When the promises don't pan out
By KRIS HUNDLEY
c St. Petersburg Times, published March 16, 1998
In late 1996, Universal Medical Systems Inc. of Clearwater seemed to be on a roll.
The tiny high-tech medical equipment company was hyping new products and cutting deals to ship goods to the Far East. The company hit pay dirt. It had sold three of its signature product -- a scanner with software to design cancer treatment plans -- to hospitals in Taiwan.
The deal helped Universal Medical's stock, which was selling at less than $3 a share, grab the attention of a handful of analysts. Suddenly, the firm was a Wall Street darling on Internet sites and in investment newsletters.
Less than two years later, Universal's stock is trading at less than a nickel a share. Plenty of investors, including a church in Indiana, feel cheated. Employees, many owed months of back wages, are left with uncovered medical bills and underfunded pension accounts. The landlord has locked the company out of its corporate headquarters near Largo and is suing to evict.
As for the scanners in Taiwan, they don't work. Several employees now describe them as little more than a box of bolts, a far cry from the earlier promise of a breakthrough in cancer treatment. On Thursday, company officials, now working out of their homes, said they still hope to raise $1-million to fix the scanners.
The tale of Universal's rise and fall offers a glimpse into the tumultuous world of small companies that go public on promises of big breakthroughs.
Universal was never more than a small player on the OTC bulletin board, with just 25-million shares and a stock price that peaked at a little over $3 in March 1996. The company, which had about 50 employees, reported less than $1-million in revenues and never posted a profit. Following a loss of $3-million in 1996, Universal expects its loss for 1997 to be about $5-million.
But Universal was able to attract shareholders and more than $8-million in capital in two years. Its hook: promises of quick riches in the sexy world of medical high technology. Universal claimed its devices would be faster and cheaper in the fight against breast cancer, heart disease and spinal injuries. But the equipment never lived up to promises.
In a hot stock market, however, stories like Universal's sell. Every investor is eager to spot the next Microsoft. Few investors researched the track record of Universal's executive team. Analysts and newspaper reporters accepted Universal's promises. Even regulators ignored the company when management failed to submit any financial reports.
Arthur Leavitt, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, recently called for a crack-down on micro-cap stock fraud, which is believed to cost investors $6-billion a year. The Nasdaq stock market is considering dropping most of its bulletin board companies.
But Universal's problems never seem to have popped up on the SEC's radar screen. That's true even now when the company's shares are in the gutter and investors, vendors and former employees have sued. It's not like the SEC didn't know the company's president and chief executive, Myron A. "Mike" Baker. Baker was disciplined by the SEC in 1992 in response to complaints about false financial reports.
When asked about Baker, an SEC spokesman said the agency did sanction him, but the SEC can't find the file on the case.
Meanwhile, Baker, a youthful 68-year-old, presides over Universal from his half-million-dollar home in Nevada City, Calif. Or from his more modest home now for sale in Palm Harbor. He and Dennis D. Cole, Universal's counsel, strenuously deny any wrongdoing and reject the suggestion that Universal is in trouble. "We are trying our best to make the company successful," Baker said. "We'll do whatever needs to be done to keep the company going forward." Beyond that, Baker refused to comment and referred all questions to Cole.
Howard Sirota, a former Nasdaq investigator who now practices securities law in New York, said Universal's blunders are common, especially with the rise of investment hype on the Internet.
"These pump-and-dump operations promote the stock, sell their own shares to the public and move on," Sirota said. "It's the Wild West out there."
Baker built trust among industry watchers by talking about his credentials in Corporate America. In interviews with analysts, Baker said he had 30 years of management experience with Dresser Industries and Fairchild Camera and Instrumentation. He did not mention his role over the past two decades as officer and director in dozens of corporations that sold everything from oil purification units to an herbal cure for AIDS.
By late 1994, Baker, along with Cole and Guy Zani Jr. were doing business as MedHealth Imaging Inc. in Largo, promoting a device for detection of breast cancer. In the search for capital, they turned to the Church of God in Anderson, Ind., where Cole had once been a member.
Cole and Baker persuaded the church to lend the company $657,599.47 so it could complete development of its promising new medical device.
Looking for ways to grow even faster, Baker, Cole and Zani took over small troubled companies. In late 1995, they approached a struggling Clearwater company called Medical High Technology International.
Medical High Technology was started in the early 1980s by three friends who had worked for Pfizer Medical Systems. The men built a healthy business, servicing scanners in the United States and Latin America. By the late-1980s, they began developing the CT Simulator, a scanner with additional computer hardware and software for designing radiation treatment plans for cancer patients.
While a conventional scanner spots a cancerous tumor, this improved model also maps precise coordinates for radiation therapy. That saves surrounding healthy tissue from getting zapped.
Medical High Technology sold about 40 of its scanners and was developing an advanced model when the money ran out. Enter Baker and company.
He convinced Medical High Technology officials that he could raise the cash they needed. He failed to mention his track record. And Medical High Technology apparently didn't check him out. For instance, in 1989, Baker paid $265,000 to settle charges of breach of contract and fraud while he headed a consulting company from his Palm Harbor home.
Baker also neglected to disclose that Cole, Universal's counsel, had been disbarred and given a three-year suspension for misconduct by both the state of Colorado bar and federal bar. The suspension followed several disciplinary actions and was sparked by his failure to appropriately represent a client. When asked about it, Cole deemed it "irrelevant" to his current business.
Baker was able to win over Medical High Technology owners by showing financial statements for his company that showed ownership of a 1,450-acre resort in northern Minnesota valued at $5-million. In fact, the resort's owner said Baker's company never had an ownership interest in the resort.
But Medical High Technology's owners, who took Universal stock in return for their company, were happy to find anyone promising to bring money to their project. "They were really the only girl at the dance," said James N. Marsh, one of Medical High Technology's founders. "We were right on the verge of turning the corner, but we needed extra revenue."
Baker did raise new capital for the merged companies, now called Universal Medical. But little of it seemed to filter from the front office to the engineers, who needed the money to complete the scanners and other products.
Marsh said he had to turn down orders because the products were not ready for the market.
"We told them we needed $2-million to $3-million to complete our task and they said they could provide it," Marsh said. "Well, a lot of money came in to the company, but I can't tell you where it went."
Promised acquisitions didn't materialize. Plans to acquire two companies with a vascular diagnostic system ended in a lawsuit. An attempt to buy a new high-tech cobalt scalpel -- a cancer treatment tool -- also fell apart.
Two years after Baker came on the scene, Marsh is locked out of work and owed more than $75,000 in back pay. He estimates he lost several hundred thousand dollars on the Universal stock he received for his share of Medical High Technology. The shares were worth about $2 each at the time of the sale; on Friday, the stock closed at 3.9 cents a share.
Another Medical High Technology founder, Jerome Shields, has sued Universal and Baker for breach of contract and civil theft. That suit is pending. An investor in Nebraska also sued Universal for breach of contract to try to reclaim her $660,000 investment.
Beyond the investors, employees are discovering that payroll deductions for their 401(K) retirement plans were not turned over to the fund trustee by the company. John Krawczyk said his pension plan was underfunded by more than $1,900. "When I told the company, they said they recognized that fact and had every intention of making it up," Krawczyk said.
Tracy Luoma, whose ex-husband worked at Universal, learned the hard way that the company was not sending her payments to the insurance carrier. After having an accident and extended hospital stay, Luoma found herself with more than $150,000 in unpaid medical bills. "I was devastated when the insurer told me by coverage had been canceled due to lack of payment," Luoma said. "The company must have thought no one would ever have to collect."
Cole, Universal's counsel, denies that the company failed to fund either pension funds or insurance plans. "I feel the company more than bent over to take care of those people," he said.
As for the Indiana church, it's still trying to get its loan repaid. Baker's company made occasional payments, but more than $550,000 is outstanding and the church is suing for repayment.
"The church doesn't normally invest in venture capital type companies," said Louis Jackson, who handles loans for the independent congregation, but was not employed by the church in 1994. "Probably what happened was that these guys sold the (church) board a bill of goods."
Analysts who once touted Universal have turned sour. Marc Klee, with American Fund Advisors in Garden City, N.Y., visited the company's headquarters in early 1996 and expected it to start reporting profits by late that year.
A year ago, Klee told a Times freelance writer that he predicted the company's stock price could reach $10 a share by early 1998. But Klee dropped his coverage of the company when officials repeatedly misled him about when they would file financial reports. "I told the company I wouldn't speak with them again until they produced audited financial statements," Klee said. "They never did and I haven't spoken to them in over a year."
In its registration statement with the SEC, Universal admitted it had not sold a single piece of equipment in 1996. Total sales for the year of about $700,000 were from providing service and parts to machines already in the field. Final results for Universal for 1996: a net loss of nearly $3-million.
Baker, Cole and Zani, meanwhile, collected salaries of $120,000 each, along with "bonuses awarded from time to time by the company's board of directors." The three executives were the only members of the company's board.
Cole said the 1997 annual report is awaiting final approval by the company's auditor and attorney, a refrain investors have been hearing since December. Matthew Szynkiewicz, company controller, said Universal lost about $5-million last year. But Cole declined to confirm that figure.
"I can assure you there was probably a loss in 1997," said Cole, who promises the filing is imminent. "But it was probably (on) paper, not cash."
As Universal's stock nosedived over the past few months, anxious investors on an Internet chat room watched its demise and traded rumors about the company's possible resurrection. A minor pop in the stock or rise in volume would spark a round robin of postings, all speculating on a possible Lazarus-like move.
Tom Kosta, chief executive of Kostech Corp., a Reno, Nev., research firm that follows small companies, once believed in Universal's potential.
"When I recommended the stock in January 1997, they looked like an up-and-coming medical device and service company that had all the appearances of being a diamond in the rough," said Kosta, who emphasizes that he never received any money from the company in exchange for his report.
Now he has no illusions about the company, despite recent announcements of possible financing. "Stick a fork in it," Kosta said. "It's done."
cCopyright 1998 St. Petersburg Times. All |