and mpre BCSC talks tough on offshore insiders
Donner Minerals Ltd DML Shares issued 31,689,657 1999-12-21 close $0.11 Tuesday Dec 21 1999 See B.C. Securities Commission (BCSEC) Street Wire by Brent Mudry With a second associate of banned Vancouver promoter Terry Alexander facing regulatory jeopardy for alleged illicit and illegal offshore dealings, the British Columbia Securities Commission's long-awaited and much-overdue crackdown on Howe Street's proliferation of shady offshore deals is picking up steam. On Tuesday, a few days after fining Michael Seifert $450,000 and banning the disgraced Maitland & Co. star securities lawyer for 12 years, the BCSC targeted his long-time close associate, David Michael Patterson. The regulator claims Mr. Patterson, an active promoter on the former Vancouver Stock Exchange, the exchange formerly known as the Scam Capital of the World, hid his offshore dealing in five companies, including his once-flagship Donner Minerals. While BCSC officials cannot comment directly on Mr. Patterson's case, as he is presumed innocent pending a hearing or settlement, the regulator is keen to warn Howe Street of its belated intolerance for dubious offshore dealings. "We have seen a number of cases where persons in B.C. are trading through offshore accounts and not reporting, when they have insider interests," BCSC enforcement director Sacha Angus told Stockwatch. "We are trying to send a message that this practice must cease ... it's invidious .. it's got to stop," says Mr. Angus. The Patterson citation shows the BCSC's offshore investigation into Mr. Alexander's Arakis Energy affairs, which included several trips to the secretive offshore enclave of the Channel Islands, proved fruitful. In February, Mr. Alexander was fined $1.2-million and banned for 20 years in a settlement with the BCSC. On Friday, in another negotiated settlement, Mr. Seifert agreed to pay a $250,000 fine and $200,000 in investigation costs and put himself in a 12-year penalty box for setting up Arakis's million-share Anthem gift to shadowy European "investors" and his own secret offshore dealings. Mr. Patterson's own troubles trace back to the same offshore dodge which tripped up Mr. Seifert, in Jersey in the Channel Islands. The BCSC claims the stock promoter, who set up a secret Jersey account in September of 1990, exactly one year after Mr. Seifert set up his own secret account in the same house, traded shares of Donner, Crazy Horse Industries, Allied Strategies, Zicor Mining, Consolidated Valley Ventures and Prairie Rose Resources, but repeatedly forgot to make any disclosure to either securities regulators or the general public. In its offshore probe, the BCSC discovered that in September of 1990, the VSE stock promoter set up the D. Patterson Trust through RYCO Trust in Jersey. The Patterson Trust, was also known as JT167, but it is unknown if this is a reference to Mr. Alexander, also known as J.T. Alexander. RYCO served as trustee of the trust, with Mr. Patterson nominating his wife, his daughter, his parents and his parents-in-law as beneficiaries. The same month he established the account, Mr. Patterson allegedly directed RYCO to acquire Bray International, a holding shell in another offshore enclave, the British Virgin Islands. DONNER Mr. Patterson, the president and chief executive of Donner, was a busy secret trader in his company's shares for at least 14 months. The BCSC claims that between Nov. 27, 1995, and Jan. 10, 1997, the Bray account bought 80,500 shares for $112,200 in 18 trades and sold 40,900 shares for $66,700 in 12 trades, all unreported. The secret Bray account also received in 242,000 Donner shares and delivered or transfered out 267,000 shares. Donner has been a favourite of Vancouver and offshore Howe Street followers for several years. A private placement in April of 1998 featured such buyers as Michael and Gwen Seifert, Mr. Seifert's New York partner Joseph Sierchio, his and Mr. Patterson's associates Harvey Keats and Colin Watt, and then-Yorkton Securities chairman Robert Cross's Can Oro Consulting. The offshore buyers included secretive Swiss financier Carlo Civelli, backer of countless VSE deals and Laiy Ltd., a Nassau account. A large private placement of five million units at 20 cents this February featured a stronger offshore contingent. Mr. Civelli's Clarion Finanz bought 500,000 units, followed by Scorpio Services, a Jersey post box account, with 250,000 units, and Synergy International Facilitators Ltd., housed in another Nassau post box, with 125,000 units. Mr. Patterson bought the same amount as Mr. Civelli's mystery client: 500,000 shares. CRAZY HORSE Mr. Patterson was also active offshore in trading of Crazy Horse, according to regulators. The promoter served as Crazy Horse's president, CEO and chief financial officer. Between Dec. 31, 1996, and Jan. 6, 1997, the secret Bray account transferred out 339,500 shares in two trades, but the forgetful Mr. Patterson again neglected to tell anyone besides his family and close associates. Crazy Horse was also a popular Howe Street promotion. An Aug. 14, 1996, private placement of 360,000 special warrants at 37 cents featured such buyers as Mr. Patterson's close associate Barry Ching, using ARC Capital Management in Jersey, Pacific International Securities brokers Michael Patterson and Dirk Rachfall, arrested this summer by the FBI in an unrelated mob deal, Harold Hodgson of Haywood Securities and Brad Birada of McDermid St. Lawrence Securities, each with 100,000 units. A large financing of four million units at 15 cents in April of 1998 featured such buyers as Mr. Patterson, associates Mr. Seifert, Colin Watt, Harvey Keats, Mr. Ching, using a different offshore post box, and Mr. Sierchio, along with Mr. Civelli's Clarion, Maitland managing partner Ross McCutcheon and newsletter writers Bob Bishop and Peter Grandich. Later that year, Mr. Cross's Oro, Mr. Matthews and Harold Hodgson's boss, John Tognetti, bought in, along with Chris and Jamie Storrow. It is not known whether the latter pair are related to prominent defence lawyer Mr. Storrow, who negotiated Mr. Seifert's BCSC settlement and recently represented the P.I. brokers Mr. Patteron and Mr. Rachfall. ALLIED STRATEGIES Mr. Patterson's cited offshore trading began in December of 1993, when his Bray account bought 495,000 special warrants of Allied Strategies for $594,000, while he served as a director. Allied was quite a favourite of Thai financier Rakesh Saxena, now holed up in Vancouver fighting extradition for his alleged key roles in massive frauds at the Bangkok Bank of Commerce. ZICOR The BCSC also claims that between March of 1995 and December of 1996, Mr. Patterson's secret Bray account sold 59,000 shares of Zicor in 14 trades for $34,600, which the account had received in. Although Mr. Patterson was a director of Zicor, he forgot to disclose his trades. Zicor, renamed Mano River, remains an offshore favourite. In a Sept. 16, 1998, vend-in valued at $7.24-million (U.S.), Mano paid 40.83 million shares to a variety of offshore accounts all care of Vector XXI Finance SA of Switzerland. CONSOLIDATED VALLEY The BCSC also claims Mr. Patterson used his Bray account to secretly buy a modest 60,000 units of Consolidated Valley while he was a director. In this contentious 30-cent placement, he also bought 60,000 shares in his own name. The other Howe Street buyers include Mr. Seifert, with 25,000 shares and fellow Howe Street lawyer Bernie Zinkhofer, with 20,000 shares. Barbara Dunfield's 458685 B.C. and Ian Rozier's Heritage Mineral Investments each bought about 250,000 shares, while the biggest buyer was offshore: Zolarium Ltd. of Hong Kong, with 450,000 shares. Zolarium also showed up in two 1995 private placements, including leading a one-million unit 38-cent financing with 350,000 units. Although Consolidated Valley later changed names to CVL Resources, with Ian Rozier now serving as president and chief executive, its offshore flavour remains. The company's last major filing, on Sept. 14, was for 500,000 incentive stock options at 45 cents to Milet Global Corp., which operates out of the secretive haven of Tortola in the British Virgin Islands. In November of 1997, close to four years after Bray's dubious private placement, Milet was the major buyer in another placement of 12 million shares at 60 cents. Milet bought 4.85 million shares, while Incidental Holdings Ltd., which operates out of the Offshore Incorporation Centre in Tortola, purchased the same amount. A private placement of 3.6 million special warrants at $1.50 in early 1996 featured a host of Howe Street notables, including penny-stock-boosted mutual funds, First Marathon Securities brokers, a few Canaccord Capital associates and the requisite offshore accounts. Fund manager Steve Misener's BPI Canadian Small Cap Fund was the biggest buyer, with 700,000 units and his BPI Small Cap Fund, with 300,000 units, while now-disgraced fund manager Frank Mersch's Altamira Management bought 300,000 units. First Marathon's Vancouver brokers and clients took down 635,000 shares, including Cartaway Resources engineers Blayne Johnson and Rob Hartvikson, with about 100,000 units each. The Canaccord buyers included Peter Brown's MacLachlan Investments, CLD Financial Opportunities and Goosly Resources, each with 100,000 shares. The offshore buyers included such familiar Howe Street faces and fronts as Euroswiss Securities of Jersey, Societe Bancaire Julius Baer, Cantrade Ormond Burrus Banque Privee, both of Geneva and Bunnaton of Hong Kong, each with 100,000 units, Midland Bank Trust of London, with 400,000 units, and Indian Investments, which operates out of a post box in the Republic of Suriname, with 75,000 units. It may be that the BCSC sees a pattern here. |