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To: Ice Cube who wrote (6716)1/29/2000 7:10:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10354
 
Not true. Continental Capital has 50 employees of which 40 are PR types. They work a lot of stocks like UTCC, BTWS et al.



To: Ice Cube who wrote (6716)2/1/2000 1:54:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 10354
 
Movie "Boiler Room" Wins "Thumbs Up" From Top State Securities Cop The soon-to-be-released motion picture "Boiler Room" won praise today from the nation's top state securities cop for shining the spotlight on a criminal subculture on Wall Street that has stolen hundreds of
millions-perhaps billions-of dollars from investors.

"[Writer-director] Ben Younger deserves to be commended for this
realistic, insider's view" of crime at a fly-by-night brokerage firm.
"A movie in the multiplex reaches a far wider audience than
securities regulators can ever hope to," says Bradley Skolnik,
Indiana's Securities Commissioner and president of the North American
Securities Administrators Association (NASAA).û

The movie, to be released on February 18th by New Line Cinema and
starring Ben Affleck and Giovani Ribisi, focuses on the "boiler room
boys" at a fictional Long Island "bucket shop," J.T. Marlin. College
drop out Seth Davis (Ribisi) is lured by J.T. Marlin's chief
recruiter (Affleck) with promises of big commissions for selling
dubious stocks over the telephone. The boiler room boys alternately
charm, manipulate and bully their prey. "If you don't want a piece of
this action, you're not alive," goes a line from the movie's web
site, mimicking the aggressive tone of a boiler room broker.

As is typical in so-called microcap stock fraud, the buyers are charged
huge (and illegal) commissions, and once the price of the "house
stock" is driven high enough, insiders sell, making big profits for
themselves and often wiping out the savings of investors.

"What we want people to take away from this movie is this: These boiler
room operations simply steal people's money by lying. These aren't
investment houses, they're criminal enterprises and we're committed
to putting the people behind them behind bars," says Skolnik.

In recent years, state, industry and federal regulators have cracked
down on notorious microcap stock brokerages such as Stratton Oakmont,
A.R. Baron and Duke & Company.ý Brokers and principals at those and
similar firms have been convicted and sentenced to prison. While the
big microcap boiler room operations have been shut, the problem
remains serious. "Some boiler room crooks simply moved across the
street and set up smaller operations," says Skolnik. "Others moved
into 'off market' investment schemes like phony prime bank notes,
foreign exchange trading programs or other scams.ü The New York City
area and south Florida are havens for boiler rooms pushing stocks;
boiler rooms in California and Canada promote other scams.4

While praising the movie's realism--Boiler Room's web site features a
glossary of boiler room lingo and writer-director Lyon spent a year
on research after attending a boiler room recruiting session-- Skolnik cautions
that the film is drama not documentary. "We need to keep it in
perspective." J.T. Marlin and its manipulative brokers make up "a
tiny tiny minority on Wall Street. The vast majority of stock brokers
are ethical professionals who, out of enlightened self- interest, work hard
for their clients."

By focusing on the story of the boiler room boys, Skolnik notes, the
film necessarily had to devote less time to the victims of securities
fraud. "As regulators, we see the terrible human toll-the ruined
lives and broken dreams-that these criminals cause."

To protect themselves, investors should hang up on aggressive cold
callers, regulators agree. Baby Boomers with elderly parents, a
frequent target to boiler room crooks, should buy them answering
machines and urge them to screen their calls, advises Tanya Solov,
director of the Illinois Securities Division.

Before doing business with a broker, call the regulators to check them
out. The broker's education, work and disciplinary history, if any,
is available from state securities regulators and the National
Association of Securities Dealers (NASD). For the telephone number of
your state regulator, look in the white pages of your phone book
under "Government" or call NASAA at (202) 737-0900 or visit the
group's website (www.nasaa.org). The NASD has a toll-free hotline to
check out brokers 800/289-9999. You can also request a broker's
record online at www.nasdr.com.