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To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (130)11/29/1999 10:34:00 PM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 228
 
Jeff,

Oh, my! Another faux pas??? Oh, well...

KJC



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (130)11/30/1999 6:20:00 AM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 228
 
Incredible! Dr. Cruz seems to have his fingers in many a rotten pie.

Nice find Jeff!

TG



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (130)12/1/1999 6:28:00 PM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 228
 
Is it just me, or has anyone else noted that the dubious players that surround the more questionable investments just cannot perform even simple math???

Also, looks like them thare warehouses that has barrels and barrels of gold dust stored in 'em ain't just safe no more...

From The Las Vegas Sun...

lasvegassun.com

November 30, 1999

Wall Street financial executives scratch heads over Las Vegas company's planned stock sale

By Gary Thompson <gary@lasvegassun.com> LAS VEGAS SUN


The purported financial savior of Las Vegas Entertainment Network Inc. isn't letting an investigation of LVEN stock trading -- suspended since Oct. 18 -- derail his plans to sell stock in another suspect company.

Fred Cruz has filed a registration statement with the Securities & Exchange Commission saying his Countryland Wellness Resorts Inc. of Las Vegas is selling 10 million shares at an anticipated price of $18 to $23 a share. After expenses, the SEC filing said, Countryland expects to net at least $160 million.

But the prospectus names as underwriters some of the top investment bankers on Wall Street -- and they don't know anything about the proposed offering.

"Who?" responded Leslie Thompson, a spokesperson for Donald, Lufkin & Jenrette, when asked Monday if she was aware of the Countryland filing. "We've never heard of them."

DLJ, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, and Salomon Smith Barney are listed as co-underwriters of Countryland's initial public offering, according to the SEC filing. But they all told Barron's financial weekly they don't know anything about the Countryland claim.

Cruz is a former podiatrist who lost his California medical license in 1965 following his conviction on conspiracy and grand theft charges.

He petitioned the California Board of Podiatric Medicine for license reinstatement in 1996, but the board denied his motion. It cited subsequent criminal convictions in Nevada and Wyoming and said Cruz had "made a number of false or misleading statements to the board."

Countryland's Nov. 19 SEC filing said Cruz "no longer has a license to practice medicine or podiatry as he is retired."

The new Countryland filing contains additional extraordinary statements. For example:

Countryland plans to use offering proceeds to develop its "life extension program" that, "by using our genetic engineering," can repair defective genes and let clients "live to 120 years."

"Any death before that should be considered a premature death," the filing said.

The company plans to sell memberships for 10-year packages including annual one-week treatments at selected Las Vegas resorts. The cost is $30,000, meaning Countryland "will receive revenues of $3.12 billion" and net profit of $2.44 billion, the filing said.

Countryland "is entering into a contract with two major hotels in Las Vegas." The filing asserted that "Wellness Resorts and Life Extension Program at the Ballys (sic) and Paris Hotel and Casino Las Vegas, Nevada, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Countryland Wellness Resorts Inc."

Bally's and Paris are owned by Park Place Entertainment Inc., whose spokesman said Monday there are no such agreements with Countryland.

Countryland has a joint-venture agreement with Striker Gold Mines Ltd. "to invest six bank guarantees from Bank BNI Indonesia ... that will regenerate (sic) 9 percent per day and the company will receive 50 percent of the profit. The program is ready to start in about 30 days."

That 9 percent daily interest rate is more than 520 times the current daily rate paid on U.S. Treasury notes and would yield some truly amazing profits. For example, one dollar invested at 9 percent compound interest a day would grow to $45,779,574,134,957 -- or about $45.8 trillion -- in just one year, according to Bill Anthony, a financial consultant with Wells Fargo Bank.

Previous Countryland filings said the Indonesian bank guarantees are for $100 million each, so the taxes alone on Countryland's investment program would easily wipe out the accumulated debt of every nation on earth in just a year.

After the 10 million-share offering, Countryland will have 100.8 million shares outstanding -- 90 percent of them owned by Cruz and his associates. Countryland's "stock incentive plan" will authorize issuance of another 28.8 million shares to "our officers, employees, directors, consultants and advisors," the filing said.

But there's no immediate danger Cruz and his aides will sell their holdings, since "our executive officers, directors and other security holders have entered into lock-up agreements with the underwriters."

"Without the prior written consent of Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc., none of us will, during the period ending 180 days after the date of this prospectus," sell and stock or options.

Again, Morgan Stanley told Barron's the investment banking firm has no deals pending with Countryland, let alone an executed lock-up agreement.

Countryland has assets of $2.6 billion. According to the filing, they include $400 million of bank guarantees from BNI Bank and $2.2 billion of "gold and silver reserves" from California mining claims the company won't begin working until metals prices rise.

In an SEC filing it made just a month and a half ago, Countryland claimed it had assets of $2.4 billion. That filing valued the gold and silver reserves at $1.3 billion and said the company had "cash and equivalents" of $1.1 billion.

The "cash and equivalents" consisted of 11 $100 million bank guarantees from an Indonesian bank, the filing said, and "$22.3 million" of gold stored in a California warehouse.

"With respect to gold in storage" in California, the latest filing said, "the company has determined that the warehouse went out of business about three or four years ago and said gold deposit has been declared a casualty loss.

"In the opinion of the company counsel, the gold has been lost or stolen, and in any event is missing."

That isn't the only matter under investigation. According to the accountant who audited Countryland's earlier filings, the SEC has been looking into Cruz' filings for months.

And SEC and NASDAQ investigators are probing the purported $495 million "investment" Cruz made in LVEN, whose stock trading was halted after a rapid price run-up fueled at least in part by the news of his largess. Part of his investment called for Cruz to pay more than $101 a share for LVEN stock when it was publicly trading for a little over $1 a share.

The investigators have asked LVEN for information about the company, but LVEN officials have refused to respond to repeated requests for comment by reporters. It isn't known whether they've responded to the investigators questions, though LVEN stock trading is still halted.

KJC



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (130)12/4/1999 3:40:00 AM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 228
 
KVBC-TV (Las Vegas) has updated their original news story that I posted here a few days ago. While much of the beginning of this report duplicates the original report, there are some new facts starting about halfway through this post. Therefore, I have italicized the original report, and left the new stuff in a regular font.

The original story can be found here: #reply-12162052

msnbc.com

[PHOTO CAPTION] For eight-years the El Rancho has been shrouded in mystery, but an exclusive News 3 investigation could help remove that cloak of darkness.

The last Las Vegas mystery

Darcy Spears

LAS VEGAS, Dec. 3– To most Las Vegans, the old El Rancho is the eyesore of the strip. Since its doors closed in 1991, the western-themed hotel-casino sits idle, despite the biggest construction boom the city has ever seen.


MANY PEOPLE WONDER why it's empty, who owns it and where's the “Countryland USA” gambling mecca the marquee's been promising for years?

In an exclusive investigation, Darcy Spears has spent four-months digging deeper into those questions.

For eight-years the El Rancho has been shrouded in mystery, but an exclusive News 3 investigation could help remove that cloak of darkness.

For the very first time, News 3 reveals the real story behind the ghostly exterior since the doors closed at El Rancho, the last Las Vegas mystery.

The booming Las Vegas strip has glitz, glamour and of course gambling. But in the midst of it all is a ghost town and many skeletons in the El Rancho's closet.

“It is a shuttered, kind of mysterious operation at a time in which the rest of the strip appears to be prospering and growing and expanding,” says newspaper columnist John L. Smith. “Everyone who passes by, the first thing they think of is, what's that all about?”

NEWS 3'S EXCLUSIVE TOUR

We all know what El Rancho looks like on the outside. But inside, you'll discover cobwebs in every corner, fungus eating up the walls, wallpaper peeling off all over the place and mold eating away the carpet.

“You've got to remember you're the first people seeing this,” says a worker who requested to remain anonymous. “In how long?” asks Darcy Spears. “In eight years that I know of.”

No one's been legally inside the El Rancho since its doors closed in 1991.

We're giving you the first look as we tour the property with workers who've asked us to conceal their identities.

The workers patrol the El Rancho, encountering danger and health hazards around every corner. They invited us inside because of concerns for their health and safety, as well as potential danger to the surrounding area.

“This is where I almost got killed. This here's the keno room and if you look up, you'll see the ceiling tiles are falling down,” says a worker.

The tiles are crashing onto the floor with employees in the line of fire.

“Be careful of this register, that's about 75 pounds and one of them came down and missed me by about two inches.”

Ceilings are caving in, exposing piping with asbestos.

Floors are coming apart. That's not all. There are loose wires.

“They're live. Don't touch them! Don't touch them, please. They will fry you,” says a worker.

The hazards grow even greater as the workers lead the News 3 Investigators deeper into the forsaken building.

The kitchen area is filled with rats and roaches.

Things attracted to ovens and other surfaces are dripping with decay.

“Pick up your shirt and put it over your face if you don't want to breathe the chemicals,” warns a guide.

The fumes were so noxious, they overwhelmed both News 3 photographers.

“Which way is back up to the casino? I just can't handle it anymore,” said News 3 photographer Justin Rush.

After discovering so much danger behind the doors of El Rancho, News 3 showed its video to county officials and it didn't take long before someone came knocking.

WHY DIDN'T ANYONE KNOW?

If you let your house and yard deteriorate into a big cluttered mess, the county would make you clean it up. So why has the old eyesore been sitting on the strip for so long in such crummy shape?

There's stagnant water, deadly spiders and strangers who attack workers.

“A man hit him from over here with a bat... kept pummeling him, knocked his teeth out, split his head wide open,” says a worker.

Could county leaders know what's going on inside the El Rancho? We got a group together including representatives from the county commission, fire department, building and safety, public response and the health district.

It's their job to oversee conditions like the ones we just showed you. We show them our video and ask if they see anything wrong.

“Clearly, things were going on there that nobody was aware of,” said Clark County Commissioner Myrna Williams.

“What I saw in some of those rooms, that wouldn't pass,” said Lonnie Empey of the Clark County Environmental Health Department.

“I assure you that we're gonna take action,” said one official.

Some agencies say they keep an eye on El Rancho, but not to the extent we have. The fire department sent an inspector when we first told them we'd been inside. What did he find?

“Could I please ask you to turn the camera off because I cannot answer that question,” said Clark County Fire Inspector Royce Leonard.

[SIDEBAR] ‘We will check out all of these concerns.' —Kathy Zegorske Fire Department

Perhaps he couldn't answer the question because he told his chief nothing was wrong except for a few burned out bulbs in exit signs.

After seeing our video, the fire department agreed they should take a closer look.

“We will check out all of these concerns and get into those areas that he wasn't into and make sure that if there are any hazards that they'll be required to have them cleaned up,” said Kathy Zegorske of the fire department.

Brian Woodward of Schirmer Engineering also saw the video. He's an independent fire safety expert who has his own concerns.

“Common sense dictates it should not be like that,” he said.

OFFICIALS TAKE ACTION

The morning after watching our tape, county cars clogged the El Rancho entrance. Even OSHA sent two inspectors, after refusing to join the group watching our tape.

“OSHA should've been involved a long time ago,” said Lonnie Empey.

The county officials indeed found electrical and chemical hazards, blocked exits and building flaws.

Now they may take steps to shut down the El Rancho. Yes, shut down. Believe it or not, El Rancho is operational. New slot machines and refurbished rooms are inside the dark hotel-casino. So what's going on?

“My gut feeling is, looking at this, somebody's making some money and it's not the Clark County Health District or Clark County,” said a county official.

Some of the county's inspection reports now show nearly four dozen fire and safety violations they found inside El Rancho. They warn the owners in writing that any repair or construction activity will be under scrutiny.


WHO'S MAKING MONEY?

It's the 64-thousand-dollar question– a question locals and tourists have been asking for eight long years– what's going on with the El Rancho? Why hasn't it been sold or imploded? The News 3 investigators spent the last four months finding answers.

Darcy Spears explains those answers may lie with the property's controversial owners.

Everyone who walks by El Rancho wonders who's holding on to it and why?

Sources inside the El Rancho who News 3 spoke with exclusively claim questionable characters and investment techniques are the reasons why nothing's been done with the place.

Federal agents are now investigating some Las Vegans who are closely tied to El Rancho's tangled web of ownership.

EL RANCHO PAST AND PRESENT

When it comes to progress on the Vegas strip, what goes up, must come down.

We've seen the Dunes turn to dust, the Sands go up in smoke and the Landmark get leveled.

Many locals, including Review-Journal Columnist John L. Smith wonder why this place hasn't met the same fate.

“This is strictly opinion, obviously,” he says, “But I mean, it's an eyesore. I don't know whether it violates codes of any kind, but it certainly has the look of an abandoned building.”

But in fact, El Rancho is anything but empty.

We know, because we walked through the front doors of the old hotel-casino in August at the invitation of some workers who asked us to conceal their identities. Inside, we saw two different worlds: One, a property falling apart. The other, a seeming renaissance, with renovated rooms, new poker tables, and shiny slots on loan from Bally Gaming.

“And that also creates speculation that there's something else going on at the El Rancho,” says Smith.

One of those speculating is our anonymous source, who claims he's seen plenty of potential investors inside.

“I think the property's being sold over and over,” he says.

John L. Smith points out, “Let's face it, on Wall Street, one of the biggest stories of the last five years was casino stock. So you would think that there would be ample speculators out there who would be interested in investing in a casino.

So why hasn't the El Rancho been developed in the last eight years? Like the spiders we saw spinning traps for unwary prey, the answer may lie in its tangled web of ownership.

It starts with Ed Torres, the original owner and close friend of noted mob boss Meyer Lansky.

“It was one of those places that opened and seemed under-capitalized and never really, really got off the ground and ran into financial problems,” says Smith.

So in 1991, Torres sold the property to Las Vegas Entertainment Network, or LVEN, a company currently being investigated by the securities and exchange commission and NASDAQ for a possible stock scam.

LVEN teamed up with a New Jersey racetrack operation called ITB, International Thoroughbred Breeders, itself also currently under the SEC's microscope.

Together they created “Countryland, USA,” a western-themed resort casino “coming soon” to the strip.

“Anytime that you've got a property that's closed and a group comes up with an idea to create two huge cowboy boots that are hotel towers, then you certainly have a place that's going to be full of character,” says Smith.

Perhaps a place full of characters with shady pasts, like Robert Brennan, who was once a major shareholder in ITB busted by the feds in a major investment scam.

That forced Brennan to turn over ITB's reigns to Nunzio Desantis, a controversial self-made millionaire from New Mexico, and his partner, Tony Coelho, a former U.S. representative who resigned from Congress during an investigation into questionable campaign finances. Coelho is the same man now running Al Gore's campaign for president.

Coelho and Desantis recently resigned from ITB in the wake of a lawsuit by company shareholders who alleged both were secretly lining their pockets with company assets.

“It's clear that from the history of the thoroughbred breeders that some of the officers of that corporation have been white-collar criminals of huge repute,” says Smith.

Then there's Las Vegas doctor Fred Cruz, a podiatrist apparently trying to get his foot in the door of the El Rancho.

In June, he filed this document with the SEC, claiming his company, Countryland Wellness Resorts, is “in the process of concluding the purchase of the El Rancho Hotel and Casino.”

ITB, which still owns the property, says that's not true, denying any dealings with Cruz.

Ad there may be good reason. Cruz lost his license to practice medicine after being convicted of four counts of grand theft.

On top of that, the SEC is also looking into Cruz for potentially making false statements to the federal government.

We went to El Rancho looking for answers from property manager ken school.

“What do you want?” asked a woman at the door.

“We want to talk to you or Ken Scholl for a story we're doing on what's going on inside the El Rancho,” replied Darcy Spears.

“No.”

“No? Why not? Where's Ken Scholl?” asked Darcy.

“When you have mystery owners or owners who appear to be the owner on paper but they're not so proud to be the owner that they want to give interviews, it tells you something, it raises suspicion,” says Smith.

It didn't raise suspicions with the Clark County Planning Commission.

A few months ago, it granted El Rancho a three-year extension on their use permit because the owners say they need more time to raise money to finance construction of Countryland U.S.A.

“Where's the proof they're actually trying to get it financed at all?” Darcy asked the Planning Commission Chairman Kirby Trumbo at a recent group interview with county leaders.

“I don't believe we're obligated to investigate whether they're a viable operation or not,” he answered.

“What would stimulate somebody to start asking questions?” asked Darcy.

“This!” he said.

And while Las Vegas waits for the county to investigate, many wonder whether anything will ever be done with the El Rancho, but they aren't holding their breath.

“I haven't purchased my tickets to the show yet. I'm deciding to withhold judgment but I'm not purchasing my tickets to the Countryland show,” says Smith.

There is one man who says the show may go on– a wealthy businessman who says he plans to make a genuine offer to purchase this place in the next few months. He wouldn't go on camera for fear that potential partners or investors would associate him with El Rancho's shady ownership. But the El Rancho story doesn't end here.

Our News 3 investigation is expanding as national television and print news magazines are planning stories surrounding two of El Rancho's past owners, particularly Tony Coelho, Al Gore's campaign manager.

News 3's investigation will also continue.

KJC