Re: SEC v. Taxin; SEC v. Tribble; SEC v. Volmer
                            SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                                      Washington, D.C.
             LITIGATION RELEASE NO.   15955 / October 27, 1998
             SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION v. EDWARD B. TAXIN and
             THE TAXIN NETWORK, 98 Civ. 7661 ( KMW) (S.D.N.Y.)
                  The Commission filed suit in federal court in New York
             yesterday against  the host of a radio infomercial show, Ed
             Taxin.  Taxin also publishes an investment newsletter on his
             website, Taxin.com.  Taxin's show, "The Financial Hour,"
             airs on six stations across the country, including New York,
             and is broadcast from Taxin's Shrewsbury, New Jersey
             residence.   The Commission charged Taxin and the Taxin
             Network with promoting stocks on the Financial Hour and his
             newsletter, Investors Chronicle, without disclosing that he
             is compensated for the touts, as follows.  The Taxin Network
             (owned by Taxin's wife, Joanne Pagano) has agreements with
             numerous small-cap companies, including Envoy Communications
             Group, Inc., PTC Group, Inc., Sungold Gaming International
             Inc., Telepad Corp., VentureTech, Inc., and Wolf Industries,
             Inc.  These companies or their agents have paid the Taxin
             Network at least $200,000 in cash or stock for promotional
             services, including exposure on the Financial Hour and in
             the Investors Chronicle.  On the Financial Hour, Taxin
             introduces a series of guests, including promoters from
             investor-relations firms and officers of the companies.
             Taxin joins with his guests in their rosy predictions for
             the companies they represent, mixing in Wall Street patter
             to convey the impression of objective financial reporting.
             Taxin introduces the promoters as Wall Street notables and
             stock-pickers, disguising their relationship with the
             companies they represent.
                  The compensation received by the Taxin Network is not
             adequately disclosed on the radio show or in the newsletter.
             The only disclosure on the radio show is generally that the
             guests (or some of the guests) have paid a fee to appear on
             the show or that Taxin owns shares in some of the companies
             discussed.  Taxin's internet site contained no disclosure at
             all of the compensation until Taxin was contacted by the
             Commission's staff; the new disclosure is not adequate.  The
             Commission, seeking a permanent injunction and penalties,
             alleges that Taxin and the Taxin Network are in violation of
             Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933, which requires
             that all such compensation, and its amount, be fully
             disclosed.
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                          SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                                   Washington, D.C.
             S.E.C. v. Francis Tribble and Sloane Fitzgerald
             Civil Action No. 98-8699 (RVX ) (C.D. Cal. October 27, 1998).
             Litigation Release No.  15959/ October 27, 1998
             SEC Fines Internet Stock Promoter Responsible for Massive
             Spam Campaign
                  The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil
             action in federal district court against Francis A. Tribble,
             a stock promoter, and Sloane Fitzgerald, Inc., a public
             relations firm which Tribble owns, alleging that Tribble and
             Sloane Fitzgerald touted two microcap stocks over the
             Internet without disclosing contractual arrangements with
             the issuers of those stocks to pay stock and cash
             compensation for those promotional efforts.  The Complaint
             alleges that Tribble, through Sloane Fitzgerald, entered
             into contractual agreements with Eventemp Corporation and
             JT's Restaurants, Inc. to promote their companies and
             securities over the Internet and elsewhere for stock and
             cash compensation.  According to the complaint, between
             November 1997 and August 1998,  Tribble disseminated several
             million Internet e-mails, known as "spams;" designed and
             maintained several Internet websites; and distributed an
             online investment newsletter, each of which recommended
             investment in Eventemp or JT's Restaurants common stock,
             without making legally sufficient disclosure of Tribble's
             compensation arrangements with those issuers.  Without
             admitting or denying the allegations in the complaint,
             Tribble and Sloane Fitzgerald have consented to be enjoined
             from violating Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933,
             and Tribble has consented to pay a civil penalty of $15,000.
                  The Complaint alleges that Tribble sent out millions of
             spams to Internet users touting the potential earning power
             of Eventemp and JT's Restaurants stock.  Many of the spams
             purported to be from independent stock promoters such as
             "HotStock," "Net-Vest," and "Cyber-Stock," which were
             actually only names Tribble invented.  Tribble's spams also
             referred readers to a variety of Internet websites which he
             built, containing additional information about the companies
             he was touting and recommendations to buy their stock.
             Finally, in August 1998, Tribble wrote an online investment
             newsletter touting JT's Restaurants and distributed it over
             the Internet to 200 subscribers whom he had solicited
             through previous Internet e-mails and websites.
                  In conducting this Internet promotional campaign, the
             Complaint alleges, Tribble failed fully to disclose that he
             had a vested interest in an increase in the price of the
             stocks he was touting, or that he would be compensated by
             the companies he was touting in cash or securities of those
             companies.  Tribble's activities violated Section 17(b) of
             the Securities Act of 1933, which makes it unlawful for any
             person to recommend stock for consideration, whether past or
             prospective, without disclosing the fact, nature, and amount
             of that consideration.
                  Investors are advised to read the SEC's "Cyberspace"
             Alert before purchasing any investment promoted on the
             Internet.  The free publication, which alerts investors to
             the telltale signs of online investment fraud, is available
             on the Investor Assistance and Complaints link of the SEC's
             Home page on the World Wide Web <www.sec.gov>.  It can also
             be obtained by calling 800-SEC-0330."  Investors are
             encouraged to report suspicious Internet offerings (or other
             suspicious offerings) via e-mail to <enforcement@sec.gov>.
             A user-friendly form to assist you in making a report is
             available at the Enforcement Complaint Center, Mail Stop 8-
             4, 450 Fifth Street, Washington, D.C.  20549."
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                            SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                                   Washington, D.C.
             Litigation Release No.  15952 / October 27, 1998
             SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION v. BRIAN M. VOLMER, JOHN
             R. SWITZER, INTERNATIONAL ALLIANCE TRADING, INC., and SUN
             PACIFIC CAPITAL GROUP, INC., Civil Action No. 98-
             8698JFL(MCX)(West. Div.)(C.D. Cal. October 27, 1998).
                         SEC SUES PROMOTERS WHO TOUTED STOCK
                   ON THE INTERNET AND IN NEWSPAPER ADVERTISEMENTS
                   In a case that illustrates the migration of illegally
             conducted stock touting from traditional print media to the
             internet, the Securities and Exchange Commission today
             announced that it had filed a civil injunctive action
             against four southern California defendants involved in
             promoting the stock of microcap issuers.  The complaint
             alleges that the defendants -- Brian M. Volmer, John R.
             Switzer, International Alliance Trading, Inc.
             ("International Alliance"), and Sun Pacific Capital Group,
             Inc. ("Sun Pacific") -- accepted stock and cash payments
             from the issuers in exchange for favorable and purportedly
             independent reviews published in three newspaper
             advertisements and, later, on the internet website
             "Investors Edge."
                  The Commission's complaint, filed in the United States
             District Court for the Central District of California,
             alleges that Volmer, through his company, International
             Alliance, wrote and placed a newspaper advertisement touting
             the stock of Cetacean Industries, Inc., a company that
             claimed to be engaged in diamond exploration and mining in
             Brazil.  Crafted to appear as an independent research
             report, the advertisement appeared in Investor's Business
             Daily on October 17, 20 and 24, 1997.  The complaint alleges
             that the advertisement failed to disclose that International
             Alliance had received options to buy Cetacean shares in
             exchange for promoting its stock, in violation of  Section
             17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 ("Securities Act").
             That provision of the Securities Act requires that anyone
             giving publicity to a security in return for compensation
             from an issuer or underwriter must disclose the receipt and
             amount of that compensation.
                  In addition, the complaint alleges that, in two
             versions of the advertisement, Volmer and International
             Alliance knowingly or recklessly misrepresented that
             Cetacean's stock had been the subject of a buy
             recommendation issued by a prominent, New York-based
             investment management firm, when, in fact, that firm had
             neither issued a buy recommendation for Cetacean nor
             authorized the use of its name in the advertisement.  The
             complaint also alleges that Volmer and International
             Alliance knowingly or recklessly misrepresented that the
             issuer had acquired the mineral and mining rights to a
             certain Brazilian property, which was described as
             containing a minimum of two million carats and yielding
             minimum revenues of $40 million.  The complaint further
             alleges that, acting contrary to their simultaneous buy
             recommendation to public investors, Volmer and International
             Alliance sold the shares they had received as compensation
             from Cetacean, profiting in excess of $64,000.  As a result,
             the complaint alleges that Volmer and International Alliance
             violated the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities
             laws, specifically Section 17(a) of the Securities Act, and
             Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and
             Rule 10b-5 thereunder.
                  The Commission's complaint also alleges that Volmer,
             Switzer and Sun Pacific violated Section 17(b) of the
             Securities Act in connection with an on-line research report
             posted on "Investors Edge," an internet website that Volmer
             and his company, Sun Pacific, began operating this year.
             Prepared by Volmer and Switzer, Investors Edge has posted
             purported research reports touting the stocks of several
             microcap issuers, including Juina Mining Corporation, whose
             principal assets are the Brazilian diamond operations
             previously owned by Cetacean.  The complaint further alleges
             that the Juina Mining report, which first was posted in or
             about July of this year, failed adequately to disclose the
             full extent of the compensation that the defendants had
             received, directly and indirectly, from the issuer in
             exchange for touting its stock.
                  In its complaint, the Commission seeks an injunction
             against the defendants to prevent further violations of the
             federal securities laws, disgorgement of undisclosed
             compensation, prejudgment interest, and civil penalties.
                  Investors are advised to read the SEC's "Cyberspace"
             Alert before purchasing any investment promoted on the
             Internet.  The free publication, which alerts investors to
             the telltale signs of online investment fraud, is available
             on the Investor Assistance and Complaints link of the SEC's
             Home Page on the World Wide Web <www.sec.gov>.  It can also
             be obtained by calling 800-SEC-0330.  Investors are
             encouraged to report suspicious Internet offerings (or other
             suspicious offerings) via e-mail to <enforcement@SEC.gov>.
             A user-friendly form to assist you in making a report is
             available at the Enforcement Complaint Center on the
             Enforcement Division link of the SEC Home Page
             <www.sec.gov>.  Investors can also mail a report to the SEC
             Enforcement Complaint Center, Mail Stop 8-4, 450 Fifth
             Street, Washington, D.C. 20549.
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