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Enron Not Named In Suicide Note

An anguished note left behind by a former Enron Corp. executive who killed himself in January makes no specific mention of the energy giant's collapse but says "where there was once great pride now it's gone."

The police department in this Houston suburb released the seven-sentence note from John Clifford Baxter immediately after the Texas attorney general's office issued an opinion that the document was a public record.

His family had opposed release of his handwritten note, citing privacy issues.

The note made no mention of the financial scandal that plunged the former energy trading giant into bankruptcy. Baxter resigned as vice chairman in May 2001, months before Enron collapsed.

Police said Baxter, 43, shot himself in the head on Jan. 25, while parked in his black Mercedes in the affluent Houston suburb where he lived with wife and two children.

He'd just agreed to testify to Congress in the Enron case. A congressional source tells CBS News that Baxter wasn't a target in the probe, he was to provide evidence against others.

Baxter's suicide came a day after the congressional hearings began.

The note was handwritten in all capital letters on a blank sheet of paper. An attorney for the family, Pike Powers, has said it was left in Carol Baxter's car in the garage of the family home. The home is a half-mile from the spot where his body was found.

The attorney general's office had until Friday to make a decision. It turned aside arguments that the note might embarrass or invade the privacy of Baxter's family, "given the substantial public interest in the causes of Enron's failure and its far-reaching consequences."

CBS News Correspondent Sharyl Attkisson reports the order from the Texas Attorney General also ordered other tightly-held records be made public, including police evidence photos, but Baxter's family quickly blocked their release citing privacy concerns.

The opinion also determined that Baxter became a public figure. He had been a defendant in investor lawsuits because of Enron stock sales that netted him about $35 million before the energy giant's stock price began falling last year.

Enron's collapse was the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history.

Baxter was named in an explosive warning that another Enron executive sent to company Chairman and Chief Executive Kenneth Lay in August about questionable financial practices.

"Cliff Baxter complained mightily to (then-CEO Jeff) Skilling and all who would listen about the inappropriateness of our transactions with LJM," Sherron Watkins wrote. LJM is one of the partnerships apparently used to keep a half-billion dollars in losses off Enron's books.

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