| Rene Hamouth NEWS 
 SEC wins $446,000 (U.S.) on Vohra offshore accounts
 
 Securities and Exchange Commission                                     *SEC
 Thu 28 Feb 2002                                                 Street Wire
 Also Securities and Exchange Commission (U:*SEC)
 
 by Brent Mudry
 
 The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has  won  $446,000  in
 default  judgments  against  three offshore accounts used by notable former
 Canadian penny stock promoter Rajiv Vohra and partner Sean  Healey  in  the
 rig  job  of New Directions Manufacturing Inc. on the OTC Bulletin Board in
 1997 and 1998. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) The fines bring the SEC's
 total  tally  to $1.43-million, almost triple the estimated illicit profits
 of $500,000 in the stock manipulation, which featured offshore accounts  at
 three Canadian brokerages.
 Mr. Vohra, 48, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Mr. Healey,  44,  of  Foxboro,
 Mass.,  used  Bahamian  accounts  named  Lantern  Investments  Ltd., Lipton
 Holdings Ltd. and Beaufort Holdings Ltd.  at  Canadian  brokerages  Yorkton
 Securities, now defunct Merit Investment and Dominick & Dominick. Mr. Vohra
 also rigged trading through accounts in his name at Yorkton, Merit and U.S.
 brokerage Equitrade Securities.
 Mr. Vohra is best known as  the  former  associate  of  controversial  West
 Vancouver  stock  promoter  Rene  Hamouth in the Penway Explorers scandal a
 decade ago. Both were acquitted after a high-profile Canadian  penny  stock
 manipulation  trial.  (Mr.  Hamouth  was not involved in the New Directions
 affair.)
 The SEC disclosed Thursday that United States District Judge Patricia Seitz
 of  the Southern District of Florida entered default judgments earlier this
 month against Lantern, Lipton and Beaufort. The judge imposed  civil  fines
 of  $100,000 each against the trio, plus disgorgement orders of $61,903 and
 interest of $14,124 against Beaufort and $57,702 plus interest  of  $12,300
 against  Lantern.  "Vohra  and  Healey attempted to conceal their scheme by
 conducting much of their activity through Canadian brokerage  accounts  and
 the Bahamian companies," states the SEC.
 The SEC news comes two days after Canadian securities regulators, preparing
 for  a  broad  crackdown  on  offshore  abuses, released an industry survey
 showing Canadian brokerages service a whopping 13,000 accounts in two dozen
 offshore  jurisdictions  blacklisted  by the Financial Action Task Force on
 Money Laundering, an agency of the Organization for  Economic  Co-operation
 and Development.
 In earlier decisions in the New Directions  case,  Judge  Seitz  fined  Mr.
 Vohra  a  total of $843,000 in January, including $599,000 in disgorgement,
 $134,400 in interest and a $110,000 civil fine, and Mr. Healey a  total  of
 $146,000  last April, including $66,821 in disgorgement, a similar fine and
 $12,358 in interest. Mr. Healey was also banned for  five  years  from  the
 penny stock industry.
 (c) Copyright 2002 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com
 
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