Mining firm's trading halted
Claim of huge gold find in Bolivia questionable, investigators explain of small Denver company
By Al Lewis Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer
Securities regulators Friday ordered a trading halt on stock of a little-known, Denver-based mining company that has been making extraordinary claims about gold in Bolivia.
Golden Eagle International Inc., while under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission for possible stock fraud, issued a press release on May 22 saying it had found as much as 157 million ounces of gold on 4,810 acres it controls in Cangalli, Bolivia.
In a statement released Friday evening, the SEC said the claim is questionable. So Golden Eagle stock, which trades for pennies on the Over the Counter Bulletin Board, is suspended from trading until July 6.
Golden Eagle's boast is about as large as one made by Bre-X Minerals Ltd., a Canadian venture that last year became known as the largest gold fraud ever perpetrated.
Bre-X claimed to have found between 70 million and 200 million ounces of gold in Indonesia. Its stock ran to new highs until the claim proved false. Shareholders lost billions. And Bre-X's chief geologist jumped or fell to his death from a helicopter over the jungles of Borneo.
Golden Eagle's stock hasn't had near the run-up. As news of its gold reserves spread, its stock rocketed from 12 cents to 40 cents per share. That was nearly a 400 percent increase, but fell far shortof valuing what the company called a proven reserve of 6.43 million ounces and "inferred resources" of 157.4 million ounces.
"If this is a hoax, they are all going straight to jail," said Andr'e Nel, a Dallas investor who has invested thousands in Golden Eagle. "But I believe in the story, and I'm very comfortable with the SEC being involved."
Nel wonders why Golden Eagle executives would make such astonishing claims while under the intense scrutiny of the SEC.
Nel says the company's executives are either insane, or they've truly hit a mother lode. "Either way, it's going to be an incredible story," he said.
SEC investigator Robert Fusfeld would not comment on Golden Eagle's latest claim, but he minced few words last month when he announced civil stock fraud charges against Golden Eagle, its executives and its public relations firm.
"It's what we call a hype-and-dump," he said May 11. "They issue false press releases, get the market excited and sell a lot of stock."
Golden Eagle's stock reached a high of $6.50 per share in December 1994, then plunged into penny stock territory. The SEC alleges defendants made at least $662,000 from the sale of stock, after making false regulatory filings and distributing misleading marketing materials between 1994 and mid-1996.
Among the defendants are Golden Eagle's former president Ronald A. Knittle, 45, and his wife, Mary A. Erickson, 40, who serves as corporate secretary and owns one of the largest stakes in the company.
Knittle and Erickson, who founded Golden Eagle, have been advised by their attorney not to comment on the pending action. But the company's president, Terry C. Turner, and its Bolivian geologist, Guido Paravacini, agreed to an interview with the Rocky Mountain News on Thursday.
Paravacini, a well-credentialed geologist, has no stake in Golden Eagle and serves as an independent consultant. Turner, who took over as president in February 1997, is the only American licensed to practice law in both Bolivia and the United States. He too has no stake in the company's stock.
"These deposits have been well-known in Bolivia for many years," Paravacini said. "But up until now they have only been mined using primitive means."
Stories of rich gold reserves around Golden Eagle's land date back more than a millennium to the Incas. Later, Spaniards and then Portuguese mined the area. But socialist economic structures and cumbersome terrain have discouraged sizable Western mining concerns from exploiting the region.
"There was a void," explained Turner, "and Golden Eagle filled the void before any of these majors did."
Turner said his company decided to disclose its gold reserves only because online investors were badgering company officials for information and circulating distortions over the Internet.
"The company made a decision that it was more important that the public had accurate information than information that was leaked or twisted," he said. "The company is trying to be as transparent as it can be."
Turner said he is close to working out a resolution with the SEC and that meanwhile, no one in the company is taking fast profits.
"Officers and principal shareholders of the company are not dumping the stock," he said. "Everyone we're talking to is in this for the long haul."
The company's Bolivian prospects and Paravacini's study must now undergo the scrutiny of independent auditors, Turner said.
Aside from Golden Eagles' woes with the SEC, its true prospects are difficult to analyze in one of the worst economic climates for the gold industry. Gold trades for less than $300 per ounce and gold stocks are generally in the tank.
No analysts follow Golden Eagle. And the company has yet to file its 1997 and first quarter 1998 financial statements with the SEC. Turner said the company is working out glitches between Bolivian and American accounting standards and that the reports will be filed soon.
Meanwhile, Turner said Golden Eagle's balance sheets are laden with debts, and the company cannot afford to exploit its massive gold find without taking on a larger partner. He said he even he would advise investors to wait for more information before buying a stake.
"It would not have been our preference to have launched the information that our independent geologist and geophysicist were telling us," he said. "That immediately puts us in the category of being scrutinized. But we welcome this scrutiny and we are actually glad the market is behaving skeptically. In the post-Bre-X world, that's a better scenario."
June 20, 1998 |