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To: Jim Bishop who wrote (52460)6/24/2000 7:27:00 AM
From: ChrisJP  Respond to of 150070
 
WOOO ! WOOO ! WOOO ! HIDE YOUR WALLETS ! ROTFLMAO ! :-))

Chris



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (52460)6/24/2000 1:33:00 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
ccspubs.com

SEC Rule 15g-9 Rule 3a51-1 - Definition of "Penny Stock" Penny Stock Disclosure

SEC Rule 15g-9

Broker/dealers should be aware of the SEC's PS Rules and specifically 15g-9, formerly called the "Cold Call" Rule.

240.15g-9 Sales Practice Requirements For Certain Low-Priced Securities.

a. As a means reasonably designed to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, or manipulative acts or practices, it shall be unlawful for a broker or dealer to sell a penny stock to, or to effect the purchase of a penny stock by, any person unless:

The transaction is exempt under paragraph (c) of this rule; or
Prior to the transaction:
(i)The broker or dealer has approved the person's account for transactions in penny stocks in accordance with the procedures set forth in paragraph (b); and
(ii) The broker or dealer has received from the person a written agreement to the transaction setting forth the identity and quantity of the penny stock to be purchased.
b. In order to approve a person's account for transactions in penny stocks, the broker or dealer must:

Obtain from the person information concerning the person's financial situation, investment experience, and investment objectives;
Reasonably determine, based on the information required by paragraph (b)(1) and any other information known by the broker/dealer, that transactions in penny stocks are suitable for the person, and that the person (or the person's independent adviser in these transactions) has sufficient knowledge and experience in financial matters that the person (or the person's independent adviser in these transactions) reasonably may be expected to be capable of evaluating the risks of transactions in penny stocks;
Deliver to the person a written statement:
(i) Setting forth the basis on which the broker or dealer made the determination required by paragraph (b)(2);
(ii) Stating in a highlighted format that it is unlawful for the broker or dealer to effect a transaction in a penny stock subject to the provisions of paragraph (a)(2) unless the broker or dealer has received, prior to the transaction, a written agreement to the transaction from the person; and
(iii) Stating in a highlighted format immediately preceding the customer signature line that:
A. The broker or dealer is required by this rule to provide the person with the written statement; and
B. The person should not sign and return the written statement to the broker or dealer if it does not accurately reflect the person's financial situation, investment experience, and investment objectives; and
Obtain from the person a manually signed and dated copy of the written statement required by paragraph (b)(3).
c. For purposes of this section, the following transactions shall be exempt:

Transactions that are exempt under 17 CFR 240.15g-1 (a), (b), (d), (e), and (f).
Transactions that meet the requirements of 17 CFR 230.505 or 230.506 (including, where applicable, the requirements of 17 CFR 230.501 through 230.503, and 17 CFR 230.507 through 230.508), or transactions with an issuer not involving any public offering pursuant to section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933.
Transactions in which the purchaser is an established customer of the broker or dealer.
d. For purposes of this section:

The term "penny stock" shall have the same meaning as in 17 CFR 240.3a51-1.
The term "established customer" shall mean any person for whom the broker or dealer, or a clearing broker on behalf of such broker or dealer, carries an account, and who in such account:
(i) Has effected a securities transaction, or made a deposit of funds or securities, more than one year previously; or
(ii) Has made three purchases of penny stocks that occurred on separate days and involved different issuers.
[54 FR 35481, Aug. 28, 1989; 58 FR 37417, July 12, 1993]

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Rule 3a51-1 - Definition of "Penny Stock"

For purposes of section 3(a)51 of the Act, the term "penny stock" shall mean any equity security other than a security:

a. That is a reported security, as defined in Rule 11Aa3-1(a) of this chapter; except that a security that is registered on the American Stock Exchange, Inc. pursuant to the listing criteria of the Emerging Company Marketplace, but that does not otherwise satisfy the requirements of paragraph (b), (c), or (d) of this section, shall be a penny stock for purposes of section 15(b)(6) of the Act;

b.That is issued by an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940;

c.That is a put or call option issued by the Options Clearing Corporation;

d.Except for purposes of section 7(b) of the Securities Act and Rule 419, that has a price of five dollars or more;

For purposes of paragraph (d) of this section:
i. A security has a price of five dollars or more for a particular transaction if the security is purchased or sold in thattransaction at a price of five dollars or more, excluding any broker or dealer commission, commission equivalent, mark-up,or mark-down; and
ii. Other than in connection with a particular transaction, a security has a price of five dollars or more at a given time if the inside bid quotation is five dollars or more; provided, however, that if there is no such inside bid quotation, a security has a price of five dollars or more at a given time if the average of three or more interdealer bid quotations at specified prices displayed at that time in an interdealer quotation system, as defined in Rule 15c2-7(c)1, by three or more market makers in the security, is five dollars or more.
iii. The term "inside bid quotation" shall mean the highest bid quotation for the security displayed by a market maker in the security on an automated interdealer quotation system that has the characteristics set forth in section 178(b)2 of the Act, or such other automated interdealer quotation system designated by the Commission for purposes of this section, at any time in which at least two market makers are contemporaneously displaying on such system bid and offer quotations for the security at specified prices.
If a security is a unit composed of one or more securities, the unit price divided by the number of shares of the unit that are not warrants, options, rights, or similar securities must be five dollars or more, as determined in accordance with paragraph (d)1 of this section, and any share of the unit that is a warrant, option, right, or similar security, or a convertible security, must have an exercise price or conversion price of five dollars or more;
e. That is registered, or approved for registration upon notice of issuance, on a national securities exchange that makes transaction reports available pursuant to Rule 11Aa3-1 of this chapter, provided that:

Price and volume information with respect to transactions in that security is required to be reported on a current and continuing basis and is made available to vendors of market information pursuant to the rules of the national securities exchange; and
The security is purchased or sold in a transaction that is effected on or through the facilities of the national securities exchange, or that is part of a distribution of the security; except that a security that satisfies the requirements of this paragraph, but that does not otherwise satisfy the requirements of paragraph (a), (b), (c), or (d) of this section, shall be a penny stock for purposes of Section 15(b)(6) of the Act;
f. That is authorized, or approved for authorization upon notice of issuance, for quotation in the National Association of Securities Dealers' Automated Quotation system (NASDAQ), provided that price and volume information with respect to transactions in that security is required to be reported on a current and continuing basis and is made available to vendors of market information pursuant to the rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.; except that a security that satisfies the requirements of this paragraph, but that does not otherwise satisfy the requirements of paragraphs (a), (b), (c), or (d) of this section, shall be a penny stock for purposes of Section 15(b)(6) of the Act; or

g. Whose issuer has:

Net tangible assets (i.e. total assets less intangible assets and liabilities) in excess of $2,000,000, if the issuer has been in continuous operation for least three years, or $5,000,000, if the issuer has been in continuous operation for less than three years; or
Average revenue of at least $6,000,000 for the last three years.
For purposes of paragraph (g) of this section, net tangible assets or average revenues must be demonstrated by financial statements dated less than fifteen months prior to the date of the transaction that the broker or dealer has reviewed and has a reasonable basis for believing are accurate in relation to the date of the transaction, and:
i. If the issuer is other than a foreign private issuer, are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been audited and reported on by an independent public accountant in accordance with the provisions of Rule 2-02; or
ii. If the issuer is a foreign private issuer, are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been filed with the Commission or furnished to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b); provided, however, that if financial statements for the issuer dated less than fifteen months prior to the date of the transaction have not been filed with or furnished to the Commission, financial statements dated within fifteen months prior to the transaction shall be prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the country of incorporation, audited in compliance with the requirements of that jurisdiction, and reported on by an accountant duly registered and in good standing in accordance with the regulations of that jurisdiction.
The broker or dealer shall preserve, as part of its records, copies of the financial statements required by paragraph (g)3 of this section for the period specified in Rule 17a-4(b).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Penny Stock Disclosure

General Rules and Regulations promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Rule 15g-100 - Schedule 15G-Information to be Included in the Document Distributed Pursuant to 17 CFR Rule 15g-2

Securities and Exchange Commission Washington, DC 20549

Schedule 15G Under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Important Information on Penny Stocks

This statement is required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and contains important information on penny stocks. Your broker-dealer is required to obtain your signature to show that you have received this statement before your first trade in a penny stock. You are urged to read this statement before signing and before making a purchase or sale of a penny stock.

Penny stocks can be very risky.

Penny stocks are low-priced shares of small companies not traded on an exchange or quoted on NASDAQ. Prices often are not available. Investors in penny stocks often are unable to sell stock back to the dealer that sold them the stock. Thus, you may lose your investment. Be cautious of newly issued penny stock.

Your salesperson is not an impartial advisor but is paid to sell you the stock. Do not rely only on the salesperson, but seek outside advice before you buy any stock. If you have problems with a salesperson, contact the firm's compliance officer or the regulators listed below.

Information you should get.

Before you buy penny stock, federal law requires your salesperson to tell you the "offer" and the "bid" on the stock, and the "compensation" the salesperson and the firm receive for the trade. The firm also must mail a confirmation of these prices to you after the trade.

You will need this price information to determine what profit, if any, you will have when you sell your stock. The offer price is the wholesale price at which the dealer is willing to sell stock to other dealers. The bid price is the wholesale price at which the dealer is willing to buy the stock from other dealers. In its trade with you, the dealer may add a retail charge to these wholesale prices as compensation (called a "markup" or "markdown").

The difference between the bid and the offer price is the dealer's "spread." A spread that is large compared with the purchase price can make a resale of a stock very costly. To be profitable when you sell, the bid price of your stock must rise above the amount of this spread and the compensation charged by both your selling and purchasing dealers. If the dealer has no bid price, you may not be able to sell the stock after you buy it, and may lose your whole investment.

Brokers' duties and customer's rights and remedies.

If you are a victim of fraud, you may have rights and remedies under state and federal law. You can get the disciplinary history of a salesperson or firm from the NASD at 1-800-289-9999, and additional information from your state securities official, at the North American Securities Administrators Association's central number: (202) 737-0900. You also may contact the SEC with complaints at (202) 272-7440.

Further Information

The securities being sold to you have not been approved or disapproved by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Moreover, the Securities and Exchange Commission has not passed upon the fairness or the merits of this transaction nor upon the accuracy or adequacy of the information contained in any prospectus or any other information provided by an issuer or a broker or dealer.

Generally, penny stock is a security that:

Is priced under five dollars;
Is not traded on a national stock exchange or on NASDAQ (the NASD's automated quotation system for actively traded stocks);
May be listed in the "pink sheets" or the NASD OTC Bulletin Board;
Is issued by a company that has less than $5 million in net tangible assets and has been in business less than three years, by a company that has under $2 million in net tangible assets and has been in business for at least three years, or by a company that has revenues of $6 million for 3 years.
Use Caution When Investing in Penny Stocks

Do not make a hurried investment decision. High-pressure sales techniques can be a warning sign of fraud. The salesperson is not an impartial advisor, but is paid for selling stock to you. The salesperson also does not have to watch your investment for you. Thus, you should think over the offer and seek outside advice. Check to see if the information given by the salesperson differs from other information you may have. Also, it is illegal for salespersons to promise that a stock will increase in value or is risk-free, or to guarantee against loss. If you think there is a problem, ask to speak with a compliance official at the firm, and, if necessary, any of the regulators referred to in this statement.

Study the company issuing the stock. Be wary of companies that have no operating history, few assets, or no defined business purpose. These may be sham or "shell" corporations. Read the prospectus for the company carefully before you invest. Some dealers fraudulently solicit investors' money to buy stock in sham companies, artificially inflate the stock prices, then cash in their profits before public investors can sell their stock.

Understand the risky nature of these stocks. You should be aware that you may lose part or all of your investment. Because of large dealer spreads, you will not be able to sell the stock immediately back to the dealer at the same price it sold the stock to you. In some cases, the stock may fall quickly in value. New companies, whose stock is sold in an "initial public offering," often are riskier investments. Try to find out if the shares the salesperson wants to sell you are part of such an offering. Your salesperson must give you a "prospectus" in an initial public offering, but the financial condition shown in the prospectus of new companies can change very quickly.

Know the brokerage firm and the salespeople with whom you are dealing. Because of the nature of the market for penny stock, you may have to rely solely on the original brokerage firm that sold you the stock for prices and to buy the stock back from you. Ask the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (NASD) or your state securities regulator, which is a member of the North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc. (NASAA), about the licensing and disciplinary record of the brokerage firm and the salesperson contacting you. The telephone numbers of the NASD and NASAA are listed on the first page of this document.

Be cautious if your salesperson leaves the firm. If the salesperson who sold you the stock leaves his or her firm, the firm may reassign your account to a new salesperson. If you have problems, ask to speak to the firm's branch office manager or a compliance officer. Although the departing salesperson may ask you to transfer your stock to his or her new firm, you do not have to do so. Get information on the new firm. Be wary of requests to sell your securities when the salesperson transfers to a new firm. Also, you have the right to get your stock certificate from your selling firm. You do not have to leave the certificate with that firm or any other firm.

Your Rights

Disclosures to you. Under penalty of federal law, your brokerage firm must tell you the following information at two different times-before you agree to buy or sell a penny stock, and after the trade, by written confirmation:

The bid and offer price quotes for penny stock, and the number of shares to which the quoted prices apply. The bid and offer quotes are the wholesale prices at which dealers trade among themselves. These prices give you an idea of the market value of the stock. The dealer must tell you these price quotes if they appear on an automated quotation system approved by the SEC. If not, the dealer must use its own quotes or trade prices. You should calculate the spread, the difference between the bid and offer quotes, to help decide if buying the stock is a good investment.

A lack of quotes may mean that the market among dealers is not active. It thus may be difficult to resell the stock. You also should be aware that the actual price charged to you for the stock may differ from the price quoted to you for 100 shares. You should therefore determine, before you agree to a purchase, what the actual sales price (before the markup) will be for the exact number of shares you want to buy.

The brokerage firm's compensation for the trade. A markup is the amount a dealer adds to the wholesale offer price of the stock and a markdown is the amount it subtracts from the wholesale bid price of the stock as compensation. A markup/markdown usually serves the same role as a broker's commission on a trade. Most of the firms in the penny stock market will be dealers, not brokers.

The compensation received by the brokerage firm's salesperson for the trade. The brokerage firm must disclose to you, as a total sum, the cash compensation of your salesperson for the trade that is known at the time of the trade. The firm must describe in the written confirmation the nature of any other compensation of your salesperson that is unknown at the time of the trade.

In addition to the items listed above, your brokerage firm must send to you:

Monthly account statements. In general, your brokerage firm must send you a monthly statement that gives an estimate of the value of each penny stock in your account, if there is enough information to make an estimate. If the firm has not bought or sold any penny stocks for your account for six months, it can provide these statements every three months.
A Written Statement of Your Financial Situation and Investment Goals. In general, unless you have had an account with your brokerage firm for more than one year, or you have previously bought three different penny stocks from that firm, your brokerage firm must send you a written statement for you to sign that accurately describes your financial situation, your investment experience, and your investment goals, and that contains a statement of why your firm decided that penny stocks are a suitable investment for you. The firm also must get your written consent to buy the penny stock.
Legal remedies

If penny stocks are sold to you in violation of your rights listed above, or other federal or state securities laws, you may be able to cancel your purchase and get your money back. If the stocks are sold in a fraudulent manner, you may be able to sue the persons and firms that caused the fraud for damages. If you have signed an arbitration agreement, however, you may have to pursue your claim through arbitration. You may wish to contact an attorney. The SEC is not authorized to represent individuals in private litigation.

However, to protect yourself and other investors, you should report any violations of your brokerage firm's duties listed above and other securities laws to the SEC, the NASD, or your state securities administrator at the telephone numbers on the first page of this document. These bodies have the power to stop fraudulent and abusive activity of salespersons and firms engaged in the securities business. Or you can write to the SEC at 450 Fifth St., NW., Washington, DC 20549; the NASD at 1735 K Street, NW., Washington, DC 20006; or NASAA at 555 New Jersey Avenue, NW., Suite 750, Washington, DC 20001. NASAA will give you the telephone number of your state's securities agency. If there is any disciplinary record of a person or a firm, the NASD, NASAA, or your state securities regulator will send you this information if you ask for it.

Market Information

The market for penny stocks. Penny stocks usually are not listed on an exchange or quoted on the NASDAQ system. Instead, they are traded between dealers on the telephone in the "over-the-counter" market. The NASD's OTC Bulletin Board also will contain information on some penny stocks. At times, however, price information for these stocks is not publicly available.

Market domination

In some cases, only one or two dealers, acting as "market makers," may be buying and selling a given stock. You should first ask if a firm is acting as a broker (your agent) or as a dealer. A dealer buys stock itself to fill your order or already owns the stock. A market maker is a dealer who holds itself out as ready to buy and sell stock on a regular basis. If the firm is a market maker, ask how many other market makers are dealing in the stock to see if the firm (or group of firms) dominates the market. When there are only one or two market makers, there is a risk that the dealer or group of dealers may control the market in that stock and set prices that are not based on competitive forces. In recent years, some market makers have created fraudulent markets in certain penny stocks, so that stock prices rose suddenly, but collapsed just as quickly, at a loss to investors.

Mark-ups and mark-downs. The actual price that the customer pays usually includes the mark-up or mark-down. Markups and markdowns are direct profits for the firm and its salespeople, so you should be aware of such amounts to assess the overall value of the trade.

The "spread."

The difference between the bid and offer price is the spread. Like a mark-up or mark-down, the spread is another source of profit for the brokerage firm and compensates the firm for the risk of owning the stock. A large spread can make a trade very expensive to an investor. For some penny stocks, the spread between the bid and offer may be a large part of the purchase price of the stock. Where the bid price is much lower than the offer price, the market value of the stock must rise substantially before the stock can be sold at a profit. Moreover, an investor may experience substantial losses if the stock must be sold immediately.

Example: If the bid is $0.04 per share and the offer is $0.10 per share, the spread (difference) is $0.06, which appears to be a small amount. But you would lose $0.06 on every share that you bought for $0.10 if you had to sell that stock immediately to the same firm. If you had invested $5,000 at the $0.10 offer price, the market maker's repurchase price, at $0.04 bid, would be only $2,000; thus you would lose $3,000, or more than half of your investment, if you decided to sell the stock. In addition, you would have to pay compensation (a "mark-up," "mark-down," or commission) to buy and sell the stock. In addition to the amount of the spread, the price of your stock must rise enough to make up for the compensation that the dealer charged you when it first sold you the stock. Then, when you want to resell the stock, a dealer again will charge compensation, in the form of a markdown. The dealer subtracts the markdown from the price of the stock when it buys the stock from you. Thus, to make a profit, the bid price of your stock must rise above the amount of the original spread, the markup, and the markdown.

Primary offerings

Most penny stocks are sold to the public on an ongoing basis. However, dealers sometimes sell these stocks in initial public offerings. You should pay special attention to stocks of companies that have never been offered to the public before because the market for these stocks is untested. Because the offering is on a first-time basis, there is generally no market information about the stock to help determine its value. The federal securities laws generally require broker-dealers to give investors a "prospectus," which contains information about the objectives, management, and financial condition of the issuer. In the absence of market information, investors should read the company's prospectus with special care to find out if the stocks are a good investment. However, the prospectus is only a description of the current condition of the company. The outlook of the start-up companies described in a prospectus often is very uncertain.

For more information about penny stocks, contact the Office of Filings, Information, and Consumer Services of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington, DC 20549, (202) 272-7440.



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (52460)6/24/2000 1:38:00 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
stockjustice.com

Is one of your stocks being illegally manipulated?
Tell the SEC about it NOW!
SEC Division of Enforcement

Enforcement Complaint Center
Mail Stop 8-4
450 Fifth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20549
Fax Number is:(202) 942-9618
Toll Free Number is: 1-800-SEC-0330

Also try:

e-mailing to enforcement@sec.gov
your complaint and your Name, Address, & Phone
or
Mail your complaint to
care of O.I.E.A. U.S. SEC
450 5th Street N.W. mail stop 2-13
Washington, D.C. 20549


___________________________________



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (52460)6/24/2000 1:39:00 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
bosbbb.org

Penny Stock Frauds

Consumer Information Sponsored by Member Businesses

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Penny stock swindles are now the number 1 threat of fraud and abuse facing small investors in the United States. A September 1989 report by the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) to the U.S. House Telecommunications and Finance Subcommittee estimates that Americans lose at least $2 billion each year as a result of schemes involving penny stocks - the shadowy netherworld of the U.S. equity markets. NASAA found that the penny stock industry increasingly is dominated by utterly worthless or highly dubious securities offerings that are systematically manipulated by repeat offenders of state and federal securities laws and other felons, some of whom have been identified as having ties to organized crime.
Since unmanipulated penny stock investors are believed to lose all or some of their investment 70 percent of the time and the presence of fraud pushes up that figure to 90 percent, abusive promoters of these low-priced securities rely on sophisticated, high-pressure telemarketing techniques to lure in hundreds of thousands of new, unsophisticated investors, a majority of whom appear to be first time entrants to the market and are clearly unsuitable candidates for risky penny stoc

The consumer bulletin is a joint effort of NASAA, the national organization of the 50 state securities agencies and the Council of Better Business Bureaus (CBBB). Research for this NASAA/CBBB bulletin revealed numerous indications of the growing national scope of the penny stock problem. New penny stock investigations opened by state securities agencies of penny stock cases rose 97 percent from 1987 to 1988, according to the September 1989 NASAA report. During the same period, small investor reports of penny stock fraud and abuse climbed 51 percent. State securities agencies reported a two-year total of almost 4,500 penny stock related consumer complaints, with 1,767 logged in 1987 and another 2,660 made in 1988.

PENNY STOCKS: FROM COTTAGE INDUSTRY TO THE BIG TIME
Abuse of penny stocks, which are low-priced securities trading from as little as a penny to as much as $5 a share, is not new and dates back at least to the 1940's and 1950's, a period when worthless shares in uranium mine stocks were bought and sold over the counter of a Salt Lake City coffee shop. However, it is only in the last decade that broker-dealers specializing in penny stocks have grown from a handful of small firms plagued by fits and starts to a booming, multi-billion dollar national growth industry. Since 1983, the U.S. penny stock marketplace has undergone dramatic and disturbing changes:

Penny stocks have evolved from a primarily regional phenomenon (with active penny markets in Denver, Utah and Spokane), to a problem of truly national proportions. The number of firms specializing in penny stock trading has increased almost five-fold in recent years. Half a decade ago, 55 penny stock firms were headquartered in fewer than 6 states. Today, an estimated 325 penny stock firms have set up main offices in 29 states employing several thousand brokers at more than a thousand branch offices that now reach down into even the smallest communities of America.

Trading in penny stocks is extremely lucrative, with broker-dealers and individual stockbrokers taking in massive profits far in excess of what is attainable in the mainstream of the securities brokerage industry. In 1987, the president of one penny stock firm drew a salary of between $7.4-$9 million, more than the combined reported salaries and bonuses of the chief executive officers (CEO's) of Merrill Lynch & Co., Shearson Lehman Hutton and First Boston. Many individual penny stock brokers earn $20,000 to $50,000 a month or more. A now-defunct penny stock firm has at $19 million advertising budget in 1984 and ran ads on evening network news shows and the Super Bowl, where 30 second spots were sold for $300,000. The penny firm's advertising budget was just $1 million dollars under the promotional allocation of the largest brokerage firm in the U.S. In one case, the branch office of a penny stock brokerage made more than $1 million in profit in a single day through its penny stock activities.

The recent ascendancy of so-called "blank-check" blind pools, in which the new company generally has no assets, no employees and no stated business plan, has fueled the spread of fraud and abuse in the penny stock market. Once relatively rare, blind pools accounted for an estimated 70 percent of new penny stock offerings in 1988 and the first half of 1989, compared to less than 5 percent as recently as 1983. A high percentage of blind pools frequently are indirectly controlled by broker-dealers and unnamed promoters, many of whom have been identified as repeat violators of securities laws and felons, who use the offerings as a vehicle for systematic market manipulation. A number of direct links have been made between promoters of "blank-check" blind pool penny stocks and organized crime, according to the NASAA report to Congress.

The names of one or more individuals with a background of violations of securities laws, felony indictments and/or convictions or reported ties to organized crime were found in more than four out of five of the major penny stock enforcement cases examined in the NASAA report to Congress. Two individuals with organized crime backgrounds have been involved in some way at least 40 (11 percent) of the 360 "blank-check" blind pool offerings registered by the SEC since 1985. One of this pair is now in prison in Paris for his alleged part in a global penny stock scheme involving a U.S. take that may have reached $1 billion. The penny stock promoter in question has been identified before Congress and by the Federal Bureau of Investigation as being involved in organized crime, particularly the Genovese crime family in New York. He was barred for life from the securities industry by the SEC in 1966.

HOW THE MARKET WORKS - IN THEORY
Historically, the over the counter (OTC) stockmarket has acted as the birth-place and cradle for many new and expanding companies. It is in this marketplace that many of these companies raise the capital needed to commence, or build upon, existing operations. The process of distributing ownership certificates (stock) is called "initial public offering" (IPO) or a "new issue."

Trades in exchange-listed stocks are facilitated by a stockbroker who seeks the best available price in an auction system, with the transaction taking place on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), or other national or regional stock exchange. OTC trades are carried out within, or between, the trading departments of brokerage firms. These brokerages or, a single brokerage firm, as often is the case in penny stocks, are called "market makers" when they carry an inventory of the stock and quote the prices at which they are willing to buy and sell securities. The difference between the "bid" (the price at which a customer may sell a security) and the "asked" (the price at which a customer may buy a security) is known as the "spread". For instance, if a penny stock in bid at 1 1/2 ($1.50) and asked at 2 ($2), then the spread in 50 cents or 33 percent. This latter amount is the minimum that an investor would have to recoup in order to break even on an investment in the stock.

Since the creation of the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation (NASDAQ) system in 1971, price information on may OTC stocks has appeared in all major newspapers, allowing investors to track bid and ask quotations. However, this same information is almost unavailable for "pink" sheet penny stocks, leaving the unwary investor at the mercy of whatever quotes are supplied by the broker-dealer, who, in any event, may be the only market maker trading in the stock. The competitive pressures that act as a check on the manipulation of the spreads of upper echelon OTC securities is absent in the penny stock market. As a result, abusive and unreasonable markups and spreads on penny stocks are widespread in the pink sheets.

THE MYSTERY OF THE PINK SHEETS
There are 18,000 or more publicly-traded corporations in the United States. About 2,500 of the largest and most established firms trade on national stock exchanges, including 1,600 that are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Another 4,600 firms are listed on the NASDAQ system, which is home to most of the major firms in the over-the-counter (OTC) market. More than 2,800 NASDAQ securities are listed on the NASDAQ/National Market System, which imposes the highest standards on OTC stocks. Outside of regional exchanges, the balance of publicly-held firms are traded in the murky netherworld of U.S. equity transactions known as the "non-NASDAQ OTC" market. Almost all of these securities - more than 11,000 - are quoted in a daily circular known as the "pink sheets," so named for the color of the paper on which they are printed.

The pink sheets are home to almost all penny stocks, which, with very few exceptions, are not traded on the exchanges or NASDAQ. Unlike exchange-listed stocks and those on NASDAQ, pink sheet securities are subject to no meaningful listing requirements and escape almost all of the computer-guided surveillance and policing of the other segments of the equities market. For this reason, the pink sheets also are the primary playing field of penny stock swindlers, who thrive in the obscurity of the lowest rung on the ladder of the U.S. securities market. Some non-U.S. companies whose financial statement do not conform to American accounting standards and formats also appear in the pink sheets.

Why would companies choose to be listed in the pink sheets? Most have no choice; they are unable to satisfy the minimum listing standards for the NASDAQ market. Some of the securities are those of dormant or bankrupt companies - "shells" that are made to order vehicles for manipulative secondary market trading.

Some pink sheets stocks are those of low-profile, closely-held firms, a number of which trade at $50 a share or even in multiples of hundreds of dollars. A number of small and medium sized financial institutions of primarily or entirely local and regional interest have their market in the pink sheets.

Not all pink sheets securities are penny stocks, but virtually all penny stocks are found in the pink sheets. While a number of even the low-priced securities are perfectly legitimate, it is apparent that the pink sheets are increasingly being overrun by abusive promoters of manipulated penny stocks. Even in unmanipulated pink sheet securities, the absence of meaningful information for decision-making purposes poses a serious hazard. An investor's risk of losing all or some of his or her funds in penny stocks is all but assured when the considerable handicap of manipulation is combined with the almost total "black out" on information in the pink sheets.

THE RISK TO INVESTORS
There is convincing and growing evidence that the non-NASDAQ OTC market - the 13,000 stocks trading in the "pink sheets" - has been substantially overrun by fraud and abuse at the hands of unscrupulous promoters. It is for this reason that securities regulators say that "penny stocks are bought and not sold." While there are reputable dealers in low priced securities and legitimate pink sheet stocks do exist, the rise of fraud in the penny stocks has seriously imperiled the current and future potential of this marketplace as the "starting line" for new and growing companies.

Recent cases and enforcement trends suggest that $2 billion or more of investor funds are lost each year due to fraud and abuse in the penny stock market. This loss to the U.S. economy is profound. For example, the estimated penny stock fraud toll is equal to two-thirds of the $3 billion raised by U.S. venture capitalists in 1988. Taking the rule of thumb that $25,000 in outside financing is needed to get a small business off the ground, the amount is reflective of the loss of 80,000 potential new firms, which would employ well over 150,000 workers. Ironically, penny stock boosters promote the market as a contributor of new businesses and jobs. However, it appears unlikely that the non-NASDAQ OTC market is actually a net "plus" to the U.S. economy.

The $2 billion in penny stock fraud and abuse is in addition to the estimated 70 percent profitability that an unmanipulated penny stock investor will lose some or all of his or her investment. Combining this inherent high degree of risk with the staggering amount of penny stock fraud and abuse results in an extremely bleak picture of the prospects for investors in the low-priced securities. These figures suggest that there is only about one chance in ten that many penny stock investors will break even, much less earn a single dollar in net profit through trading in the low-priced securities. This is a degree of risk that is slightly greater than that generally associated with commodity futures trading. It may be that use of the term "risk" is inappropriate in the context of the rigged marketplace of penny stocks, since there is, in fact, a virtual certainty of loss of funds by investors.

Penny stocks are thinly traded and subject to domination and control by a single market maker. As such, unlisted securities are attractive vehicles for manipulative, artificial schemes which are intended to raise the price or volume of the securities, primarily for the benefit of often unnamed insiders and, frequently, the brokerage firm itself, which may unload its own shares of a stock into the market it has helped send skyward.

The hallmarks of penny stock manipulation include: control by one or only a few brokers who often have contacts with the promoter or the issuer; matched purchases and sales to drive up prices, a practice also known as cross-trading; excessive spreads between "bid" and "ask" prices; false and misleading rumor-mongering and hype to inflate the prospects for a stock; and, the dumping of the securities at inflated prices by the promoters or brokers who then move on to the next manipulation. Penny stock investors routinely are victimized by grossly-inflated markups, which have been reported as high as 400, 500 and even over 1,000 percent. Other penny stock market abuses include refusing "net sales" (insisting that customers roll over paper profits), trading by unregistered salespersons, unauthorized trading in customer accounts, sales prior to the registration of a new issue, and over-subscription of initial public offerings.

A fundamental abuse that seems deeply rooted in the penny stock market (and, most likely, is crucial to its continued expansion) is the placement of unsuitable investors in the risky, volatile securities, including low-income elderly individuals whose primary sources of income are Social Security and other retirement benefits and those who are seeking low-risk investments with strong income potential. Documented cases of abuse include those in which penny stockbrokers have convinced clients to place penny stocks in their IRA accounts. It may be said that the suitability test applied by abusive penny stock firms is, quite simply, the ability to pay.

THE "BLANK CHECK" BLIND POOL PROBLEM
An estimated 70 percent of penny stock new issues floated in 1988 and through mid-1989 were blind pools, virtually all of them "blank check" offerings, so named because investors are provided with almost no meaningful information about the company in which they have placed their money. For example, "blank check" business plans are not detailed in the offerings' prospectuses. Frequently, "blank check" blind pools are merely sham corporations that are brought public as vehicles for future manipulative conduct, which is widespread. In a matter of weeks after a "blank check" offering closes, a "reverse merger" or "reverse acquisition" may be announced and the underlying blind pool becomes and immediate candidate for hype and manipulation in the secondary marketplace, which is where stocks trade after an initial public offering (IPO) has been made. Similar abusive activity also takes place with so-called "shell corporations," which are generally inactive or bankrupt publicly-traded companies that are "raised from the dead" and merged with private companies.

The result of "blank check" and "shell game" craze is the sale to the public each year of stocks in hundreds of insubstantial and, in many cases, failing firms which, if they had attempted to come to market in a traditional IPO, most likely would have never passed the muster of state securities law. No academic literature or anecdotal evidence suggests that a net economic benefit results from the existence of "blank check" blind pools. In fact, it appears that the dollars raised in these offerings are matched several times over by the volume of resulting market manipulation, which, in short, means that the cost of "blank check" blind pools to society far outweighs any benefit they are known to bring about.

STATE EFFORTS TO COMBAT PENNY STOCK FRAUD
A number of state initiatives are either in place or underway to curb the rising tide of penny stock fraud and abuse, including:

A total of 36 states have outright prohibitions or substantial restrictions of the registration of "blank check" blind pools. Utah, once the home of the "blank check" blind pools, has acted to clean up its soiled reputation. New regulations passed in Utah in 1986 imposed escrow and other requirements on blind pool offerings. In fiscal 1983, 217 blind pools in Utah raised $19.8 million. That number fell to 116 in 1986, 17 in 1987 and 5 in 1988, raising just $500,000. The New Jersey Bureau of Securities recently was given the discretion to deny registration to blind pools. In April 1989, the membership of the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA), declared "blank check" blind pools to be abusive "per se" and called for their elimination.

A number of states, including Missouri, Florida and Connecticut, have developed innovative and extensive programs to keep as much penny stock fraud as possible outside of their borders. The three states are among those that have developed extensive penny stock branch office auditing programs, which have generated dozens of enforcement actions. Missouri and Florida also have been trend-setters in the use of existing disciplinary information as the basis for pre-registration screening of individual stockbrokers and the handling of requests for the opening of new branch offices. Both states routinely deny registration to penny stockbrokers with established histories of disciplinary infractions.

A total of 36 states use "merit review" powers to screen out securities offerings that would be patently unfair, abusive or fraudulent to investors. This authority has been a major tool in the campaign by states to squelch problem initial public offerings (IPO's) of penny stocks.

States also are working together with the SEC and NASD on joint examinations of problem penny stock firms. Cooperative enforcement projects have also been undertaken, in order to more effectively ration the small pool of state, federal and industry regulatory manpower. Eight states joined earlier this spring in the joint examination of a Denver-based penny stock firm, including the simultaneous entry of the firm's eight branch offices around the nation. The state of Oklahoma, the SEC and NASD collaborated in 1987 and 1988 on actions taken against a Tulsa-based penny stock brokerage firm that engaged in driving up the market valuation of a bogus gold mining stock from $2 million to $315 million.

IF YOU DECIDE TO GAMBLE ON PENNY STOCKS...
Few investors are likely to be suitable candidates for penny stocks, which involve a high or total degree of risk of the entire amount invested. As a result, penny stocks should be looked upon as being on the same order as playing the lottery or betting at the horse track. There are some means by which investors can minimize their risk of total loss in penny stocks. Consider the following tips before investing:

Determine how much you can afford to lose. Don't gamble on penny stocks any of the money you need for regular expenses or future plans.

Get it in writing - and read it. Don't rely on the glib talk of a penny stock salesperson. Get everything in writing about the investment in question. If the stock is more than a year old, ask the broker for the most recent 10K. If the company is a new one, ask to see the prospectus and then read it. Pay particular attention to the sections of the prospectus that discuss the risk factors and firm's management, outstanding litigation and financial status. Keep in mind that these factors all could be crucial to the firm's success.

Hang up on abusive, high pressure telephone salesmen. Remember that penny stocks salespeople will go to any lengths to get a sale. If you are not interested in making a purchase, say so and then get off the line.

Try to get independent verification of the "bid" and "ask" prices that are quoted. Ask the broker for the names of at least two other firms trading in the stock. Call those firms and determine if the prices quoted to reflect other market activity in the stock. (Keep in mind, however, that many penny stocks are traded in earnest by as few as one brokerage firm.)

Beware of claims of advance knowledge about pending announcements that will drive up the price of the stock. When it comes to penny stocks almost all such claims are phony. Insider trading is against the law; no legitimate brokerage firm is going to encourage you to invest on the basis of "secret" or "not yet announced" information.

Don't be impressed that the brokerage firm owns a big chunk of the stock. A penny stock salesperson may attempt to woo a prospective customer by pointing out that his or her brokerage firm holds a major portion of the outstanding float of a stock. Keep in mind that the firm may have paid little or nothing for the stock - possibly a very small fraction of what you are being asked to shell out. Such a holding may actually be a sign of trouble, since the holding can be sold into the stock's rising market, thereby causing the value of outstanding stock held by public investors to plummet in value.

Exercise caution when it comes to profit predictions and special analysis. If the broker indicates that his firm is recommending the stock, ask to see a copy of the related research report. Established brokerage firms have research department that publish detailed analysis on the pros and cons of individual stocks. If there is no such report available on the stock then the chances are good that you are getting nothing more than hot air.

Check out the brokerage firm and the stockbroker. Call your state securities agencies for a report on their track record of disciplinary infractions, if any. For the number of your state agency, call NASAA at 202-737-0900.

Use common sense. The chances of a penny stock becoming the next Apple Computer or Standard Oil are extremely thin. Don't listen to hype and feverish talk about "guaranteed," "can't lose," or "no risk" investments. They don't exist in the world of penny stocks.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
The securities administrator in your state, province or territory is responsible for the protection of the investors. If you have questions about investments, contact the securities administrator in your state. Your prompt action could save you money. For the telephone number of your state securities administrator call NASAA at 202-737-0900.

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To: Jim Bishop who wrote (52460)6/24/2000 1:43:00 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
www10.nytimes.com

November 19, 1999

Penny-Stock Fraud Is Billion-Dollar Game




The following article is based on reporting by David Barboza, Leslie Eaton and Diana B. Henriques and was written by Ms. Eaton.

ost Americans may not know it, but there are really two Wall Streets.

One is the Wall Street of the New York Stock Exchange closing bell, of brash stockbrokers and hair-trigger traders, of big deals and big fortunes, of Microsoft and mutual funds.

But in the crooked alleys of Lower Manhattan flourishes another Wall Street. This is a world of low-priced stocks and high-priced dreams, of grimy offices and sham companies, of swindlers and touts who prey on average people trying to grab the brass ring in the greatest bull market in American history.

Like the world of organized crime, with which it increasingly overlaps, it is a violent place full of colorful characters and arcane lingo, of "naked shorts" and "pump 'n' dumps." And it specializes in creating illusions that are as complex as a Broadway play -- and as simple as a game of three-card monte.

It was in this world that Albert Alain Chalem and Maier Lehmann lived -- and died. The men, who were promoting stocks over the Internet together, were both shot in the head on Oct. 25 and left to die on the marble floor in the $1.1 million home in Colts Neck, N.J., where Chalem lived.

Their world might seem arcane -- except that its denizens bilk Americans out of roughly $2 billion a year, securities regulators say. The problem is so severe that regulators and prosecutors have made it one of their chief goals to crack down on what they used to dismiss as "penny-stock fraud," before it became clear that the money involved amounted to many billions of pennies.

"A sustained, prolonged bull market really does bring out the crustaceans from the bottom of the sea," said Richard H. Walker, director of enforcement for the Securities and Exchange Commission. "They're attracted to the money."

While the enforcement effort has closed down many of the big brokerage operations that pushed shady stocks over the telephone, Walker said, many people who were kicked out of the securities business have moved their schemes into cyberspace. "That's where the action is now," he said.

And that is where Chalem and Lehmann were before they were killed. In addition to running a Web site, Chalem was trading stocks electronically, and may have had an account under an assumed name at a Manhattan firm called Harbor Securities. Investigators are examining whether he traded there, and if it was linked to his death.

From the very first, investigators have suspected that the slayings somehow involved the two men's financial dealings, rather than their personal lives. And, although the investigation remains in its early stages, law enforcement officials have clearly not changed their minds.

On the surface, Lehmann, 37, seems to have had the more troubled work history. He had pleaded guilty to mail fraud in an insurance scheme and settled civil securities-fraud charges. Before his death he told Barron's magazine that he had secretly worked at Patterson, Travis Inc., a small brokerage firm with a history of regulatory troubles; company officials said yesterday that they had no record of his having worked there.

In fact, Lehmann was more than willing to talk. He told reporters, regulators, prosecutors and, apparently, anyone who would listen about what he said were various schemes and swindles.

But it was Chalem, 41, who cast the longer shadow in the world of shady stocks, and it is Chalem who is increasingly the focus of investigators. He had worked at a brokerage firm, A. S.

Goldmen & Company, that prosecutors contend was a criminal enterprise -- a charge that the firm denies. He also worked secretly at a firm called Toluca Pacific Securities, according to several people who knew him. Toluca, which is defunct, had a long history of regulatory run-ins and had links to career felons and to organized crime.

Mobsters have increasingly turned up in stock swindles. In January, two men whom prosecutors said were tied to the Bonanno and Genovese crime families pleaded guilty to federal charges that they participated in a conspiracy to manipulate the stock of an Arizona company that owns a health club; the president of the company was convicted of related charges in May in Federal District Court in Manhattan.

In June, federal prosecutors in Brooklyn indicted a group they said included members of the Colombo crime family and an associate of the Bor organized crime group of Russian immigrants.

The men, who prosecutors said ran rogue brokerage firms that manipulated stock prices, were charged with conspiracy, securities fraud and money laundering; they pleaded not guilty.

Chalem was widely believed, in the penny stock world, to have dealings with Russian organized crime and to be "a protected guy," as one lawyer put it.

New information is coming to light about his activities in the weeks before his death. Last week, federal prosecutors served subpoenas to retrieve trading records, which may be linked to Chalem, from Harbor Securities, which catered to self-employed day traders. Heavy financial losses recently forced the firm to close.

Whether Chalem's trading had anything to do with his death remains unclear. What is clear is that he and Lehmann were more accustomed to being predators than to being prey in the dangerous world they inhabited.

The Performance: Everything Fake Except the Money

Their alternative Wall Street is not a big place; its players, who all seem to know each other, cluster in just a few spots: San Diego and La Jolla in Southern California, Boca Raton, Fla., Vancouver and New York, the ground zero of stock fraud.

To be successful, stock frauds must look a lot like legitimate deals. But in reality, they are elaborately choreographed performances, in which everything is fake except the money the audience will lose when the play is over.

Fraudulent companies issue fraudulent press releases touting fraudulent products; fake newsletters make fake recommendations about fake stocks; phantom investors make phantom trades to push up the price of these phantom stocks. A small claque in the audience may be tossing tomatoes, but these skeptics -- known as short-sellers -- can often be bought off by the show's producers.

Between them, Chalem and Lehmann seem to have played every possible role in such productions. Behind-the-scenes operators, they did business over cellular phones and computers, from so-called boiler rooms full of phones and fast-talking salesmen, and most recently, on the Internet.

To understand how thousands of Americans get taken in by these shows, it helps to know a little bit about the legitimate side of Wall Street -- and about how the real thing differs from its evil twin, as described in court documents, in interviews with regulators and prosecutors, and in discussions with people in the stock business.

In the real Wall Street, new companies that want to raise money pay investment firms a fee to sell shares of stock. In the shady Wall Street, almost none of the money raised from investors goes to the company; rather, it lines the pockets of brokers and promoters and their pals. In one case analyzed by state regulators in Alabama, a New York company raised $12.5 million from investors; $11 million of that went to insiders and brokers.

In the real Wall Street, public companies are vetted by accountants and auditors and lawyers and investment firms, all of them supervised by regulators. Companies that have stock outstanding must file quarterly financial reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and keep investors informed of major changes in their businesses.

In the ersatz Wall Street, companies avoid filing regulatory reports -- lying on such reports is a crime -- and communicate almost entirely by news releases, the more hyperbolic the better. (Without admitting or denying wrongdoing, one Florida executive recently settled regulatory charges over his press releases. These falsely claimed that the Moscow Ministry of Finance and Walt Disney World were negotiating to buy his company's process for turning scrap tires into oil.)

At legitimate companies, insiders, like executives and directors, must report, publicly, any time they buy or sell their own stock. People who own even 5 percent of a company must also reveal that through filings.

In the fake Wall Street, insiders use false names and dummy accounts to hide the fact that they control almost all of a company's stock that is available for trading. In one regulatory case recently filed in Federal District Court in Brooklyn, the S.E.C. contends that a group of stock promoters controlled as much as 95 percent of the tradable shares in several companies.

Though the real stock market is a complicated place, particularly in the short run, over the long haul a company's stock price rises when investors are optimistic about its future sales and profits; the stock price falls when investors worry that the company's business is in trouble.

In the false Wall Street, a stock rises like Peter Pan in the stage play, not because he is thinking merry little thoughts, but because he is attached to a wire strung from the theater's rigging. (Aptly, these manipulated stocks are called rigs.)

The stage for these stocks is usually the O.T.C. Bulletin Board, a trading network run by the National Association of Securities Dealers, which also runs Nasdaq. But unlike the real Nasdaq market, the bulletin board will trade the stock of almost any company, no matter how small, secretive or downright preposterous.

Regulators predict that more than half of the roughly 6,000 companies that were trading on the bulletin board last year will be removed by next June, under new rules that require them to file current financial statements with regulators.

The cast of characters includes the promoters, who are often stockbrokers barred from the securities business, their lawyers and public-relations advisers. The production also needs someone still in the securities business who can execute trades.

Other starring roles usually belong to corporate executives, who are mostly in on the rig, though sometimes they are innocents desperate to raise money for their companies.

And then there are short-sellers, who are people who bet that share prices will fall (and make a profit when that happens). In some cases, they are doing all they can to make sure the production is a flop.

The production may call on the brokers and cold-callers to unload shares on the public, although the Internet is making such brokers increasingly unnecessary; now, investors can be persuaded to buy stock electronically. "The Internet has put this type of fraud on steroids," said Cameron Funkhouser, vice president of market regulation for the National Assocation of Securities Dealers.

The Choreography: Hyped-Up Ideas, Controlled Stock

The plot of the play always begins with the company. The ideal stock-fraud company has some whiz-bang new product that will excite investors, like a self-chilling beer can, springy shoes for race horses, or a cure for baldness or for tooth decay. Also popular are gold mines in obscure locations, theme restaurants in Las Vegas and anything in cyberspace with a .com after it.

Sometimes the purported business will change in the course of the scheme; according to a ruling in a federal lawsuit, one outfit called Sky Scientific claimed at various times to be running gold mines, a financial services company and the first riverboat casino in Moscow. Occasionally the company is a small operation that has a real product, but it is just not as thrilling as the company's public relations makes out. (The vitamins do not really cure cancer; the Internet service has not really signed up every household in Peru.)

One company Lehmann was involved with, Electro-Optical Systems, claimed to be developing a computer gizmo that would read fingerprints, so that users could sign in without having to remember pesky passwords.

His original role was to hook up the would-be inventor of the product with the "investment bankers" who were supposedly raising money for the company, according to a decision in a lawsuit filed last year by the S.E.C. in Federal District Court in Manhattan. The inventor was not named as a defendant in the case, which is now dormant while a criminal investigation continues. Lehmann settled the regulators' charges and paid $630,000 in fines and restitution.

The key, from the con artists' point of view, is to get control of the shares of stock, which might be called Act 1. Sometimes shady brokerage firms stage "initial public offerings," but a faster and cheaper method -- the one Lehmann's group used -- is to merge the company with a shell corporation, which has stock outstanding but no business.

Almost everyone involved in the scheme is paid with stock; the promoters usually control huge blocks in accounts with false names, often overseas.

They all make money by making the shares rise in price. They often do this in part by making fake trades at arbitrary prices. In the case of Electro-Optical, regulators contend that the promoters put in an order to buy shares at $7 each, far above the 20 cents for which shares had last changed hands before the promotion began.

Once the stock price has been pumped up, it is time to lure outsiders into buying the shares. Lehmann helped out with the public relations. He got an an Internet newsletter to choose Electro-Optical as its "pick of the year"; the newsletter's owner was later sued by the S.E.C., which accused him of secretly taking stock and cash from companies in exchange for recommending their stocks; he is contesting the charges.

Lehmann also approved a press release that claimed, falsely, that Electro-Optical had just received a big order for its products. (Neither order nor products existed.) Investors, entranced with the concept and the rising stock price, began to buy the inflated stock.

After the pump comes the dump. Those in the know sell their shares to unsuspecting investors. Lehmann had received 100,000 shares, for which he paid nothing and which he put in an account in his wife's name; when he sold, he made about half a million dollars. All told, regulators say, those involved in the Electro-Optical rigging made $12 million by dumping their shares.

Once the promoters stop pumping the stock, its price usually plunges. Anyone who wants to buy Electro-Optical today can get 10 shares for a penny.

Bailing Out: Special Handling for Short Sellers

Some inventive stock promoters find a way to make money on the falling price, too, by selling short. To do this, a short seller simply borrows some shares from a brokerage house, promising to replace them later, and then sells them. If the trader has guessed right and the stock's price later falls, he can replace the borrowed shares -- a step known as "covering" -- by buying shares at the new, lower price.

His profit is the difference between the price at which he sold the borrowed shares and the price at which he bought the replacements. But if the share price rises, he can easily lose his entire investment.

While short selling can be a legitimate practice, it can also be abused. Chalem's friends and former business allies say he practiced a more aggressive form of short-selling, called naked shorting. Brokerage houses that deal in a particular stock can short it without borrowing the shares first. Going through those cooperative brokers, speculators like Chalem sell, and sell and sell -- thereby guaranteeing that the stock's price will plummet.

A year or two ago, Chalem's associates say, he was shorting the stock of the Quigley Corporation of Doylestown, Pa., which makes zinc lozenges that it says relieve common colds. The company blamed short-sellers for the decline in its stock, which has dropped from $23 in the fall of 1997 to about $3 today. Skeptics said the company's share price was too high and, indeed, sales of the lozenges have been falling.

But a debate over the true merits of most penny stocks is pointless; in many cases, both the promoters and the short sellers know that the stocks are rigged. Then, the question is simply who has enough power -- and money -- to prevail in what is really trench warfare.

Promoters may try to make short-sellers go away by giving them free shares that the short-sellers can use to cover and close out their positions with big profits. This has caused some prosecutors to believe that this sort of short-selling is really a kind of extortion, though that is hard to prove.

Both sides use rough tactics in their efforts to win. They try to plant stories in the press. They call regulators and prosecutors to inform on each other.

And they threaten each other with physical harm, backed up by visits from burly men. John Fiero, a prominent short seller and president of the firm Fiero Brothers in Manhattan, has repeatedly complained to the police about the threats he has received.

And that violence may ultimately be the biggest difference between the real Wall Street and the parallel universe inhabited by people like Chalem and Lehmann.

Real Wall Street takes a lot of financial risks. But the crooked Wall Street "is not just a financially dangerous world," said Stephen Luparello, a senior vice president of the N.A.S.D. "It's also a physically dangerous world."




To: Jim Bishop who wrote (52460)6/24/2000 7:03:00 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
Excellent link to penny stock fraud.

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