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To: allen v.w. who wrote (35738)6/21/2000 8:28:00 AM
From: Pete Summers  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 40688
 
OT: Chat board cheat forced to post retraction

Last Update: 1:49 AM ET June 21, 2000
NewsWatch

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man accused of posing as a former
executive of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. on an Internet
message board has been ordered to post a message on the
same board under a new name - "Retraction."

The California Department of Corporations, which regulates
securities trading, won a settlement Tuesday with Victor
Idrovo, a Manhattan Beach investor accused of posting
fraudulent messages to influence the stock price of MGM
(MGM: news, msgs).

The state alleged that Idrovo posted two messages in 1999 in
a Yahoo (YHOO: news, msgs) message board devoted to
discussing the stock of MGM. Idrovo used the Internet
nickname "FrankGMancuso," leading others to believe he was
the former chairman and chief executive officer of MGM.
Mancuso is still on the company's board of directors.

One message, posted last April, seemed
designed to get investors to buy the stock. It
was headlined "Kirk says $24 a share" and
led investors to believe that "Mancuso" had
inside information from Kirk Kerkorian,
MGM's majority stockholder. At the time the
message was posted, MGM stock was trading
around $15 per share.

A second message, posted in October, was
headed "Let the selling begin" at a time when
the stock was trading at slightly over $20 per
share.

Neither message succeeded in moving MGM
stock significantly and state regulators say
Idrovo did not profit from the trading he was
doing at the time of his postings.

"That's not the point," said Marc Crandall,
lead counsel of Internet Compliance and
Enforcement. "It caused a lot of problems on
the message boards and we don't think it
should be tolerated."

Crandall said Idrovo cooperated in the inquiry, as did Yahoo
and MGM.

MGM issued a brief statement saying it would cooperate with
any other state or federal investigations of the matter.

"This successful legal action should send a clear message to
others who try to manipulate stock prices, particularly short
sellers, by spreading false information," the statement read.

Tuesday's settlement does not require Idrovo to admit or deny
any wrongdoing. The state won an injunction barring Idrovo
from posting any more fraudulent messages. In addition,
Idrovo must pay the state $4,500 in fines and costs. He must
also post a message on the same Yahoo chat board under the
Internet nickname, "Retraction."