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To: CIMA who wrote (10985)10/4/1999 4:06:00 PM
From: Jim Bishop  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
Oct 11, isn't that a holiday here, turkey day, Cdn markets closed.



To: CIMA who wrote (10985)10/4/1999 10:32:00 PM
From: Mr Metals  Respond to of 150070
 
NA's PI broker-bait settles with SEC
Vancouver Stock Exchange VSE
Shares issued 0 1899-12-30 close $0
Monday Oct 4 1999
See National Bank of Canada (NA) Street Wire
by Brent Mudry
Promoter-turned-informer David Houge, who lured two Vancouver Stock Exchange brokers into the United States for a round of golf that landed them in the rough confines of a Seattle jail this summer, has reached a final settlement with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. On Monday, the SEC disclosed a Sept. 30 consent settlement with Mr. Houge, barring him from association with any broker or dealer, participation in any penny stock offering and acting as an officer or director of a penny stock company.
The deal includes no fine or disgorgement. Mr. Houge's plea-bargain support was crucial to cracking his ring, and led to the arrests of PI brokers Dirk Rachfall and Michael Patterson by officers of the Federal Bureau of Investigation on June 29. The pair of Vancouver brokers were held in jail for a week before being released on bail.
The SEC now reveals that its partial final consent judgment for Mr. Houge was dated June 16 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. That day, two dozen alleged co-conspirators, including reputed members of the New York Russian mob and the Colombo crime family, were indicted in Mr. Houge's stock fraud scheme. Two weeks later, Mr. Houge called up his PI broker-associates for their fateful golfing trip.
The SEC notes that from May of 1995 through November of 1998, Mr. Houge and others orchestrated the manipulations of Auxer Industries, Legend Sports and Orlando Super Card and participated in the fraudulent sale of a private placement for City Services. "For each of Auxer, Legend and Orlando, Houge controlled the supply of the stocks, raised the price through orchestrated trades and paid undisclosed cash compensation to retail salespeople," states the SEC. (Readers wishing more details may refer to Streetwires dated July 5 and July 6, amongst others.)

(c) Copyright 1999 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com



To: CIMA who wrote (10985)10/4/1999 10:36:00 PM
From: Mr Metals  Respond to of 150070
 
Dion Entertainment Corp -
Dion's CEO Leo a Bay Street promoter, according to brother Lou
Dion Entertainment Corp DIO
Shares issued 52,267,597 1999-10-04 close $2.33
Monday Oct 4 1999
Also Border Capital Corp (BOP)

by Brent Mudry
While chief executive Leo Dion and his brother Louis are both quite keen on the prospects for Dion Entertainment, the bingo-promoter-brothers are in denial about being stock promoters, especially stock promoters with any association to Howe Street. "At no time has Mr. Dion been a Howe Street stock promoter," states Bryce Cabott, Leo Dion's lawyer, who now has almost six years at bar. Mr. Cabott asserts that the term "Howe Street stock promoter" is "unethical and unprofessional" and causes "irreparable harm" to Mr. Dion and his company. (Last week, an associate at Mr. Cabott's law firm stated that the Dion brothers will also suffer "irreparable harm" to their potential multibillion dollar business if injunctions against Border Capital are not granted.)
Mr. Dion, his close associate Theresa Gortva and his brother Lou, who denies being any kind of stock promoter himself, point out that Dion Entertainment, based in the Vancouver suburb of White Rock and followed by Howe Street brokers, is actually listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. "He is a company builder ... if you want to, call him a Bay Street promoter," explains brother Lou, who hastens that Dion does not have any promoters. Brother Lou also points out that Ms. Gortva was totally wrong when she said that brother Leo fired him. "I have never been fired in my lifetime ... I left the company for him to run," states Louis Dion.
The Dion brothers and Ms. Gortva also all deny that Leo ever served as a director of Double Eagle Entertainment, the Dion brothers' disastrous previous bingo-stock promotion, which was listed on the Vancouver Stock Exchange. "My brother has never been involved in a public company in Vancouver ... he was not involved in Double Eagle," stated Louis Dion on Monday. (In a July 10, 1995, Double Eagle press release, Louis Dion announced that brother Leo, then the president and CEO of Dion Entertainment, had been appointed a director of Double Eagle, effective four months earlier.)
Louis Dion also has a different version of the demise of numerous major Double Eagle deals, vetoed by the VSE in August of 1996. The Howe Street exchange was concerned about Mr. Dion's management agreement, agreements for loans from Sodak Gaming International, a $1.5-million private placement, Double Eagle's acquisition of the right to manage a Czech bingo and lottery venture, and the granting of bonus shares and warrants to him for guaranteeing the Sodak loan. "I was working on getting information then ... its like audits, right ... we were in that process, there were some changes with the Czechs ... those were never declined, they were just never completed," explains Mr. Dion.
Louis Dion is also keen to assure Dion Entertainment's followers that he is not promoting the stock. The former Dion chairman says he is now just a shareholder, who like 10 other shareholders, like to tell people about the company. "I talked about it to my paperboy, yes, and a guy I met at a wedding ... I don't fly around the country promoting the stock," he explains.
While Lou denies he plays a role promoting brother Leo's stock, he remains a major proponent for Dion's big bingo potential. "Bingo is the most-played game in the world today ... it has 1.6 billion visits a year ... much more than movies," says Mr. Dion. "Bingo is over bowling, movies, NBA games ... and Dion is the leader in bingo." This leadership in bingo, he likens to that of Microsoft in software. Mr. Dion says that Dion Entertainment's market capitalization of $150-million is "just peanuts," and it will easily be over a billion dollars sometime in the near future. "I'm not a promoter," Mr. Dion reminds a reporter.

(c) Copyright 1999 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com