Senator: Federal Website Hosts Porn Enron Emails

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. government publishes porn.

It may be inadvertent, but a senator from Washington state says a website operated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) contains links to pornographic emails written by Enron Corp. employees.

Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., called on FERC Thursday to review the database linked to its website and remove any emails containing offensive or sexually explicit material from the former Houston, Texas-based energy giant, which had an apparent crass corporate culture.

"How serious are they about the investigation [of charges of manipulating electricity prices] if FERC doesn't even know that their website has pornographic emails?" Canwell asked. "It shows how amateur and ineffective FERC is in pursuing the case against Enron."

FERC spokesman Kevin Cadden said access to the emails is indirect and includes clear instructions that a user must leave the FERC site to view the material, Cadden said.

"The FERC does not put pornography on its website, period," Cadden said, noting however that anyone who gains access to the site could see pornographic material.

FERC hired private contractor Aspen Systems of Frederick, Md. to create a database on Enron that includes hundreds of thousands of emails from company employees after the company was fingered for nefarious activities that eventually created an energy crisis in California in 2000-01.

Some personal information, such as Social Security numbers, were removed from the emails, but the agency does not have the resources to go through all the documents and remove all offensive or questionable material, he said.

On Thursday, the state of California sued Enron and several of its divisions for allegedly manipulating market prices, costing consumers hundreds of millions of dollars.

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Playboy Partners With Creator Platform Tango

Playboy has partnered with creator platform Tango, introducing Playmates to the livestreaming service.

Anti-Porn Senator Introduces Federal Age Verification Bill

U.S. Senator Jim Banks of Indiana, who last month urged the Department of Justice to ramp up obscenity prosecutions, on Wednesday introduced a bill that would make age verification by adult websites federal law.

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches by Country for April, May

AEBN has released the list of popular searches from its straight and gay theaters, by country, for April and May.

Ondato Joins Pineapple Support as Sponsor

Age and identity verification company Ondato has joined the ranks of over 70 adult businesses and organizations committing funds and resources to Pineapple Support.

2026 XBIZ Amsterdam Website Now Live, Registration Opens

XBIZ is pleased to announce that the website for its annual European conference, XBIZ Amsterdam, is now live.

MyMember.site Integrates FSC's 'PrivateAV' Age Verification Solution

MyMember.site has integrated Free Speech Coalition's PrivateAV age verification tool into its website-building platform.

Pearl Industry Network Opens Beta for Creator Networking App

Industry trade group Pearl Industry Network (PiN) has launched beta testing for the PiN Member App, a networking and collaboration tool for content creators.

FSC: W.V. Age Verification Law Takes Effect June 12

The Free Speech Coalition has issued a reminder notice that West Virginia's age verification law takes effect on June 12, 2026.

Pineapple Support Taps Brad Mitchell, Jean-Micheal Veen for Senior Leadership Positions

Pineapple Support has named Brad Mitchell as its new board president and Jean-Micheal Veen as technology and development chair.

WOW Tech, XR Brands Reach Settlement in Patent Infringement Dispute

XR Brands and Lovehoney Group subsidiary WOW Tech Group have settled a patent dispute over WOW's Pleasure Air Technology.

Show More