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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Amplidyne, AMPD

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To: Pluvia who wrote (233)9/12/1999 11:09:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) of 538
 
Forget TRAV's crap with the NASDR (for a second), this is much more serious schtuff (US Attorney's Office Indicts a TRAV owner, even though the old man said he owned the joint lock stock and barrell (TRAV is a PORVEN LIAR)): ""Also named in yesterday's indictment were ... Judah Wernick, 35, a principal of Patterson Travis, a brokerage firm with offices in New York ...":

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

Randolph Pace, the man who prosecutors say was the mastermind behind a big securities fraud in the early to
mid-1990's, was charged Thursday with directing a wider conspiracy that involved three brokerage firms, the
manipulation of 11 companies' stocks and $200 million in illegal profits.

Pace, a former brokerage firm executive, has been under indictment since November on charges of manipulating
the shares of six companies through Sterling Foster, a defunct New York securities firm that prosecutors say he
secretly controlled. But according to a 26-count superseding indictment brought Thursday by Mary Jo White, the
United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Pace's fraudulent activities were much more
extensive. Previously, prosecutors had said that Pace and Sterling Foster had defrauded investors of $100 million.

Now they say that Pace, 53, and Alan Novich, 52, a longtime associate, also enlisted the aid of eight individuals,
including employees and top management at VTR Capital and Investors Associates, two defunct brokerage firms,
to help manipulate the stocks and reap illegal gains. Prosecutors say Pace, a founder of Rooney Pace Inc., a
defunct brokerage firm, tried to conceal his involvement because he had been barred from the securities industry.
Nevertheless, prosecutors say that he controlled Sterling Foster and VTR Capital, a firm that had offices in New
York, Colorado, Florida, Georgia and Pennsylvania.

In a statement, Ms. White said, "Today's charges should serve notice that any violations of the Federal securities
laws, even the most creative and complex schemes, will be uncovered by law enforcement and aggressively
prosecuted."

Robert G. Morvillo, the lawyer representing Pace, said that his client intended to plead not guilty to the charges.

The actions cited by prosecutors took place from 1995 through 1997 and began with the issuance to Pace and his
associates of cheap "founders" stock in companies about to go public in offerings underwritten by VTR Capital and
Investors Associates. Prosecutors say that before the offerings, Pace and his colleagues agreed to sell their shares
to the underwriters at prearranged prices, resulting in substantial profits to the insiders. Then shares in the
companies were sold to the public by brokers using abusive sales practices, such as misrepresenting facts about the
companies and their prospects to pump up demand for the stock. This created illegal profits for the firms selling the
shares. Most of the companies' share prices subsequently collapsed.

The companies whose shares were underwritten by VTR Capital and Investors Associates were Interiors Inc., a
company that made picture frames; Compare Generiks, a distributor of over-the-counter drugs; Perry's Majestic
Beer, a brewer; Decor Group, a maker of sculptures, and Superior Supplements, a manufacturer of dietary
supplements.

Also named in yesterday's indictment were Warren Schreiber, 43, a former broker with VTR Capital; Vincent
Grieco, 33, co-manager of the Melville, N.Y., office of Investors Associates; Judah Wernick, 35, a principal of
Patterson Travis, a brokerage firm with offices in New York; Robert Landau, 57, an investor in three of the
offerings, and Nancy Shalek, 44, chairman of three of the companies. VTR Capital and Investors Associates were
charged, as well.

Co-conspirators named in the indictment were Lawrence Penna, 55, the former president and chief executive of
Investors Associates; Herman Epstein, 58, compliance director of the firm, and Douglas Mangan, 37, a former
supervisor at the firm's Melville, N.Y., branch. Phone calls to Schreiber, Ms. Shalek and Landau and Novich were
not returned last night. The others could not be reached. ...

The full article can be found at: nytimes.com
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