed the S&L policy and handpicked the people that gutted
- the oversight agencies. They are now being forced to take
- responsibility for the greatest rip-off in American history."
- </p>
- <p> Both parties have it right. The thrift industry's largesse
- was bipartisan, going to anyone in power of either political
- persuasion in hopes that no one would stop the party made
- possible by deregulation. When Common Cause compiled a list of
- contributions by the thrift industry to public officials, two
- of the top five Senate recipients proved to be Republicans
- (Pete Wilson of California and Alfonse D'Amato of New York) and
- three Democrats (Don Riegle of Michigan, Lloyd Bentsen of Texas
- and Alan Cranston of California).
- </p>
- <p> The equal-opportunity $11 million that the thrifts showered
- on politicians turned out to be a wise investment. Even after
- the cost of bailing out thrifts (now estimated at $500 billion
- over 40 years) became apparent, the Republican White House and
- the Democratic Congress both had a stake in treating the S&L
- debacle as an accident of the marketplace. It was in fact the
- work of cash-hungry politicians, inept regulators and
- high-flying owners who used government-insured deposits to
- finance wildly speculative investments, corporate jets, hunting
- lodges and luxury yachts.
- </p>
- <p> But the charges against Neil Bush are helping to make a
- scandal that the public had difficulty comprehending a bit more
- understandable. With the disclosure that Bush and the Silverado
- board approved loans to a Bush business partner that resulted
- in $45 million in losses, taxpayers are beginning to grasp an
- infuriating fact: it will cost every American man, woman and
- child $2,000 to pay for a decade-long orgy to which very few
- of them were invited. At last there was a human face that
- seemed to symbolize the scandal and how it had crept into every
- corner of the government, including the President's family.
- </p>
- <p> With so much pent-up fury crashing over him, Neil Bush's
- lonely offensive last week to salvage his name seemed a lost
- cause. His father calls Neil "the most sensitive" of his four
- sons and one daughter. His poor performance as a student went
- unexplained until it was discovered he was mildly dyslexic.
- Though a high school guidance counselor told his parents that
- Neil would never get to college and shouldn't bother trying,
- Barbara Bush was undaunted, tutoring him herself and dragging
- him to special classes. Eventually, Bush earned an M.B.A. at
- Tulane. But Bush family friends say he never lost his naivete.
- </p>
- <p> Neil ignored the possibility that the high rollers of Denver
- were seeking him out for something other than his financial
- experience; at 30 he had very little. It did not take long for
- Bill Walters and Kenneth Good to embrace him after he struck
- out for Denver in 1980, almost exactly as his father had
- traveled to West Texas to seek his fortune 32 years before. "I
- didn't have a red Studebaker," Neil says, "but I wanted to be
- in the oil business."
- </p>
- <p> He went to work for the Amoco Production Co. but within two
- years founded JNB Exploration Co. Walters invested $150,000 in
- JNB, about half the money Bush needed to get started, and
- received a limited 6.25% interest that allocated 19.5% of JNB's
- pretax profits to him. There never were any. Good bought a 25%
- limited partnership in 1983 for $10,000. The next year, Good
- lent Bush $100,000 to play in the commodities market with the
- understanding that he would not have to repay it if the
- investment went belly-up. Bush admits that was an "incredibly
- sweet deal." Over the next six years, JNB sold shares in 28
- wells but did little more than cover costs and salaries. Says
- Neil: "I was not a high-rolling oilman."
- </p>
- <p> Despite his lack of success as a wildcatter, Bush became an
- outside director of Silverado in 1985. Although he says the
- officers and other directors of the bank were aware of his
- connections to Walters and Good, the knowledge seems to have
- been spotty. The Office of Thrift Supervision has accused Bush
- of "one of the worst kinds of conflict of interest" for not
- disclosing that he would benefit from extending a $900,000 line
- of credit to Good for an Argentine oil-exploration deal. Bush
- argues--and has documents to corroborate the claim--that
- everyone knew of the two men's business connections and that
- the line of credit was simply a way of dealing with the
- Argentine bureaucracy and was never intended to be exercised.
- </p>
- <p> OTS charges a second conflict-of-interest violation when
- Good in 1986 asked the board to restructure $14 million in
- loans on troubled real estate projects. According to the
- agency, Bush should have told the board that Good had just
- signed an agreement with JNB contemplating a further cash
- infusion of $3 million. Silverado lost at least $13 million on
- the restructuring. Bush argues in response that the directors
- of Silverado knew more about Good's liquidity than he did. The
- OTS also cites Bush for not abstaining from voting on
- transactions involving Walters. But Bush claims the law did not
- require him to.
- </p>
- <p> Bush's effort to fight back could be costly and ultimately
- futile since the regulators' diligence from this point on may
- be judged by how effectively they handle the case against the
- President's son. His comment that in cities like Denver
- "everybody has relationships, everybody knows everybody" only
- adds to the image of insider deals made with government
- guarantees that privatized profits and socialized losses. Bush
- must answer the OTS charges at a Sept. 25 administrative
- hearing in Denver.
- </p>
- <p> While he has a credible defense--a combination of
- selective prosecution and sufficient, if not total disclosure--his father and the Republican Party may wish he had cut a
- deal and signed the cease-and-desist order when the OTS was
- willing. With all the publicity surrounding young Bush, the
- FDIC may feel pressure to push its suit to partially recover
- from the directors and officers of Silverado the $1 billion
- loss to taxpayers. On Friday Democratic members of the House
- Judiciary Committee asked the Justice Department to appoint a
- special prosecutor to handle the Silverado case; but at least
- one of the members, Edward F. Feighan of Ohio, abruptly
- withdrew from the effort after G.O.P. leaders threatened to
- seek the appointment of another special prosecutor to
- investigate the actions of former Democratic leaders.
- </p>
- <p> Even if Neil Bush eventually clears his name, he will be
- crushed by legal fees. After his sobering week, there remained
- an air of unreality about him. As he boasted of getting down
- to fighting weight, he pondered a new and ironic goal: running
- for Congress.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-