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Microcap & Penny Stocks : ANTs SOFTWARE.COM (ANTS)

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To: Sir Auric Goldfinger who wrote (490)12/20/2000 3:40:24 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) of 607
 
Mr. Gold was Executive Vice President and head of investment
banking at L.T. Lawrence Co., an investment banking firm. From April 1995 to April 1996,

. The address of Joel Gold is c/o Berry Shino Securities , 430 Park Avenue, Suite 610, New York, New York 10022 tenkwizard.com

CONCORD CAMERA CORP filed this PRE 14A on 03/08/2000.
Joel L. Gold has been Executive Vice President of Berry Shino
Joel L. Gold has been Executive Vice President of Berry Shino
Securities since January 2000. Mr. Gold was Executive Vice President of J.W.
Barclay & Co. Inc. from September 1999 to December 1999 and Senior Vice
President of Solid ISG Capital Markets LLC from January 1999 to September 1999.
He was Senior Managing Director of Inter Bank Capital Group LLC, an investment
bank, from October 1997 to January 1999. From March 1996 through September 1997,
Mr. Gold was an Executive Vice President at L.T. Lawrence & Co., Inc., an
investment bank. From April 1995 through March 1996, Mr. Gold was a Managing
Director at Fector Detwiler & Co. Inc., an investment bank. From January 1992
through April 1995, Mr. Gold was a Director at Furman Selz Incorporated, an
investment bank. From April 1990 through December 1991, Mr. Gold was a Managing
Director at Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc., New York, New York. From 1971 through
February 1990, Mr. Gold was a Managing Director at Drexel Burnham Lambert. Mr.
Gold is a director of BCAM International, Life Medical Sciences, PMCC Financial
Corp. and Sterling Vision.

tenkwizard.com

tenkwizard.com

Joel L. Gold has been nominated to become a Director of the Company
following the closing of this Offering. In September 1997, Mr. Gold became Vice
Chairman of Coleman and Company Securities, Inc. From April 1996 through
September 1997, Mr. Gold was Executive Vice President and head of investment
banking at L.T. Lawrence Co., an investment banking firm. From April 1995 to
April 1996, Mr. Gold was a managing director and head of investment banking at
Fechtor & Detwiler. From 1993 to 1995, Mr. Gold was a managing director at
Furman Selz Incorporated, an investment banking firm. Prior to joining Furman
Selz, from 1991 to 1993, Mr. Gold was a managing director at Bear Stearns & Co.,
an investment banking firm. Previously, Mr.
42
Gold was a managing director at Drexel Burnham Lambert for nineteen years. He is
currently a member of the Board of Directors of Concord Camera, Sterling Vision,
Inc., Life Medical Sciences and BCAM International, Inc. Mr. Gold has a law
degree from New York University and an MBA from Columbia Business School.
==========================================

test.ai.org

At one office of L.T. Lawrence & Co., there was a score board listing stocks, customers, and other production information. Nobody at the firm could explain its use to state examiners or the information listed on the board. A registered rep told an examiner that he made 250 calls on a good day; 70 on a bad day. All of his calls had been previously "qualified" by an unregistered cold caller. Sales practice abuses. Unauthorized trading was rampant at all of the firms. Firm and branch records were falsified. Customer account forms were marked with the number of the registered rep whom the clients insist they never spoken to or traded with. Failure to execute sell orders (no commission is paid on a sell order and there is no market until the next victim is found), unsuitable recommendations, and other unethical practices were common customer complaints. At one firm, a review of a thousand customer accounts showed that all of the clients had bought only one or two stocks -- stocks that only that particular firm was selling to the public. At a time when the Dow Jones Industrial Average was being driven by the S&P 500, these firms' clients were investing solely in never heard of micro-cap companies.

ORLANDO PREDATORS ENTERTAINMENT INC filed this SB-2/A on 11/21/1997.
tenkwizard.com

RE: ORLANDO PREDATORS ENTERTAINMENT INC Search Results For : Brett L. Bouchy tenkwizard.com

also see

Gum Tech cut its ties to ousted stockbroker
Source: Arizona Business Gazette
Date: 05/09/1996
Subject(s): Stock brokers; Public companies; Going public; Candy industry
Author(s): Anonymous

Arizona's newest public company has started trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange after severing financial ties with a former stockbroker whose license was revoked for securities fraud.

Phoenix-based Gum Tech International (Nasdaq: GUMM) makes specialty chewing gums for such uses as losing weight, boosting energy and cleansing breath.

Both John E. Epert, the company's chairman and president, and former stockbroker Brett L. Bouchy, have links to Unitech Industries, an electronics firm in Scottsdale that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January, a month after announcing it may have misstated its earnings.

Epert serves on Unitech's board of directors. Bouchy helped finance Unitech before its initial public offering in November 1994.

Bouchy says he no longer has ties with either Gum Tech or Unitech.

Shareholder lawsuits accuse Unitech of falsely reporting strong sales and earnings growth, which drove share prices up and allowed insiders to profit from selling parts of their holdings.

Epert acknowledged that he sold some shares before the company's downfall, but said they amounted to less than 5 percent of his holdings in the company. His losses were extensive when the stock price collapsed, he said.

Of his profitable sale of Unitech stock, Epert said, "I can guarantee you it was not because I knew any negative inside information."

At the time of the sales, the company's auditors at Coopers & Lybrand said the company was doing fine, he added.

Michael Marrie, who was managing partner of the Phoenix office of Coopers & Lybrand at the time, declined to comment. He now heads administrative and business operations at Snell & Wilmer, a law firm in Phoenix.

The ex-stockbroker, Bouchy, 27, said a distinction must be made between Unitech and Gum Tech. "Each company speaks for itself," he said.

On April 24, the Arizona Corporation Commission rejected requests by Bouchy and a former colleague, Richard C. Whelan, 31, for a rehearing of their license revocations and penalties.

In the early 1990s, Bouchy and Whelan ran a now-closed Scottsdale brokerage called Franklin-Lord. The brokerage and both men were fined and their licenses revoked earlier this year by the state for allegedly manipulating stock prices and engaging in other fraudulent securities practices, none related to Unitech.

Also, both men have been disciplined by the National Association of Securities Dealers, which runs Nasdaq, for a variety of securities violations.

NASD insisted that Bouchy sell his equity stake in Gum Tech as a condition of Nasdaq listing, according to the April 16 Gum Tech prospectus filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

"The National Market's objection to allowing Mr. Bouchy to remain an equity holder in the company resulted from fines and censures imposed upon Mr. Bouchy by the NASD and the Securities Commission of the State of Arizona," the filing says.

Bouchy, who grew up in the east Valley and now lives in Incline Village, Nev., defended his role in Gum Tech.

He took on a "tremendous amount of risk" by initially investing in Gum Tech, held stock for more than a year, and invested considerable "time, effort and work" into the company, he said.

Gum Tech's financial results reflect improvement, he said. The company's pretax income for 1995 was $768,321 on revenues of $4.3 million. That compares with pre-tax income of $231,589 on $1.9 million in revenue in 1994.

Gum Tech is expecting further strong growth in 1996, Bouchy added.

Bouchy estimated his profit in Gum Tech deals at $2 million to $3 million.

Epert said Bouchy "found a company that was not doing much" and has enhanced its value. He noted the addition of officers and directors and the company's move to manufacture its own products. Earlier, it outsourced the work.

As for his past, Bouchy said Franklin-Lord has been the subject of much criticism, but the brokerage's track record includes having underwritten the initial public offerings of several companies, including Employee Solutions (Nasdaq: ESOL), a Phoenix-based employee leasing concern, Bouchy notes.

Employee Solutions' earnings swelled to $3.8 million in 1995, up nearly tenfold from a year earlier. Revenue in 1995 was $165 million, compared with $74 million in 1994.

Epert, too, said Bouchy has severed his ties to Gum Tech.

"The only association with Mr. Bouchy was that he was an investor early on. When the SEC objected to him being involved, we asked him to liquidate his positions, which he did," Epert said.

Bouchy added that Gum Tech repaid loans he had made to the company out of the proceeds of the recent IPO. He now has no role in the company, he said.

Epert referred questions about regulators' concerns about Bouchy's role in Gum Tech to Englewood, Colo., attorney Gary A. Agron, who handled the prospectus filing. Agron declined to comment.

Epert explained that his roles in Unitech and Gum Tech grew from his earlier investing through the Franklin-Lord brokerage.

Gum Tech's IPO raised $7.4 million for the company.

Gum Tech, organized as a Utah corporation in 1991, is a newcomer to Arizona. In February it completed improvements and began manufacturing product in its 28,000-square-foot facility in Phoenix, according to the prospectus.

The company's product line includes gums with ingredients that Gum Tech claims promote weight loss (ChromaTrim and CitrusSlim brand names), contribute to energy and endurance (Buzz Gum, Power Gum and Love Gum brands), alleviate certain premenstrual symptoms (Repose brand) and promote oral hygiene and fresh breath (DentaHealth brand), the prospectus says.

Brett Bouchy's role in financing Gum Tech, as described in the prospectus, began in November 1994 when Gregory Gossett, then the company's president and majority stockholder, sold just over 2 million shares, at 48 cents per share, to Dale Holdings LDC. At that time, and until December 1995, Dale was owned 51 percent by Riverlux Trust REG, a Liechtenstein company, and 49 percent by Bouchy.

In February 1995, Dale sold 367,150 shares of common stock to a group of 11 investors for $560,000, or $1.53 per share, A year ago, the company and Dale each sold 420,000 shares of the company's common stock through an underwriter for $756,000, or $1.80 per share, according to the prospectus.

Also, Bouchy was one of four lenders who loaned a total of $1.55 million to Gum Tech in October 1995, according to the prospectus.

In December, Dale dissolved and issued 51 percent and 49 percent of its common stock in the company and its loans receivable due from the company to Riverlux Trust REG and Bouchy. The next month, the company repurchased from Bouchy the remaining 619,175 shares of Gum Tech common stock owned by him for $4.50 per share, or $2.5 million total.

Bouchy's brother, Jeffrey L. Bouchy, is listed as secretary, treasurer and chief financial officer of Gum Tech. He joined the company in May-1995, according to the prospectus.

Brett Bouchy and Epert said Jeff Bouchy has a master's degree in accounting and is well-qualified to serve as a company officer.

The firm that underwrote Gum Tech's IPO was Kensington Securities, which is based in Agoura Hills, Calif., and has branches in Scottsdale and New York.

Copyright Phoenix Newspapers Inc. May 09, 1996
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