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To: Jim Bishop who wrote (14801)11/21/1999 7:13:00 AM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 150070
 
BCE Emergis has personal press release portfolio here:

isdnwire.com



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (14801)11/21/1999 9:04:00 AM
From: Mr Metals  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
ubj: Stockwatch: Street Wire: VSE, BCSC quiet on Canaccord matter
Date: 11/20/99 8:18:22 PM Eastern Standard Time
From: list@stockwatch.com

B.C. Securities Commission - Street Wire

VSE, BCSC quiet on Canaccord matter

See Vancouver Stock Exchange (VSE) Street Wire
by Brent Mudry

While stock market regulators on both sides of the border claim to take a
dim view of shady dealings in the OTC Bulletin Board market and any
concerted stock manipulations, the BCSC's southern uncle inspires more fear
than does the northern nephew. The United States Securities and Exchange
Commission, for example, has come down hard on the key American
perpetrators in the Sky Scientific rig job, but the British Columbia
Securities Commission and the Vancouver Stock Exchange have yet to take any
serious notice of Canaccord Capital's mystery account executive, or to
censure Canaccord for failure to supervise either the account executive or
its trading desk. (Readers wishing an outline of the Sky case can refer to
a Streetwire of Nov. 17 under the symbol VSE.)
In its well-documented 51-page initial decision, released eight months ago
and presumably read by the staff of Doug Hyndman's BCSC and Michael
Johnson's soon-to-be-gone VSE, the SEC gives Canaccord full credit for its
role in the Sky manipulation. The SEC notes that scores of trades were
regularly set up between Canaccord and Gilbert Marshall, a U.S. bucket shop
shut down over the Sky debacle. "With this infrastructure in place, the
promoters were able to manipulate the price of Sky stock through wash
trades and 'cleaning the street'," states the SEC.
The U.S. regulator notes that "wash trades occurred in the Canaccord
accounts on 96 days between April 1993 and December 1994." Frequently, the
shares were purchased at higher prices than they had been sold for earlier
in the day.
"I find that the wash trades created a deceptive and fraudulent appearance
of market activity by interfering with the free forces of supply and
demand. I further find that the practice of 'taking out the low bid or
'cleaning the street' was likewise calculated to interfere with the natural
operation of market forces by altering the price of the stock and
manufacturing the appearance of legitimate trading activity," stated SEC
administrative law judge Robert Mahony. He does not speculate on whether
the Canaccord orders could have been entered by a blind salesman, executed
by a blind trader and supervised by a blind manager -- or whether Canaccord
was simply duped.

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