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Pastimes : ISOMAN AND HIS CAVE OF SOLITUDE -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J T who wrote (320)11/19/1999 2:08:00 AM
From: ISOMAN  Respond to of 539
 
Vancouver Stock Exchange - Street Wire

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



To: J T who wrote (320)3/21/2000 9:37:00 AM
From: ISOMAN  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 539
 
Here is a list of URLs of online brokers..

They are not in any particular order. If anyone wants to help me research these babies, I'd appreciate it. Here is the Data I'm looking for...

Fees for listed stock i.e. $20 for 1000 shares
Fees for OTC or penny stocks...
reliability
perks, i.e. free level II checking..etc.
touchtone trading? fees
Broker assit ? Fees
Foreign Accounts, I.E. Evil Canadian
Does your account update instantly or does it take 24 hours for changes to appear...
Clearing firm

-----------------------------------------------------
buyandhold.com af.com sunlogic.com livebroker.com clarkfinancial.com olde.com webbroker.greenline.ca canada.etrade.com ffutures.com swiftrade.com fidelity.com online.msdw.com eschwab.com ml.com accutrade.com nowtrade.com wallstreete.com wsaccess.com trade-well.com bushburns.com andrewpeck.com wsei.com a1financial.com pawws.com castleonline.com rapidtrade.com vanguard.com dljdirect.com peremel.com wilshirecm.com gfn.com fidelity.com mainstmarket.com bullbear.com farsight.com mrstock.com freemanwelwood.com wsdc.com wrhambrecht.com quick-reilly.com trade4less.com witcapital.com etrade.com citicorp.com usdb.com ndb.com ziegler-thrift.com newport-discount.com 4tradestar.com eregal.com jboxford.com bclnet.com lindnerfunds.com trutrade.com investexpress.com 1st-discount.com internettrading.com stocks4less.com sanford.com.au bidwell.com state-online.com mytrack.com wyse-sec.com preferredtrade.com tradeoptions.com preftech.com edreyfus.com freedominvestments.com siebertnet.com americanexpress.com visiontrade.com umcstock.com aftrader.com webstreetsecurities.com ameritrade.com usrica.com waterhouse.com mydiscountbroker.com scottrade.com empirenow.com investrade.com brownco.com datek.com investin.com abwatley.com suretrade.com tradingdirect.com firstrade.com wangvest.com rjt.com interactivebrokers.com



To: J T who wrote (320)4/29/2001 11:02:34 PM
From: ISOMAN  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 539
 
Guess what.......(sorry for all the typos I will obviously make)

if you have a sore throat...say for 10 days..

You should probably get it looked at by a doctor.

I didn't...

Until Yesterday (Saturday April 28)

My throat was so infected that it closed (See what it takes to shut me up)

So..The emergency room put me on a drip with some antibiotics.

They left the tube in my hand so that I could come back six hours later for another dose.

They took the IV approach because they said I need to accelerate the attack on the infection since I let it go so long ...

They wanted me to spend a couple of nights in the place too, but We had just erected this complicated scaffold over an empty indoor pool, on friday---

we took to steel IBeams and built a floating staircase that matched the shape of the ceiling, at the highest point you are a 35 foot drop to the pool bottom...used a ton of lumber...very nice...all because I couldn't get a mechanical sky jack through the doors into the pool bottom.

Anyway, we got that installed Friday, and Saturday and sunday were left for installing the drywall, taping priming.

so...a stay in the hospital was out of the question...

Ok...so the plan is that I am to come back at 6 P.M on Saturday to get a second bag of antibiotics...

At six P.M. I show up.

This time it is a male nurse...and I am sitting there talking to a painter friend in the room with me. The male nurse comes in and does a couple of things that are completely different from the day nurse.

First, she used this machine that pumped the bag of salene and antibiotics in me..

The second nurse, the male nurse, used no machine, he used gravity...but...here is the biggest difference.

Before he hooked the IV bag into the tube in my hand, he injected a needle full of stuff into the tube, and then hooked the bag up....

About 10 seconds later I said...

"something isn't right...I don't feel so good all of a sudden"

They (the nurse and my painter friend) helped me to the table to lie down....

The rest is third party information, as I don't recall any of it.

MY painter friend said I started to shake all over and my eyes rolled up so that only the whites were showing and my face colour was green, he said that several times, and as a painter, I'd say he's quick with colours...

so aparantly this nurse was a little new on the job, and freaked....

he started pounding on the help button..

Oh I forgot he was jamaican too....that's important...it adds to the whole mental picture of this if you visualize the jamaican accent.

Anyway, he jabbed another needle in my upper arm with benolyn or something like that...

That didn't do anything for me so another nurse brought in an epinephorin pin (I doubt I spelled that correctly)

Thing is I started to come out of it...

and here is what I saw..

My vision comes back and a guy in a green suit is standing over me with a big needle...

And I can't recall why I am there or what the hell is going on....

So this guy flips me on my side and jabs the pin in my thy....

Then they start asking me all kinds of questions, what's my name, where do I live, what's my son's birthday

it should have taken half an hour for this drip.

I was there for 2 hours with a blood pressure and glucose monitor and doctors coming in and out.

I was back up on the scaffold by 8:30 (they insisted I stay in the hospital)

so here it is on Sunday night...and I still managed to get the project completed so that the painter can paint tomorrow....

And I escaped yet another death attempt.

MY throat feels like crap and they gave me these huge horse pills to take every 6 hours

The bottom line is the guy gave me the full shot of antibiotics in one quick jolt with a needle, rather than mixing it with a bag so that my system would get it spread over 30 minutes...

kind of like getting all of the caffine from 100 cups of coffee sent directly to your blood...instantly...