RE: Rafi Khan->- Street Wire BCSC-aided SEC sees Vancouver as key Kott centre *USSEC Shares issued 0 close $ Friday Dec 15 2000 Street Wire by Brent Mudry
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission's lengthy probe into the affairs of notorious boiler room operator Irving Kott and Reynolds Kendrick Stratton, a controversial brokerage which featured Mr. Kott as a secret owner and federal turncoat Rafi Khan as a star broker, has sharpened the focus on Vancouver as a key cornerstone of Mr. Kott's globe-spanning empire. The SEC credits the British Columbia Securities Commission with playing a key support role in helping untangle Mr. Kott's web of companies. In recently filed court documents, the BCSC notes that during the course of the SEC investigation, the U.S. regulator has obtained evidence indicating that Mr. Kott may have secretly acquired control of Reynolds Kendrick Stratton in 1993 as part of a broader scheme to manipulate the share prices of various companies. The BCSC notes that Mr. Kott allegedly acquired control of RKS by structuring a private placement of newly issued shares of the brokerage's parent company, RKS Financial Group Inc. "Kott structured the private placement so that a group of his associates would acquire and hold shares of RKSF on his behalf," states a petition, filed Tuesday in the Supreme Court of British Columbia by special outside BCSC counsel Mark Skwarok of Skwarok & Breivik. According to regulators, Mr. Kott negotiated the private placement with senior officers of RKS Financial, and organized an investor group who purportedly agreed to provide a total of $2-million (U.S.) for 1.6 million shares of RKS Financial. "Several of the investor group members were close associates of Kott, and they purchased their allotment of RKSF shares on Kott's behalf and with funds provided to them by Kott. Kott later took possession of a large amount of the RKSF shares that had been issued to his associates," states the BCSC. Regulators note that Mr. Kott used proceeds derived from sales of large blocks of shares of Synery Renewable Resources Inc. The boiler room legend used an account in the name of PYA Investments Ltd., a company based in the secretive offshore enclave of the Cayman Islands, to trade the Synergy shares through a brokerage account at Merit Investments in Toronto. According to the SEC and the BCSC, Vancouver was a key focal point for Mr. Kott, and prominent Vancouver securities lawyer David Anfield of Sobolewski Anfield, one of the best-known securities law firms in the city, played key roles. There are no allegations any wrongdoing against Mr. Anfield or his law firm. The regulators claim that in early 1993, Mr. Kott met Clive Smith, a European stock promoter, who owned 70 million Synergy shares through various family trusts. "In early 1993, the respondent (Mr. Anfield) agreed to take possession of more than 22 million of Smith's Synergy shares, and he placed them in a safe in his Vancouver law office," states the BCSC. In March of 1993, Mr. Kott allegedly agreed to loan approximately $4-million (U.S.) to Mr. Smith, and the European promoter agreed to provide the boiler room king with Synergy shares as collateral for the loan. That same month, Mr. Smith appointed Kelvin Myles to act as trustee for the various family trusts through which he held the shares of Synergy. The SEC and BCSC note that in March and April of 1993, Mr. Myles advised Mr. Anfield, the Vancouver lawyer, to deliver Mr. Smith's Synergy shares in accordance with instructions that the lawyer would receive from Yvonne Tremblay, a close associate of Mr. Kott. In April of that year, Ms. Tremblay subsquently instructed Mr. Anfield to hand over approximately 17.2 million of Mr. Smith's Synergy's shares to Mr. Kott's son, Ian Kott, according to regulators. "On or about April 30, 1993, Ian Kott attended at the respondent's (Anfield's) Vancouver law office and took possession of approximately 17.2 million Synergy shares," states the BCSC. Two months later, in June of 1993, Ms. Tremblay and Ian Kott attended at Mr. Anfield's Vancouver law office and took possession of Mr. Smith's remaining 5.5 million Synergy shares, according to regulators. The SEC and BCSC claim that at Irving Kott's direction, a large amount of Mr. Smith's Synergy shares were deposited into the Merit account in Toronto. The SEC is particularly interested in having Mr. Anfield fill in a number of the blanks on the Kott-related Synergy share transactions, and the Vancouver lawyer has chatted with regulators in formal interviews spanning eight days between April 11 and July 13 of this years. Mr. Anfield has claimed solicitor-client privilege over 19 relevant documents. Vancouver is also proving to be a productive hunting ground for the SEC in its quest to unravel the affairs of a much more famous Kott-linked company, Hariston Corp. In its Hariston probe, SEC investigators have obtained evidence indicating that Hariston's officers and directors may have knowingly filed false press releases and reports in 1993 and 1994 with the SEC and the BCSC, according to regulators. During this period, the BCSC notes that Hariston entered into a joint venture with Synergy, in which the two companies built a small-scale mineral extraction plant at an abandoned copper mine in Butte, Mont. The purported function of the Butte plant was to extract valuable minerals from the waste water in the copper mine. "The Butte plant was never profitable, as it never extracted sufficient minerals to cover its operating expenses. Despite continued operating losses, Hariston filed press releases and reports with the SEC and with the commission (the BCSC) that represented that the Butte plant would generate substantial profits," states the BCSC. Fuelled by this wave of bogus press releases, Hariston shares rose from $3 (U.S.) in January of 1993 to $12 (U.S.) by March of 1994. The BCSC and SEC note that Mr. Anfield prepared reports on behalf of Hariston regarding the Butte plant, and filed them with the securities regulators. "The respondent (Anfield) prepared the reports based on information provided to him by the directors and officers of Hariston and Synergy, including Joseph Duggan and Stephen Roth," states the BCSC. The regulators are also eager to see several more documents over which Mr. Anfield claims privilege, which may shed some light on whether the officers and directors of Hariston had a reasonable basis for believing that the Butte plant was commercially viable and that the press releases and reports issued by the company accurately described the status and operations of the plant. The SEC is also eager to further document several other Synergy share transactions related to Mr. Kott, although Mr. Anfield has claimed privilege over key records. The BCSC notes that during the course of the SEC's Kott investigation, the U.S. regulator has obtained evidence indicating that Synergy may have issued shares to R.P. Technologies Inc. in a sham transaction "designed to secretly provide" Mr. Kott with Synergy shares for no consideration, The regulators note that in early 1995, Hariston and Synergy dissolved their joint venture, and Synergy took over operation of the Butte plant. In regulatory filings with the SEC and the BCSC, Synergy stated that in May of 1995, it had acquired a mineral extraction technology licence from R.P. Technologies, a Cayman Islands company, for which it issued 475,000 Synergy shares. The BCSC claims that in reality, Synergy never received any technology licence from R.P. Technologies in this purported asset vend-in and it never implemented the technology at the plant in Montana. "Kott is the beneficial owner of R.P. Technologies and Stephen Roth, the chairman of Synergy, is a long-time associate of Kott. The 475,000 Synergy shares issued to R.P. Technologies may have been deposited into a brokerage account controlled by Kott," states the BCSC. The SEC is anxious to receive and review a key document in Mr. Anfield's possession, a letter from Mr. Roth to the Vancouver lawyer containing information about Synergy's alleged acquisition of the mineral extraction technology licence from R.P. Technologies, the offshore Cayman company. In addition, the SEC is also interested in a private placement by Synergy of 1.6 million shares to YLT Investments Ltd. at 25 U.S. cents a share. The BCSC notes the SEC has discovered evidence suggesting that YLT Investments was controlled by Irving Kott, and he was the true purchaser of the Synergy shares issued to YLT Investments. The regulators note that Synergy may have filed false and misleading press releases and reports to the SEC and the BCSC, claiming that YLT Investments was the purchaser, without disclosing that Mr. Kott controlled YLT and he was therefore the true purchaser of the shares. The SEC wishes to get it hands on a number of documents in Mr. Anfield's possession, over which the lawyer has claimed privilege. The five documents may indicate, or may lead to other evidence indicating, whether Mr. Kott was associated with YLT Investments, whether Mr. Kott had any involvement in the share transaction, and whether Synergy filed false information about the share transaction. Mr. Skwarok, the BCSC's lawyer, hopes for a mid-January court hearing on his application to seek production of the privilege-claimed documents, but concedes this may be an optimistic date target. Until then, the highly sensitive documents remain safe in the possession of Mr. Anfield. While these documents could possibly further implicate Mr. Kott and his associates, they could also help to exonerate the boiler room legend if they show that Mr. Kott has absolutely nothing to do with the Synergy and Hariston transactions. (Readers wishing more details of the SEC's BCSC-assisted Kott probe may refer to Street Wires dated Jan. 21, Jan. 24, Jan. 26, Jan. 27, Jan. 28, June 1, June 2, and Dec. 14, under the Canadian symbol BCSEC and the U.S. symbol HRSNF.
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