SEC target Lancer attracted to four Khan deals                                                                                                          Securities and Exchange Commission                                                       Tue 15 Jul 2003                                                 
  Street Wire
  by Brent Mudry Michael Lauer's Lancer Group, the controversial $1-billion  offshore  hedge fund  organization  shut  down by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission last week, had positions in at least four  dubious  penny  stock promotions  linked to Rafi Mohamad Khan. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) Lancer funds had varying stakes in World Wireless,  Hemispherix  and  Ontro Inc., in addition to Aura Systems Inc., a Khan promotion revealed Friday by Stockwatch. THE KHAN QUARTET The controversial penny stock promoter and SEC target got a  light  penalty in  a  federal income tax evasion plea deal a few years ago, which included his co-operation as a key federal informant. In a consent settlement with the SEC in May, 2000, Mr.  Khan  agreed  to  a five-year  brokerage ban for his rig jobs of L.L. Knickerbocker in 1995 and Future Communications in 1993. He was not fined. Since then, Mr. Khan has emerged as a new target of the SEC. In April, 2002, the SEC revealed Mr. Khan was  under  investigation  again. The  regulator  claims he may have used a Pakistani holding company and his wife, Rubina Khan, to trade shares of four companies: Ontro,  Aura  Systems Inc.,  GenesisIntermedia  Inc.  and eUniverse Inc., in contravention of his market ban imposed two years earlier. According to court filings, the Khan family holding company,  Aura  Private Ltd.,  or  Aura Pvt. in short, traded through brokerage accounts in Canada, as well as the U.S. While SEC officials decline to identify any  brokerages by  name,  regulatory  filings  show Aura Pvt. held shares of eUniverse and Ontro at Research Capital, a  Toronto-based  brokerage.  Although  the  SEC believed  Ms.  Khan  fronted  for  her  husband,  she has been reluctant to testify and provide other evidence about numerous transactions  in  a  bank account  and  brokerage account in her name, forcing the regulator to go to court for her co-operation. The  SEC  investigation  into   these   four   stocks   --   Ontro,   Aura, GenesisIntermedia  and  eUniverse,  was  launched  in  October,  2001.  The regulator is investigating concerns Mr. Khan may  have  promoted  all  four stocks,  then  sold  his  shares  through  undisclosed  brokerage accounts. GenesisIntermedia, the most notable, also featured Saudi arms figure  Adnan Khashoggi,  a  key  defendant in the $2-billion collapse of Bangkok Bank of Commerce. It might seem odd to see any savvy fund manager hold positions  in  even  a single  Khan  promotion,  given  the  promoter's  regulatory  baggage,  but Lancer's Mr. Lauer appeared to like  four:  Aura,  Hemispherix,  Ontro  and World Wireless. Lancer's experience was not a total success.  As  of  July  31,  2001,  its flagship  Lancer  Offshore  hedge  fund  held  6.15 million shares of World Wireless, with an average cost of $2.29 a share. By this  time,  the  stock had  collapsed  to 45 cents, an 80-per-cent loss. On paper, Lancer Offshore had lost $11.3-million on its $14.06-million stake in World Wireless.  with its position worth just $2.77-million at this date. A year earlier,  as  of  June  29,  2000,  Aura  Pvt.,  the  Khan  family's Pakistani-based  holding  company,  filed to sell a modest 60,000 shares of World Wireless through a U.S. brokerage. Hemispherix is  another  Khan-linked  promotion  which  attracted  Lancer's attention.  As  of  mid-1999,  Aura  Pvt.  was one of Hemispherix's biggest selling shareholders, filing to  sell  200,000  of  its  540,000  warrants. Lancer  was  also  a  significant  shareholder  of  Hemispherix through its various funds. Lancer also had a much smaller position in Ontro, one of  four  stocks  the SEC  is  probing for Mr. Khan's alleged touting and scalping. In one of its managed funds, the Viator Fund, Lancer held a modest 125,000 Ontro warrants as of March 31, 2000. Unrelated to Lancer, some other funds also  had  significant  positions  in Aura  Systems.  Regulatory  filings also show Canadian brokerage CIBC World Markets held 2.5 million shares of Aura Systems for a pair of  shareholders in  mid-2000:  1.5  million  shares for PRIF LP, and one million shares for Excaliber Limited Partnership. There is no suggestion that these two  major Aura shareholders were anything but innocent bystanders. The renewed SEC investigation into Mr. Khan was especially unfortunate  for Aura  Systems,  as  the  company  has  been  rebuilding  its reputation and credibility in the wake of an SEC accounting and  auditing  prosecution  in 1996.  The SEC charged Aura, chief executive and chairman Zvi Kurtzman, and accountants Francis T. Phalen and Joseph Bevacqua with boosting Aura's 1993 and  1994  revenues  by  22 per cent and 11 per cent, respectively, through booking a bogus transaction with a company called John Jory Co. "Kurtzman, Phalen and Bevacqua knew or were reckless in  not  knowing  that the Jory transaction was a sham. All three participated in the October 1993 meeting where  the  transaction  was  discussed  and  the  fictitious  Jory purchase  order  was  drafted,"  stated  SEC  secretary  Jonathan Katz in a 15-page decision. Both Mr. Phalen, Aura's senior vice-president  and  chief financial  officer,  and  Mr. Bevacqua, Aura's chief accounting officer who had been hired away as a consultant  by  John  Jory,  were  suspended  from appearing  before  the  SEC as accountants. Mr. Phalen won reinstatement of SEC privileges in April, 2000, while Mr. Bevacqua later won reinstatement. Mr. Kurtzman, who headed Aura since 1987 and remains its CEO and  chairman, settled  the charges by promising to do his best to refrain from securities violations in the future. Fast forward to  June,  2001,  and  Mr.  Kurtzman joined  the  board  of  Ontro,  an  alleged  promotion  of  Mr.  Khan which purportedly works in the research and development  of  "integrated  thermal containers"  to  heat liquids such as coffee, tea, hot chocolate, soups and alcoholic beverages. It is not known if Mr. Lauer or anyone else at Lancer had any idea that Mr. Khan  or  any  party associated with him had any interest or involvement in the public companies Aura, Ontro, Hemispherix or World Wireless. bmudry@stockwatch.com (c) Copyright 2003 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com
  Click here for company snapshot:     new.stockwatch.com*SEC Click here for recent SEDAR documents:     new.stockwatch.com*SEC |