Here is a interesting post on the CDDD thread
Talk : Software : CDDD
| Previous | ------ | Respond | To: surelock (199 ) From: Adrian du Plessis Thursday, Nov 4 1999 12:37AM ET Reply # of 200
Can a Leopard change its spots? Interesting as, no doubt, CDDD will turn out to be if Garratt and his cast of international backers are involved with its affairs, I'm not going to be tempted out of retirement. Garratt, historically, has been the front, or mouthpiece for a network of players -- from Graham Ferguson Lacey (Miami to Bermuda to you-name-it), to Roger Leopard (Switzerland), to Stratton S.A. (of Uruguay) and others, each with their own scandalous trail. Public companies associated with Garratt et al have generally been engaged in hyping new and "revolutionary" technologies or elements and have been routinely characterized by share price manipulation that goes hand-in-glove with misleading and false public disclosure. From a teacher's credit union pension fund in Australia, to a superannuation fund in the West Midlands of England, institutions have taken an unnatural liking to the bogus and inflated stocks promoted by these players -- inevitably to the great financial detriment of pensioners and/or investors. It's a familiar pattern -- and unless this ol' dog Garratt has learned new tricks, he and his cohorts have a pretty colourful, but pedestrian, approach to stock swindling. Clair Calvert was formerly a key stock-broker handling the rigged trading in Garratt-fronted stocks. I haven't followed either of these characters since the mid-1990s, but their names appearing in connection with CDDD, well, it's like watching a familiar movie...
Who knows, though, they may not be within a million miles of this company. The public can only hope!
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