Twernt Renne Hamouth involved in CDDD?
BCSC targets Pierce, Cicci file Raging Bull libel suit
B.C. Securities Commission *BCSC Thu 29 Nov 2001 Street Wire Also Vega-Atlantic Corp (U:VATL)
by Brent Mudry
After enduring the slings and arrows of all sorts of nasty name-calling and serious allegations for more than a year on Raging Bull, controversial Vancouver penny stock promoter Brent Pierce, former securities violator Gino Cicci and their close associate Gary Powers have launched an Internet libel suit in a bid to muzzle Harold Gooding, a now-disgruntled associate in their Vega-Atlantic Corp., Goldstate Corp. and Intergold Corp. OTC Bulletin Board promotions. In an endorsed writ of summons filed Wednesday in the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Mr. Pierce, Mr. Powers and Mr. Cicci claim they were defamed in no less than two dozen chat-site postings dating back to Oct. 28, 2000. A full statement of claim has not yet been filed by rookie lawyer Scarlett McGladery of Boughton Peterson Yang Anderson, who was called to the bar in February, 1998. Although Mr. Gooding lives on the Atlantic coast in Nahant, a tiny town near Boston, the transcontinental suit was filed in Vancouver, on the basis the tort was committed in B.C., which has Internet access. Mr. Pierce, Mr. Cicci and Mr. Powers seek as-yet unspecified damages for the damage caused to their fine reputations in the penny stock world, on the Internet and elsewhere. The allegations in the suit have not yet been proven in court and no statement of defence has yet been filed. Although Raging Bull has kept up Mr. Gooding's unflattering posts for all to see, unlike much-smaller Canadian rival Stockhouse, which generally yanks anything anybody squawks about, the popular American chat site has not been targeted in the B.C. suit. While neither Mr. Pierce nor Mr. Cicci are strangers to Canadian authorities, Mr. Powers, Vega-Atlantic's investor relations front man, has kept a lower profile. Although Vancouver regulators have had a high tolerance for penny stock shenanigans in the past, Mr. Cicci had the misfortune in 1995 of a three-year ban on serving as an officer or director, imposed by the British Columbia Securities Commission. The regulator also banned naughty Mr. Cicci from trading for six months. The speedy penalty came a mere four years after the BCSC launched its prosecution and just eight years after Mr. Cicci helped fuel the rise of DNI Holdings Inc. on the former Vancouver Stock Exchange with bogus and inflated promotional materials prepared by Strategic Marketing, a hired Florida-based penny stock touting service. Shares of DNI rose from $1.09 in late 1997 to a peak of $2.05 in mid-1998, before the regulators finally figured out its flagship Buffalo mine was more bull than buffalo. The stock last traded at eight cents in mid-1991, before being delisted from the VSE the next year. It is unclear just when the sleuths at the VSE and the BCSC twigged in that something was amiss at DNI. In May, 1998, just before Mr. Cicci unleashed his helpful Florida tout, DNI president David Edgell announced the tiny company had managed to buy a 100-per-cent interest in the Buffalo mine, near Baker, Ore. DNI even attracted a blue-chip backer, the secretive Kadova Finanz, based in the respected international finance capital of Vaduz, Liechtenstein. DNI impressed Kadova Finanz so much that it decided to lend the junior $3-million shares, interest-free, repayable in four years. The deal called for DNI to issue up to five million shares to the secretive offshore company. A few months later, in August, 1998, Swiss money man Max Engler, described as a Zurich-based financial consultant, presumably related to Kadova, was appointed to DNI's board. Mr. Engler was subsequently named president of another of Mr. Edgell's excellent VSE-listed companies, HPY Industries, in October, 1988, replacing Wolfgang Rauball. Although HPY featured such notables as Jerome Rak, penny stock promoter Rene Hamouth and the backing of another Liechtenstein company, the stock promotion later collapsed amid allegations of dubious dealings by Mr. Rauball. In any event, DNI looked good, especially in the glowing profiles prepared by World Prospective Communications, a subsidiary of Strategic Communications, the Florida tout. More than three years later, in December, 1991, seven months after the VSE halted DNI trading, the BCSC issued a notice of hearing alleging Mr. Edgell and Mr. Cicci conspired to disseminate tout materials inflating the value of the Buffalo mine. After a further four-year delay, the BCSC banned Mr. Cicci in November, 1995, finding he had played a "significant" role in co-ordinating the promotional materials with Strategic. On the basis of evidence at the hearing, the commission concluded that Mr. Cicci played a significant role in coordinating communication between Strategic and DNI regarding the promotional material. "Persons who are involved in a significant way in the affairs of a reporting issuer, as Cicci was, will be subjected to regulatory sanction if their involvement contributes to conduct that is prejudicial to the public interest," stated the commission. While Mr. Cicci has served his penance with the BCSC, being an odd judge of character, he recently set up shop with the notable Mr. Pierce, a seriously misunderstood penny stock promoter nudged off the former VSE a decade ago. Mr. Pierce's notable achievements include being named president of Exeter Mining Inc. in mid-1991, a mere seven months before the VSE suspended trading, citing a number of irregularities, including share issuances to the penny stock promoter. Exeter, however, paled by comparison with colleague Frank Balfour's Bu-Max Gold Corp. scandal. In mid-1989, Bu-Max declared it had suddenly discovered much of its money was missing, and Mr.Pierce soon emerged as a key target in investigations by the VSE and the BCSC. In a negotiated settlement in June, 1993, the BCSC banned Mr. Pierce for 15 years. The sweeping ban prohibited the promoter from becoming or acting as a director or officer of any company that provides management, administrative, promotional or consulting services to a reporting issuer. Besides diverting funds from Bu-Max, Mr. Pierce admitted he tendered false documents to BCSC investigators during their probe. The BCSC's 15-year ban came two months after the VSE abruptly halted trading in yet another dubious Pierce promotion, Cost Miser Coupons (International) Inc., when Vancouver Sun reporter David Baines revealed the promoter was an officer of Cost Miser's main subsidiary, in violation of a temporary ban imposed by the regulator. Cost Miser's main products, purportedly developed by Mr. Pierce, were cash register tapes with coupons printed on the back, interspersed with pictures of missing children. All of this might keep a lesser man down, but not Mr. Pierce. In early 1993, with his Cost Miser promotion about to blow up, the controversial promoter was hard at work setting up Ultra Pure Water Systems (Canada) Inc., which subsequently listed on the former Alberta Stock Exchange in March, 1994. Ultra Pure soon proved to be an ultra-dirty offshore rig job. The promotion blew up in April, 1995, when the ASE halted trading, leaving $2.36-million in unpaid debits at seven brokerages in accounts linked to Mr. Pierce and his associates. Merit Investments of Toronto was hit hardest, with a $1-million debit. Rampart Mercantile bought the weakened 35-year-old brokerage in 1997, later changing its name to Rampart Securities, which itself was shut down by regulators this August. When Merit filed its million-dollar debit suit in April, 1995, Stockwatch revealed the defendants were close associates, and presumably fronts, of Mr. Pierce, the first suggestion that Mr. Pierce might be involved behind the scenes. A subsequent 13-month criminal investigation by the Commercial Crime Section of the RCMP featured searches of 13 brokerage firm offices in Vancouver and Toronto, with Mr. Pierce and his associates as the key subjects. After spending years and extensive taxpayer resources preparing a solid case, the RCMP handed over the file to a senior Crown prosecutor a few years ago. In a controversial move that remains an open wound between the RCMP and the Crown, the prosecutor "no-charged" the case, basically torpedoeing the investigation, on the grounds there was insufficient evidence for a conviction. The prosecutor has since been demoted to handling welfare fraud cases. With the Canadian Venture Exchange, the successor to the former Vancouver and Alberta exchanges, less than enthusiastic about welcoming Mr. Pierce back aboard, the controversial penny stock promoter, like so many others of his ilk in Vancouver, has migrated to the greener pastures of the OTC Bulletin Board, with such promotions as Vega-Atlantic, Goldstate and Intergold. Vega-Atlantic, Mr. Pierce's flagship, is not for the faint of heart. The stock, which traded at 62 cents last December, bottomed out at about three cents in September, rebounded to 28 cents 11 days later, and fell back to 15 cents two weeks ago. (All OTC-BB figures are in U.S. dollars.) Vega-Atlantic shares rose eight cents to 60 cents on heavy volume of 264,000 shares on Thursday. Vega-Atlantic's main asset is its Shangzai gold mine in China, which it claims should produce 2,500 ounces this year. While China is not exactly a mecca for gold juniors, company president Grant Atkins, a close associate of Mr. Pierce dating back to the Ultra-Pure days, waxes eloquent. "Mining investors weary of China cannot ignore that Vega-Atlantic has proven that invested capital is being returned to the foreign investor through one of the most cost-effective of mining operations anywhere," stated Mr. Atkins in a recent release. "Yunnan Province is to be commended for their diligence and priority to foreign investment laws." (It is not clear whether the due diligence by the folks in Yunnan included any review of the past promotions of Mr. Atkins, Mr. Pierce and their associates.) Mr. Pierce has similar high hopes for his two other related promotions, Intergold and Goldstate, which have focused on the Blackhawk mineral claims in Nevada. With their reputations on the line, Mr. Pierce and Mr. Cicci, along with Vega Atlantic front Mr. Powers, have turned their legal guns on party-pooper Mr. Gooding, who has served directorship stints with all three companies: Intergold, Goldstate and Vega-Atlantic, which he served as president. The B.C. libel action claims Mr. Pierce and his associates were defamed in two dozen Raging Bull postings over the past 13 months. Mr. Gooding may know a thing or two about Mr. Pierce, well beyond the current bulletin board promotions. The Boston man's diverse business career includes working in sales in the water treatment industry with Osmonics between April, 1993, and August, 1994. According to regulatory filings, from April, 1994, to August, 1995, Mr. Gooding served as sales manager for Ultra Pure Water Systems (U.S.A.) Inc., which was based in his home state of Massachusetts. (c) Copyright 2001 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com |