HOW MANY FRAUDS CAN WE HANDLE......LOL
Mr Taylor, who had 20 years experience in gold exploration before he joined the VSE, confirmed that he began probing only Redell's investor relations activities, and later shifted the focus to the company's overstated reserves.
How come JT didn't do the same with IPMCF?
Redell Mining Corp -
VSE assigned rookie investigator to fraud case
Redell Mining Corp RDC Shares issued 30727103 1998-04-15 close $0.03 Friday Jun 19 1998 DEFENCE LAWYER FOCUSES ON NOTES AND METHODS by Brent Mudry Vancouver stock promoter David Thomas told a Vancouver Stock Exchange investigator four days after the VSE began probing Redell Mining's Richmond boiler room that he had no clue what was driving the stock price up, according to testimony at the Redell Mining reserve fraud trial of Glen Elmo White and Mr Thomas. "Did Thomas tell you he didn't have any idea what caused the increase in share price. . . that he didn't like the increase. . . that it was likely a number of market conditions including the strength of the New York Stock Exchange and the fact that U.S. investors liked the stock?," asked defence lawyer Rod Anderson, cross-examining VSE surveillance officer Robert Taylor Holland. "That's my notes," agreed Mr Holland on Thursday in B.C. Provincial Court, on the third day of the trial. Justice D.I. Whyte was told the phone call between Mr Taylor and Mr White took place on March 15, 1996. Mr Holland earlier testified the VSE investigation officially started on March 11, when he received an internal referral from the exchange's corporate finance department. After an 11-day delay, corporate finance red-flagged a February 29 news release in which Redell disclosed it had opened a sales office in Richmond targeting Asian investors, with Chinese staff fluent in six or seven Asian languages. Redell shares had risen from the dollar range in January, 1996, to $2 by late February and $4.50 by March 11. Under cross-examination, Mr Taylor, who had 20 years experience in gold exploration before he joined the VSE, confirmed that he began probing only Redell's investor relations activities, and later shifted the focus to the company's overstated reserves. Mr White, Redell's former president, and Mr Thomas, the company's former vice-president, jointly face one count of fraud and 20 counts of misrepresentation under the Securities Act, involving allegations of fraudulently inflated reserves over a two and a half year period. The pair claimed gold reserves of 700,000 ounces on Redell's La Forma property in the Yukon, ten times the 70,000 ounce figure shown in a VSE-ordered report and 25 times the 27,500 ounce figure calculated by engineering firm H.A. Simons in an earlier report. The case is dubbed "Mini Bre-X" by B.C.'s Securities Fraud Office. Mr Anderson opened his cross-examination by establishing Mr Holland's expertise as a surveillance investigator. The VSE official earlier testified he moved to surveillance after a three-year stint in corporate finance. "How long had you been a compliance office -- about a week?" asked the defence lawyer. "Or two," responded Mr Holland. The VSE investigator was equally candid when discussing the surveillance department's stock trading monitoring programs. In direct examination by Crown prosecutor Ron Schmidt, Mr Holland earlier told the court the computer programs "raise red flags of unusual trading patterns." In cross examination, the investigator admitted he had no idea how the programs worked, or what they specifically looked for. "That is really way beyond my area of expertise," stated Mr Holland, now a two-year veteran of the surveillance department. "My understanding is it looks for differences in trading activity," he added. "No one explained to you the program looks for things like a stock up 20 per-cent from the opening price?," asked Mr Anderson. "No, I usually just see the results," replied the investigator. The court was told that according to Mr Holland's notes, the VSE first raised questions on Redell's reserves on March 19, eight days after it launched its probe based on the company's investor relations affairs. Mr Holland confirmed that the VSE sent Redell a letter dated March 27, requesting clarification of its reserve calculations. The investigator testified that a few days later, before the end of March, Mr White came by for an impromptu meeting to show him a video and drop off a report he had prepared. The White report did little to appease the VSE's concerns on the reserve figures. Mr Anderson probed Mr Holland's standards of note-taking on several occasions in cross-examination. "Do you have any notes of that meeting of what he told you about the reserves?," asked the defence lawyer. "No," replied the surveillance investigator. When asked if he usually took notes when something important occurred, Mr Holland replied "generally, yes." The investigator offered an explanation of why he failed to record this meeting with Mr White, who now stands trial. "It was unscheduled. . . there were no minutes," Mr Holland suggested. Mr Anderson also pointed out that virtually all of Mr Holland's notes were dated "1995," when it was 1996. "I was still operating in 1995 but it was 1996," the investigator replied, chuckling in court. Mr Holland also told the court that Mr White showed him a short video at this impromptu meeting in late March. "It was one of those handheld records and you had to flip up the screen. . . it was showing the state of the mine," the investigator testified. "Did you ask for a copy?," asked Mr Anderson. "No," replied Mr Holland. The investigator also told the court about his due diligence in checking out Ash and Associates, a geological engineering consulting firm selected by Redell after the VSE ordered the company to commission an independent report on the La Forma property and its reserves. Mr Holland testified he looked up Wayne Ash and assistant George Krueckl to see if they were registered in B.C. Mr Krueckl was not registered, but Mr Holland said this was okay, since Mr Ash was the one writing the report, with Mr Krueckl doing the field work. Mr Anderson later asked about Mr Krueckl. "He has also been disciplined by the Association of Professional Engineers in 1986," stated the defence lawyer. "I was not aware of that," replied the VSE investigator in court. The trial, after a one-day break on Friday, continues on Monday. (c) Copyright 1998 Canjex Publishing Ltd.
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