SEC halts Custable's Worldwide, a Wolfson graduate Securities and Exchange Commission Tue 22 Jul 2003 Street Wire
by Brent Mudry
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has abruptly halted trading in Worldwide Holdings Delaware Corp., a penny stock promotion featuring securities violators Frank J. Custable Jr. and Allen Wolfson in the past few years, citing concerns about its regulatory filings, including the identities of its major shareholders. The SEC imposed a 10-day trading suspension on Worldwide Holdings at the open on Monday, set to expire at midnight on Aug. 1. The Worldwide halt comes four months after Mr. Wolfson, a Salt Lake City promoter, was convicted on March 26 of penny stock fraud charges in an unrelated criminal trial and Mr. Custable, a Chicago-area tout, was charged on March 27 in an unrelated SEC civil case promoting seven penny stock companies, including veteran Howe Street promoter Kenneth (Ken) Liebscher's ThermoElastic Technologies Inc. (Although ThermoElastic was named as a defendant in the SEC's suit, there is no allegation of wrongdoing by Mr. Liebscher or any other company official.) In its halt notice, the SEC notes it has questions regarding, among other things, the accuracy of statements made by Worldwide concerning the identity of its majority shareholder or shareholders, concerning its status and amount of liabilities, and concerning its annual report for Dec. 31, 2002, filed May 21. Suburban Capital, Mr. Custable's flagship private company, acquired 51-per-cent control of Worldwide on Dec. 31, according to the company's 10KSB annual report. Worldwide issued 133 million shares, valued at a deemed $15,000, on Dec. 31 to Gateway Distributors Ltd., which then sold 133.32 million shares to Suburban for $15,000 that same day. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) In recent years, the company has changed names from Jutland Enterprises Inc., to Treat Enterprises Inc., back to Jutland, then to Professional Wrestling Alliance Corp., TRSG Corp., and finally to Worldwide Holdings. According to various SEC filings, Mr. Wolfson took control of the company, then called Jutland, by the fall of 1999, with about 42.5 million shares, roughly a 42-per-cent stake, held by his family's companies A-Z Professional Consultants, Hudson Consulting Group Inc., Oasis International Hotel & Casino Inc., and his nephew Richard Surber, who served a stint as Jutland's president and chief executive officer. While intent-to-file notices show Wolfson nominees usually used U.S. brokerage Olsen Payne, his son David Wolfson filed to sell 171,000 Worldwide shares through Canadian brokerage Research Capital in October, 2001. In other promotions, Allen Wolfson favoured Vancouver brokerages Canaccord Capital and Union Securities. Mr. Wolfson's Olsen Payne broker, Kevin Kirkpatrick, was recently given a permanent injunction against future securities violations, in the SEC's unrelated prosecution of Mr. Wolfson's Freedom Surf Inc. The SEC notes that in its Freedom Surf prosecution, Allen Wolfson, his son David Wolfson and three other co-defendants all chose to assert their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and refused to testify in the regulator's investigation. There is no suggestion that Research Capital, Canaccord, Union or any of the Howe Street brokerage's employees had any idea anything was amiss in any Wolfson-related accounts they hosted. Mr. Wolfson was convicted in late March after a month-long trial of conspiracy, securities fraud and wire fraud offences arising from his scheme to manipulate six other penny stocks from early 1999 through July, 2000, resulting in losses to the public of at least $7-million. In this case, part of Operation Uptick, a massive FBI bust of Mafia-linked penny stock promoters, Mr. Wolfson bribed numerous U.S. brokers through offshore wires to a mobbed-up middleman, Michael Grecco, an associate of the Colombo organized crime family. Mr. Custable, who took control of Worldwide on Dec. 31, has a "significant disciplinary history in the securities industry," according to the SEC in its complaint filed on March 27. In 1994, Mr. Custable and his company F.C. Financial Corp. were fined $385,000 in an SEC case relating to a fraudulent offering involving mortgage-backed promissory notes. In 1992, he capped his career as a broker with a $20,000 fined from the National Association of Securities Dealers and an industry bar, based on unauthorized trades in customers' accounts and guaranteeing a return on investments. Mr. Custable also received various fines and other penalties from state regulators in his home state of Illinois and adjoining states of Wisconsin and Indiana. In its recent complaint, the SEC claims Mr. Custable used fronts to receive large blocks of consultants shares of Gateway, ThermoElastic and Wasatch Pharmaceuticals through sham Form S-8 filings. The SEC claims that as recently as Feb. 14, Gateway issued Mr. Custable S-8 shares for purported consulting work, with the stock and sale proceeds usually immediately transferred into offshore accounts in Costa Rica. Although not mentioned in the SEC complaint, Mr. Custable bought 133 million shares of Worldwide Holdings, a control block, from Gateway on Dec. 31, as noted above. Gateway, itself a public company, also featured Wolfson affiliates as shareholders, according to intent-to-file notices. David Michael LLC, owned by Mr. Wolfson's son David Michael Wolfson, filed to sell 152,000 shares of Gateway in April, 2002, while Hudson Consulting, a Wolfson group company, filed to sell 136,000 shares in November, 2001, both through Olsen Payne. Worldwide had a few share registry hiccups in recent months, according to its annual report. The company notes that since Dec. 31, 800 million shares were issued to Kevin Gallagher. "New management indicates the 800,000,000 shares of stock were issued in error. New management changed stock transfer agents May 13," states Worldwide. (The filing refers to Mr. Custable's Suburban as "new management.") Three days later, the new transfer agent received and cancelled the 800-million-share certificate, but a further one million shares were short and unaccounted for. The annual report also notes that as of May 1, the shareholders list shows that the 133.32 million shares transferred by Gateway to Suburban effective Dec. 31 were still in the name of Gateway. "Suburban acknowledges receipt of the stock from Gateway. Suburban, which is New management, indicates it is holding the stock without making a name change, pending determination of whom it will be reissued to." Worldwide's annual report notes that as of May 15, these apparent discrepancies regarding ownership, ownership control and potential claims against ownerhip had not been corrected or resolved. The SEC is now eager to find out the true identity of Worldwide's majority shareholder or shareholders. bmudry@stockwatch.com (c) Copyright 2003 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com |