VSE's Canaccord central in another SEC prosecution
  Wed 17 Nov 99                                                   Street Wire
  by Brent Mudry
  Over the years, Peter Brown's Canaccord Capital has established  itself  as the  top  brokerage  on  the  Vancouver Stock Exchange, the soon-to-be-gone exchange known formerly as the Scam Capital of the World. In recent  years, Canaccord,  like  other  Vancouver  brokerages,  has  made  up for lost VSE business by venturing onto the U.S. OTC Bulletin Board market. After watching  much-smaller  Vancouver  rival  Pacific  International  get snared  in  a  string  of  United States Securities and Exchange Commission prosecutions this year, Canaccord's Peter Brown declared in  a  rare  media interview  with  The  National  Post  two months ago that the U.S. bulletin board market is "fundamentally the most crooked market in the world." Canaccord's knowledge of the murky  and  sometimes  crooked  world  of  the bulletin  board  seems  drawn, at least partly, from first-hand experience. Last week, the Vancouver brokerage was cited by the SEC as a key conduit in the  Windswept  affair,  with  three  key  clients  heading  a scheme which generated $8-million (U.S.) in illicit proceeds from mid-1994 through 1996. While the Windswept scheme was in its  infancy,  another  and  much  bigger bulletin  board  fraud  was  peaking,  with  Canaccord  serving  as the key conduit. The Sky Scientific case has been a  public  secret  for  the  past eight  months.  In  May,  Canaccord  was toasting its merger with long-time associate T. Hoare & Co., a London brokerage, announced on  May  6  by  the VSE. Two months and one day earlier, Canaccord's name popped up scores of  times in a less-flattering document, a 51-page SEC initial decision in the matter of Sky Scientific, dated March 5.  While  Canaccord  was  not  named  as  a defendant,  its  role  as  a  conduit  was invaluable to the Sky Scientific perpetrators. The Sky players and their  friendly  brokers  had  been  awaiting  the  SEC decision  for some time. After an extensive investigation, the SEC launched an extended hearing on Aug. 25, 1997.  After  eight  days  of  hearings  in Denver, the proceeding moved to Los Angeles and Fort Lauderdale for one-day stints in November, before capping with a finale in Richmond, Va., on  Jan. 20, 1998. The Sky Scientific bulletin-board scheme was  vintage  VSE,  mirroring  the elements and modus operandi of numerous Canadian promotions which have made the Vancouver exchange so  well  known  over  the  years.  Sky  featured  a book-valued  bundle  of  $29.7-million  (U.S.) of grossly-overvalued mining properties, $40-million (U.S.) in totally worthless Russian certificates of deposit  and  a well-oiled promotional machine. "At least 95% of the assets reported on Sky's 1994 annual report were illusory," states the SEC. In its March 5 decision, the SEC levied a whopping $13.85-million (U.S.) in disgorgement   orders   and  $1.22-million  (U.S.)  in  fines  against  Sky Scientific, a network of 13 U.S. promoters,  brokers  and  associates,  and five  companies, including troubled brokerage Gilbert Marshall & Co. In the pump-and-dump scheme, Sky Scientific's shares surged from 75 U.S. cents  to $4.50  (U.S.)  in the spring of 1993, and the ring kept the promotion going through much of 1994. Canaccord was the dominant conduit  in  the  distribution  of  unregistered shares  of  Sky Scientific. The company issued a whopping 30 million shares on 107 Form S-8 filings. The key promoters and their assorted nominees sold at  least  19 million of these shares through Canaccord. The SEC notes that $12.59-million (U.S.) was raised from the sale of Sky shares from Canaccord accounts. The Sky  rig  job  was  well  orchestrated.  The  SEC  notes  that  Gilbert Marshall's Denver office concentrated almost entirely on selling Sky stock. The Denver office sold $5.4-million (U.S.) worth of Sky shares to customers from March 24, 1994, through Nov. 4, 1994, in 862 transactions. These sales accounted for 65 per cent of the total  dollar  volume  of  sales  at  that office, and 78 per cent of its total transactions. The SEC notes that Gilbert Marshall acquired 97 per cent of  its  inventory from  the  Canaccord  accounts.  Promoter  Thomas  Patrick Meehan routinely called Gary  Boldt,  Gilbert  Marshall's  trader,  to  let  him  know  that Canaccord  would be calling to offer Gilbert Marshall a block of Sky stock, according to the SEC. "A  few  minutes  later,  Canaccord  would  call  Boldt  to  complete   the transaction  ... Usher knew about this pattern, regarded it as unusual, and claims someone at Gilbert Marshall called Canaccord to find out more  about the source of the stock. Usher testified that Canaccord refused to identify the sellers of the stock. That was the extent of Usher's investigation into the  unusual  arrangement  between the Denver office and Canaccord," states the SEC. (On  Aug.  16,  Gilbert  Marshall  and  its  president  and  chief executive,  Michael  Usher,  were  ordered  in  a consent settlement to pay disgorgement of $5.43 million (U.S.). Mr. Usher was also  barred  from  any association with any broker or dealer, and Gilbert Marshall, the brokerage, was shut down.) Canaccord's star client, the acknowledged ringleader of the Sky scheme, was Robert   Schlien,   an  experienced  penny-stock  promoter  who  owned  and controlled American  Capital  Network,  a  Florida  company.  Although  Mr. Schlien  is  referred  to as a "financial consultant" who helps his clients "grow their companies," the SEC has a  different  characterization  of  his work.  "Schlien  promotes  his clients' stock by inducing broker-dealers to sell it to their customers," states the SEC. Mr. Schlien is no stranger to regulators. In a settlement with the  SEC  in August  of 1989, he was barred from any association with any broker-dealer, municipal securities dealer, investment adviser or investment company, with liberty  to  reapply  after  18  months.  Soon  after, the State of Florida ordered Mr. Schlien permanently barred from any association with any dealer of investment adviser doing business in that state. In 1992, the U.S. District Court  for  the  Southern  District  of  Florida issued   a   permanent  injunction  prohibiting  Mr.  Schlien  from  future securities violations. In a subsequent administrative proceeding,  the  SEC again  barred  Mr.  Schlien  from  any association with any broker, dealer, investment company or  investment  adviser.  "Despite  these  frequent  and serious  clashes  with  securities regulators, when he testified before the Commission in  September  1994,  Schlien  pretended  to  have  only  a  dim recollection of his recent troubles," states the SEC. The No. 2 Sky man  was  Melvin  L.  Levine,  a  good  friend  and  business associate,  who  was  recruited  by  Mr. Schlien in 1993 to work on the Sky project. Mr. Schlien told regulators that Mr. Levine  "knows  everybody  in the  business."  "Levine  was  able  to  draw  upon  his extensive store of business contacts  to  recruit  several  so-called  consultants,  including Michael Todd, David Moon, Joseph Wythe and William Morris, whose names were used to liquidate Sky stock," states the SEC. Mr. Schlien kept a firm handle on his fronts. He told Mr. Levine  that  Sky would  pay  these  consultants  with  stock,  but  he  had to have power of attorney over the consultants' accounts to liquidate the shares,  otherwise they  would not be hired. The SEC notes that Mr. Schlien in fact did secure powers of attorney allowing him to trade in his four  fronts'  accounts  at Canaccord. The No. 3 Sky man was William David Jones, who had a nine-year career as  a broker after graduating from college in 1983, and joined in the Sky project in mid-1993, near the end of his career as a broker. The SEC notes that Mr. Jones  gradually  stopped  selling securities and went into the business of selling leads, doing business as Best Brokerage Leads. Mr. Jones prefers to downplay  his  contributions,  although  he  and  Best Brokerage received over $4.5-million (U.S.) from the sale of Sky shares out of the Canaccord accounts, as well as directly from Mr. Schlien's  American Capital  Network.  "While  he  admits he sold leads to Schlien and ACN, and knew that these leads were in turn being passed on to brokers, he testified that  his  only connection to Sky was accidental and indirect, namely, that through "hanging around" with his friend Schlien  he  occasionally  allowed Schlien to use his cellular telephone," states the SEC. Like Mr. Schlien, Mr. Jones is known to the stock market police.  In  April of  1989,  Mr.  Jones  was  censured  and fined a modest $1,000 (U.S.) in a consent settlement with the National  Association  of  Securities  Dealers. When   Mr.   Jones  subsequently  applied  to  the  State  of  Florida  for registration as a broker, the state regulator allowed him to register  but, citing  the  recent NASD sanctions, imposed significant restrictions on his business activities. In May of 1993, around the time Mr. Jones was winding  down  his  brokerage career  and  winding  up  his sucker list business with Sky, the SEC, in an administrative proceeding, barred him from acting in a supervisory capacity for  any  broker or dealer for two years. The SEC also notes that Mr. Jones was recently convicted in the U.S.  District  Court  for  the  District  of Nevada of securities fraud, conspiracy and wire fraud. The list of Sky securities violators extended well beyond Mr.  Schlien  and Mr.  Jones,  with  prior  offences  on  record  long before Sky shares flew through the Canaccord conduit. Co-defendant Philip Georgeson, who began  his  brokerage  career  in  1982, worked  for eight different firms in various positions, including stints as a retail broker and a wholesale trader.  Mr.  Georgeson  was  censured  and fined  by  the  NASD on Sept. 12, 1989. On July 5, 1990, the SEC barred him from  any  association  with  any  broker-dealer,  investment  adviser   or investment  company,  with  liberty to reapply after a year. That same day, the U.S. District Court for the District of  Columbia  issued  a  permanent injunction prohibiting him from future securities violations. With a nudge or two from the regulators, Mr.  Georgeson,  like  Mr.  Jones, felt  it was time for a career change, and Mr. Schlien's Sky project looked like a winner. Mr. Georgeson was eager to move out  of  trading  securities and into public relations, and Mr. Schlien hired him to help distribute the sucker list leads to a network of brokers, and  monitor  their  activities. Mr.  Georgeson  figures  he spent 1,000 to 1,500 hours promoting Sky over a 13-month period, and he received about $273,572 (U.S.) for his efforts. Gilbert Marshall, Canaccord's Sky counterpart brokerage in  the  U.S.,  has had  its  own  tangles  with  the law in recent years. From October of 1995 through January of 1997, Gilbert  Marshall  was  sanctioned  by  securities regulators  in  Arizona,  Texas, Colorado, Massachusetts, Virginia, Alabama and Ohio. In addition, the NASD has fined  and  censured  Gilbert  Marshall three times. Smith Benton & Hughes, another Sky brokerage, was censured and fined by the NASD  in February of 1997. In June of 1998, the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California issued a permanent injunction against  Smith Benton based on its violations of the registration and antifraud provisions of federal securities laws. Four other Sky brokers had their own regulatory troubles. Michael Zaman was censured  and  fined  by  the  NASD on Feb. 4, 1997. In June of 1998 he was enjoined in California, along with Smith Benton.  On  Sept.  29,  1998,  he entered into a consent settlement with the SEC. George Hellen was censured and fined by the NASD in 1991. Michael Usher has been  sanctioned  for violating Colorado and Alabama state securities laws, and he has been disciplined by the NASD twice. Daniel  Lehl  was  sanctioned  by  the  NASD's  National  Business  Conduct Committee  in  May  of 1993 for charging excessive markups. He appealed and lost several times. On Nov. 16, 1996, he was censured and fined by the NASD in connection with the practices he used in flogging Sky's stock. The identity of Canaccord's key Sky broker remains a mystery. |