U.S. sues Wellness Universe, says investors defrauded Wed Feb 16 21:02:00 EST 2000
NEW YORK, Feb 16 (Reuters) - The Securities and Exchange Commission sued the Wellness Universe Co. and its chief executive officer on Wednesday for allegedly defrauding investors by selling them shares after issuing false press releases to boost the share price. The suit, filed in Manhattan federal court, also names Synpan Corp, a related business entity. Other defendants include George Pappas, the CEO of both Wellness and Synpan, various Pappas family members, and staff at a Brooklyn high school including the vice-principal, a teacher and a teacher's assistant. Representatives of the companies or other plaintiffs were not immediately available for comment on Wednesday. Wellness is a Minnesota company with offices in Bloomington and Minneapolis. The suit said it "purports to be an umbrella organization of health and wellness services." The suit alleges the company's securities are not registered with the SEC and it has not filed any periodic reports to the commission. Synpan is a Delaware corporation owned by Pappas. Its securities also are not registered with the SEC. On Friday, the SEC suspended trading in Wellness Universe through Feb. 25, citing concerns about the accuracy of news about the company. The suit alleges the scheme was largely conducted over the Internet since December. It alleges that Synpan claimed in press releases posted on its own and other Web sites that it planned to buy an Internet business for $500 million, that it would conduct an initial public offering of its stock for $1 billion and that it had hired an experienced executive to operate its Internet business. Synpan said that Wellness shareholders would benefit from these plans because Synpan planned to buy Wellness stock and merge the businesses. The claims, posted on the Internet, caused Wellness stock to rise from about 10 cents per share in December to over $1 earlier this month, the suit said. The suit alleges that the press releases were false because, among other things, Synpan did not have the resources to make a $500 million acquisition and there was no basis for the assertion that Synpan could raise $1 billion through an IPO of its stock. The suit alleges that Pappas and other defendants were able to sell about 3.7 million shares of Wellness stock to the public for about $2.5 million until last's week's order stopping trading, the suit said. REUTERS Rtr 21:02 02-16-00 ragingbull.com
...Mezz - Here's hoping some listened and got out in time. |