NanoWorld chatters Camporese, Cate sued by Papalia ally
Monday Jul 17 2000 See (U:NAPH) Street Wire
by Brent Mudry
In the latest round of litigation between the camps of controversial Vancouver stock promoters Anthony Papalia Sr. and Giovanni Camporese, an associate of Mr. Papalia has filed a defamation suit against Mr. Camporese and associate William Cate, claiming he has been libelled in Raging Bull chat-site postings in the past six weeks. In a self-prepared 14-page statement of claim filed Friday in the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Concezio Montagliani of Vancouver claims Mr. Camporese and Mr. Cate, who is based on Pescadero, Calif., falsely suggested he has participated in illegal stock market promotions and manipulations, he has ties to organized crime, and he has made threatening comments. Mr. Montagliani admits to posting under the nickname "Gunslinger," but he denies doing anything wrong. Neither Mr. Papalia Sr. nor his promoter-son Anthony Papalia Jr. are named as plaintiffs in the suit. The lawsuit's allegations have not been proven in court and no statements of defence have yet been filed. Both Mr. Papalia and Mr. Camporese have endured unfavourable publicity in recent years. Mr. Camporese resigned as president of his public flagship A & A Foods in January of 1997, and the Vancouver Stock Exchange, which had earlier praised the company, halted trading in A & A shares after discovering A & A had been convicted in provincial court of violating the Food and Drug Act by mislabelling cheese products. In late 1996, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission cited Wall Street Marketing, Mark Missler and Howard Jenkins, who Mr. Camporese had hired to promote A & A in 1994, in a prosecution, claiming they were part of a ring which paid $478,000 in bribes to seven U.S. brokers in 1992 and 1993 to push the shares of six other public companies. A & A was not involved in the scheme. Mr. Papalia and his twin brother Robert Papalia are well known to authorities in Vancouver, Montreal and London, although neither are believed to be related to Tony "The Pops" Papalia, who was murdered in a mob execution in Hamiltion, Ont., a few years ago. Although criminally charged with securities-related crimes on several occasions, they have never been convicted. They have, however, been blackballed from the Vancouver Stock Exchange. In his contentious Raging Bull postings, Mr. Camporese refers to Anthony Papalia Sr. as "Teflon Tony" and "The Teflon Man." The Montagliani suit comes nine days after Mr. Papalia filed a defence to Mr. Camporese's counterclaim in another suit. In that suit, filed in brief on March 14 and in full on April 25, Mr. Papalia claims he was fooled by Mr. Camporese into buying a $500,000 block of AIC International Resources shares that were sold not by Mr. Camporese's A & A Industries, but Mr. Camporese himself. The defamation suit focuses on Nano World Project, a current OTC Bulletin Board promotion featuring Mr. Papalia as a director and veteran Vancouver stock promoter David Hunter as president, after he was ousted as president of Microvision, and Equity Finance Holding Corp., which features Mr. Cate as president. Shares of Nano World, which peaked at $24.50 in early April, fell $1 to $5 on Monday on the bulletin board. On June 20, Nano World, citing "adverse market conditions," cancelled a proposed $15-million offering financing of one million shares at $15, which helped boost the market when it was first disclosed in April. The "best efforts" financing was handled by Voyager Securities Ltd., described as an "investment advisory and brokerage company" based in the secretive offshore enclave of Hamilton, Bermuda. A June 2nd posting attributed to Mr. Cate claims that: "the Papalias are pioneers of the cyber-boiler room," operating in an office on Burrard Street in downtown Vancouver. "The Twins pay their cyber-promoters by giving them 10 cents UNregistered NAPH shares to sell at $5.00. Paying for promotion in stock violates SEC rules. It's a HiTech version of Four Star Management," states the contentious posting. Mr. Montagliani claims Mr. Cate falsely suggests he was participating in an illegal market manipulation scheme, he was defrauding investors, and he illegally received Nano World shares at less than fair market value as compensation. While Mr. Camporese was ousted by Mr. Papalia from A & A amid as-yet-unproven allegations of asset misappropriations and diversions, he was eager to flaunt his achievements to Mr. Montagliani in a June 8th posting. "In conclusion, you are trying to 'character assassinate' me and my reputation. I have several degrees from various universities in 3 continents in 3 different languages. I have written hundreds of articles, some of them were edited, one is in the Library of Congress. I also have two documents certified by the Secretary of the State of the U.S., I have received over 100 awards and metals (sic), including the one of the person, 'who Has Honoured Italy In The World.' I have 5 children and a wife," stated the posting, attributed to Mr. Camporese. Nano World is not shy of trumpeting the achievements of its own stock promoter, Mr. Papalia. "Mr. Papalia brings 25 years experience in investment banking specifically relating bio and high tech development ... (he) sits on numerous public company boards in the United States, and in Europe. Mr. Papalia is also the former assistant to Mr. Loris Fortuna, former Vice-President of Italy," states Nano World on its Web-site. In the counterclaim to Anthony Papalia Sr.'s previous $500,000 suit, Mr. Camporese names twin brother Robert Papalia and Kaiden S.A., a Swiss company based in Lausanne, as third parties. Mr. Camporese claims that Robert Papalia is a director and shareholder of Kaiden. Mr. Camporese alleges that in order to induce him to sell his shares of A & A in exchange for shares of Pacrim Information Systems Inc., Robert Papalia assured him that Pacrim was a going concern with significant assets and economic prospects, that the defendants' Pacrim shares were owned by Kaiden, and that Kaiden would abide by any contracts it entered into with Robert Papalia. Mr. Camporese claims that an April 30, 1997, share-exchange agreement noted that Kaiden owned 143,000 shares of Pacrim, which it would transfer to him, and he owned 2.84 million shares of A & A that he would transfer to Kaiden. Kaiden also allegedly agreed to assume $300,000 of Mr. Camporese's liabilities. While Anthony Papalia Sr. claims he was fooled by Mr. Camporese in the deal, Mr. Camporese likewise claims he was fooled by twin brother Robert Papalia. Mr. Camporese claims he discovered in May or June of 1997 that the Pacrim shares transferred to him were not owned by Kaiden. Mr. Camporese also claims his shares of AIC International Resources suffered as a result of Robert Papalia causing Pacrim to first enter into a contract with AIC to develop a diamond mine in Brazil and then later rescinding the contract. Mr. Camporese further claims his Pacrim holdings suffered as a result of Robert Papalia giving some shares of Pacrim to a man called Alfonso Carrera, without due consideration. Mr. Camporese claims that as a result of Robert Papalia's actions, he suffered losses in the value of his holdings of shares of A & A , AIC and Pacrim. (Readers wishing details of previous litigation between Anthony Papalia Sr. and Mr. Camporese may refer to Street Wires dated Nov. 23, 1999, March 15, 2000, March 20, 2000, and March 24, 2000.) (Details of litigation relating to Anthony Papalia Jr.'s Crys-Tel Telecommunications.com are noted in Street Wires dated Feb. 26, 1999, March 1, 1999, and Nov. 23, 1999.)
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