Howe Steet at it's finest :-)
  Subject: Stockwatch: Mandorin Goldfields Inc - Street Wire 
  Mandorin, MedEra promoter Schoch explains Polish pickle 
  Mandorin Goldfields Inc                                                 MGD  Shares issued 28,273,547                                  Oct 8 close $0.06  Fri 8 Oct 99                                                    Street Wire  Also medEra Life Science Corp (MER)  by Brent Mudry  Controversial  Vancouver  stock  promoter  Arn  Schoch  has  an  intriguing  explanation  for  the  what  happened to a suspicious $5.17-million loan he  received five years ago from a Polish banker. According to  Mr.  Schoch,  a  long-time  promoter  on the Vancouver Stock Exchange, the exchange formerly  known as The Scam Capital of the World, he claims that most  of  the  money  vanished  in  one bad deal after another. Although Mr. Schoch now serves as  vice-president of business development with Dr. Michael Pezim's MedEra Life  Science,  after  a  stint  as  president of Mandorin Goldfields, his Polish  pickle stems from his tenure with CCC Coded  Communications,  a  highflying  previous promotion on the VSE. MedEra is not part of the Polish affair, but  from the MedEra  office  Mr.  Schoch  continues  to  promote  and  practice  business development.  Mr. Schoch's Polish dealings were first revealed in March of 1996  when  he  and  fellow  VSE  promoters  Don Farrell and James Curtis faced a series of  lawsuits totalling  $22.4-million  for  purported  deposits  received  from  alleged   secret  dealings  with  a  representative  of  a  Polish  banking  consortium in 1993 and 1994. In the four suits, Bank Gospodarki Zywnosciowj  Spolka Akcyjna claimed the trio and their holding companies refused demands  to repay the purported deposits.  Vancouver lawyer Winton Derby of McCarthy Tetrault claimed an  employee  of  the  Warsaw-based group of small co-operative farmers' banks conspired with  the Vancouver promoters in the scheme.  The  VSE  troika  met  the  banker,  identified  as R. Kurek, in Finland in 1993. "The defendants entered into a  secret agreement with Kurek to induce  Kurek  to  cause  the  plaintiff  to  deposit  the  funds," the suits stated. (Stockwatch first reported on these  suits in a Streetwire of March 25, 1996, under symbols  EMT,  for  Mandorin  predecessor  Emerging  Growth  Technologies, and GMD, for Mr. Farrell's GMD  Resource.)  Lawyers for the Polish bank have been busy this year, according  to  recent  court  filings, grilling Mr. Schoch about what happened to his share of the  Polish funds. On July 30, Mr. Derby and his associate Robert Sewell filed a  petition  for  a  receving  order in the matter of the bankruptcy of A.M.F.  Capital, the holding company through which Mr. Schoch  originally  received  the funds.  The petition notes that on Feb. 15, 1998, Bank Gospodarki obtained judgment  against  Mr. Schoch's A.M.F. Capital for $5.17-million, through an order of  Master Bolton of the supreme court. (Mr. Schoch is the president  and  sole  director  of  A.M.F.)  The  judgment  stemmed  from the original $3-million  (U.S.) loan, purportedly received as  a  deposit,  which  the  Polish  bank  transferred to A.M.F. on March 29, 1994.  After receiving the judgment, the  bank's  Vancouver  lawyers  grilled  Mr.  Schoch  twice, on June 9, 1998, and Feb. 19, 1999, and heard an interesting  account of the missing money. Mr. Schoch confirmed that his holding company  A.M.F.  has no assets to satisfy the judgment, except for a few small stock  positions, cannot pay any portion of the judgment, ceased to be  an  active  company  in late 1995 and currently has no office or place of business. The  stock promoter also confirmed  that  A.M.F.  has  a  single  bank  account,  dormant since Sept. 29, 1995, and no other creditors.  In sworn  depositions,  Mr.  Schoch  described  the  fate  of  the  missing  $3-million  (U.S.).  More  than  a  third  of  the money was given to Gerry  Dennehy, who moved from Australia to run  CCC  Coded  in  California.  (Mr.  Dennehy also served a stint as director of Nycal (Canada), a company in the  Graham Ferguson Lacey's Australian-flavoured web, a web that also  featured  Phil  Garratt,  an  Australian  expatriate  who ran Cycomm International in  Vancouver.) Another third of the money was used to buy  CCC  Coded  shares,  and much of the rest vanished in a bizarre Philippine gold scheme.  Mr.  Schoch  testified  that  $155,000  of  the  Polish  bank's  funds  was  transferred  to a company called Pan-Global, which in turn issued shares to  a company called Telisha Property,  which  was  owned  by  Mr.  Dennehy,  a  business partner of the VSE promoter. Mr. Schoch also claims that a further  sum of $1.02-million (U.S.) was transferred to Mr. Dennehy personally, in a  series of loans. The Vancouver promoter claims that neither Mr. Dennehy nor  his companies provided any evidence of  the  transfers,  with  no  specific  terms  of  repayment,  at no interest and without any security. Mr. Dennehy  has not repaid any of the money, according to Mr. Schoch.  The Vancouver stock promoter also claims that he used  $1.2-million  (U.S.)  of  the Polish funds to buy shares of CCC Coded, a company he was promoting  in 1994. Some of these funds then ended up in the Philippines.  Mr. Schoch testified that, using its CCC Coded shares as collateral, A.M.F.  obtained   a   $250,000   (U.S.)  loan  from  Vancouver  brokerage  Yorkton  Securities. A.M.F. wired this money to an account in the Philippines in the  name  of  Anthony  Ramos,  according  to Mr. Schoch, to enable Mr. Ramos to  establish his credibility with the Philippine government. The VSE  promoter  was  unable  to  recover any of this money. Mr. Schoch also told the Polish  bank's lawyers that he caused A.M.F. to wire an additional $392,000 to  Mr.  Ramos  to  purchase gold, but the money was never returned and A.M.F. never  received any of the gold.  According to Mr. Schoch, Mr. Ramos  was  working  on  a  big  deal  in  the  Philippines.  "This is at the time when Coded Communications is negotiating  for the purchase of a Philippine-based company called Domsat ... Mr.  Ramos  acted  as a liaison between Coded and the Philippine interests," Mr. Schoch  testified. While Mr. Schoch claims he had contact with either  Mr.  Dennehy  or  another  Coded  official in the Philippines several times a week during  the Domsat period, the deal fell through and the money was never returned.  It is unclear how vigorously Mr. Schoch attempted to  collect  any  of  the  missing  funds,  or even find out what happened to the money. The Vancouver  promoter had little explanation for what became of a housing loan  made  to  Mr.  Dennehy almost five years ago. "Do you know whether Mr. Dennehy did in  fact use the $505,000 (U.S.) to purchase a property  in  Australia,"  asked  lawyer  Mr.  Sewell in June of last year. "Until three weeks ago I believed  that he had indeed purchased a house," Mr. Schoch responded.  Mr. Schoch testified that while Mr. Dennehy allegedly asked for the loan to  buy  a  house  for  his  homesick  wife  in Australia in 1994, he belatedly  discovered in mid-1998 that the wife, then in the midst of a  divorce,  had  never been aware of these $500,000 (U.S.) loan. Mr. Schoch, now an Internet  promoter with Dr. Pezim, produced little documentation to substantiate  his  story about the mystery of the missing funds.  (c) Copyright 1999 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com |