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To: T L Comiskey who wrote (746)10/28/1999 7:10:00 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12254
 
<Risky Business.>.The Associated Press
C O L T S N E C K, N.J., Oct. 28 ? Two Internet penny
stock promoters found shot to death had ties to
?shady? business dealings, which may ultimately
have led to their execution-style killings, a
prosecutor said.
Alain Chalem, 41, and Mayir Lehmann, 37, were
found early Tuesday face down on the bloodsained
marble floor of the estate Chalem shared with his girlfriend
and her 13-year-old son.
Though investigators have not pinpointed a motive or
suspects, Monmouth County Prosecutor John Kaye said
the attack likely was at least partly tied to the pair?s penny
stock Web operation, www.stockinvestor.com, or other
ventures.
?It was probably related to the victims? business
activities,? Kaye said, ?and the killer or killers feared
something else more than the loss of money.?

Stockbroker Charged Last Year
The Securities and Exchange Commission last year
charged Lehmann and other defendants with distributing
false information about companies after Electro Optical
System Corp. stock rose from 50 cents to more than $5
per share in one day.
Investors eventually lost at least $10 million in that
scheme, authorities have said. Lehmann agreed in January
to pay $630,000 in penalties.
Between 1994 and 1996, Chelam worked at the
brokerage A.S. Goldman, which was indicted in July in
New York on charges connected with stock manipulation,
forgery and illegal trading. The firm has denied the
accusations, and Chelam was not named in those charges.

Web Site Promoted Business
The men?s Web site used mass e-mails to promote penny
stocks to prospective investors. In exchange, the partners
received commissions or discounted stock from securities
firms. The Web site was registered in Panama and
managed in Hungary.
?Penny? or ?micro-cap? stocks are cheap, highly
speculative securities that are vulnerable to investor
manipulation. Authorities suspect the victims? Web site
was based overseas to avoid SEC scrutiny. Kaye called
the men?s business practices ?shady.?
Investigators believe at least two gunmen attacked the
men late Monday while they were reviewing business
papers in the $1.1 million home. Chalem and Lehmann
were first crippled by the gunfire, then shot point-blank in
their heads, authorities said.
Chalem was shot once in the chest and five times in the
head, while Lehmann, of Woodmere, N.Y., was shot in
the leg and once in the back of the head, Kaye said. Their
cellular telephones were inches from their hands, and they
were still ringing on Wednesday.
?People are still calling these people, and we?re
answering the phone,? Kaye said.

No Signs of Burglary
The home?s wrought-iron gates were open and its front
door unlocked, but there were no signs of burglary, Kaye
said.
Kaye said the ex-husband of Chalem?s girlfriend has
been eliminated as a suspect and there are few leads, no
suspects and no murder weapon.
Chalem had lived on the 16-acre property for up to
eight months with his girlfriend. Her father owns the home
in this small, wealthy community about an hour from New
York City.
The friends who found the bodies said that Chalem
had planned to drive to Tennessee and then charter a
plane to Florida to meet his girlfriend, authorities said.
The friends told authorities they had talked with both
Chalem and Lehmann throughout the day on Monday,
then could not reach them later that night.