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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Zia Sun(zsun) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 12:59:50 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 10354
 
THE BIZARRE SAGA of JONES AND JENSEN (PART III)Fraud Investigator Quotes the Odds gamblingmagazine.com

Gambling Magazine's fraud investigator has learned that last week it was R. Gordon Jones's turn to go before the Administrative Law Judge. Gambling Magazine will be first to break this amazing story when the Administrative Law Judge makes his decision. Gambling Magazine has also learned that Starnet may be taking book on their gambling web site on the outcome. We believe these could be the current odds:

100/1 R. Gordon Jones found guilty, sent back to accounting school

1/1 R. Gordon Jones bribes Adminstrative Law Judge, is found not guilty of any wrongdoing

2/1 R. Gordon Jones found guilty, shortly afterwards is indicted for accounting fraud. Completes Starnet's audited financials from a jail cell.

1 million/1 R. Gordon Jones gets off scott-free.

Meanwhile, proceedings against Starnet's auditors continue.

sec.gov



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 1:10:11 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 10354
 
Cricket,You forgot the pathetic Good vs. Evil pump and the back of envelope pie-in-the-sky 1st grader financial analysis. Also, you forgot to mention that Ziasun's past history of false and misleading press releases are irrelevant, and the fact that the AMEX listing is only being delayed because a big shorter wants to buy shares cheaper and that the buys have far outnumbered the sells as the stock dropped from 16 to the 5's. Oh yeah, and that the many millions of shares that are now sellable won't be sold because everyone knows what a value this penny stock is once it reaches Meatloaf/Ray Dirks/ Tom Heysek's price target of $30 which will be a 1 Billion Dollar Market Cap. And that your product is much better than all the competitors' because of all of its sales over the many years (and the fact that so many shares had to be sold to offshore entities actually very positive).

Also, the fact that so many bashers are being paid $5-7 per response on your stock's message board by evil MM's (I heard it officially from pennystockpump.com) is an indication of what a quality stock this is, as bashers would never post about a scam stock.

Sounds like a no-brainer bargain to me...



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 1:45:37 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 10354
 
"THEY THINK YOU ARE TOO STUPID TO UNDERSTAND!"

By: onewhoknows $$$$
Reply To: None Tuesday, 18 Jul 2000 at 12:53 AM EDT
Post # of 23980


THEY THINK YOU ARE TOO STUPID TO UNDERSTAND!

If you are a visitor here and not a regular you must be wondering what on earth you have stumbled into. The same old faces are posting over and over the same tired PR pieces .....some of which are 3 or 4 months old. If you stop and ask yourself why do they bother ..... you come to the conclusion that they are second or third rate touts incapable of thinking and/or finding something new to post.

The thing that is hard to fathom is their thinking when you consider the price when the PR came out was higher than now. If the PR comes out and the price sinks you tend to come to the conclusion that perhaps all is not as great as these touts want you to believe or there are other factors to consider.

I do not post much here these days as time does not permit and I always believe in post if you have something to say. These touts are offensive in that they waste peoples time and in that they believe anyone is stupid enough to listen to them.

They do insult everyones intelligence by their continued touting.

JMHO

me



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 1:15:17 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 10354
 
C-3D Digital, Inc. Rescinds $2 Million Financing Deal
7/14/0 9:46 (New York)


LOS ANGELES, July 14 /PRNewswire/ -- Chequemate International Inc.
(Amex: DDD), doing business as C-3D Digital Inc., the world's first 3D
television network and 3D Internet media company, announced today it has
rescinded a $2 million financing deal.
"The C-3D Digital Board of Directors prevailed upon the investors to
rescind this deal because of the effect we perceived it was having on the
company's stock price," stated J. Michael Heil, Chairman and CEO of C-3D
Digital. "The cost of capital was just too high in this deal."
The original financing deal, announced on May 25, 2000, had the company
entering into two separate convertible promissory notes, each for
$1,000,000, bearing interest at the rate of 12%. Each note would be secured
by a lien on the Company's assets. The Company would receive $2,000,000 cash
from the transaction. Each note was convertible into restricted shares of the
company's common stock at one-half of the market value, but not less than
$2.00 per share. Each note would be accompanied by a warrant to purchase
200,000 shares of common stock at $1.00 per share.
"We are exploring other financing deals that would be more favorable to
the company," continued Heil.
C-3D Digital is a leading innovator in media content creation and
technology for 3D imagery and virtual reality entertainment for television and
the Internet. The company operates several synergistic divisions including
the C3D Television Network, the world's first and only broadcast network to
offer 24-hours, 7 days a week stereoscopic 3D programming; 3D.COM, its
Internet subsidiary and home to the virtual reality/3D portal/e-commerce
community center on the Web; Strata Software, a leading producer of 3D graphic
design software; and the Hotel Movie Network, a private broadcast network
focused on the hospitality industry.
The Company's Strata and Internet division combined to form the world's
first 3D virtual reality portal. The 3D.COM Virtual Reality Portal(TM)
features streaming video over the Internet, real-time online gaming and
e-commerce solutions in stereoscopic 3D. For more information, visit
www.3d.com.
For an Investment Profile, please contact INVESTOR RELATIONS at
800-773-7317.
Any statements released by C-3D Digital, Inc. that are forward-looking are
made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Editors and investors are cautioned that
forward-looking statements invoke risk and uncertainties that may affect the
Company's business prospects and performances. These include economic,
competitive, governmental, technological and other factors discussed in the
statements and in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Disclaimer: This transmission was intended only for the party or parties
to whom it was directed. If you have received the transmission in error or by
other means, it must be destroyed and by no means circulated, copied or
otherwise duplicated without the express permission of its author(s). Nothing
in the contents transmitted should be construed as an investment advisory, nor
should it be used to make investment decisions. There is no express or
implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The author(s) may have
positions in the stocks or financial relationships with the company discussed
and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Readers are advised to conduct their
own due diligence prior to considering buying or selling any stock. All
information should be considered for information purposes only. No stock
exchange has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein.

SOURCE Chequemate International Inc. and C-3D Digital Inc.
-0- 07/14/2000
/CONTACT: Investor Relations of C-3D Digital, Inc., 800-773-7317/
/Web site: 3d.com
(DDD)

CO: Chequemate International Inc.; C-3D Digital Inc.
ST: California
IN: CPR MLM
SU: FNC


-0- Jul/14/2000 13:31 GMT
EOS (PRN) Jul/14/2000 09:31 85

-0- (PRN) Jul/14/2000 13:46 GMT



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 6:48:44 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 10354
 
SEC May Require Brokers' Order-Routing Disclosure (Update2)

(Adds background in paragraphs 4-5)

Washington, July 18 (Bloomberg) -- The Securities and
Exchange Commission said it may propose a rule next week that
would require brokers to disclose when they use their own stock to
fill customer orders or route the orders to other brokers for
execution.
The federal agency also plans to decide whether to order the
U.S. options markets to form electronic links that would give
dealers more immediate access to the best prices on any options
exchange, the SEC announced.
Both plans, which are to be considered next Tuesday, seek to
end what SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt has called the fragmentation
of U.S. securities markets. He has said the isolation of certain
markets prevents investors from getting the best price.
The disclosure plan for customer orders is the least
aggressive of a half-dozen SEC draft proposals that were released
for public comment in February. A more sweeping draft proposal to
form a central market for many customer orders generated
disagreement between the U.S. stock markets and the largest
brokerages, while also drawing fire from Senate Banking Committee
Chairman Phil Gramm.
The SEC's disclosure proposal would target a common practice
among firms of internally matching customer orders from their own
inventories of stock, known as internalization. It also would
address brokers' practice of selling orders to other brokerages
for execution, known as payment for order flow.
``This proposal has broad support in the securities
industry,'' said Bernard Madoff, a New York broker-dealer who
heads the trading committee of the Securities Industry
Association, the brokerage trade group.

Mutual Funds

It also has the support of mutual fund companies such as the
Vanguard Group, the second largest U.S. fund company, and Scudder
Kemper Investments Inc., according to letters these firms sent
recently to the SEC.
A more specific rule proposal on disclosure would again
invite comment before the commission makes a final decision on
whether to adopt the proposal.
Levitt has already signaled that he endorses increased
disclosure about firms' order-routing and execution practices.
``I worry that best execution (of customer orders) may be
compromised by payment for order flow, internalization and certain
other practices that can present conflicts between the interests
of brokers and their customers,'' he said in a November speech.

Full Market Exposure

The SEC chairman has said customer orders that are matched
internally by firms aren't exposed to the full market, where
investors might offer new quotes at better prices. Brokers who
sell their orders to other firms for execution may do so out of
self-interest rather than the best possible price their customers
could get, he has said.
With regard to the options markets, Levitt long has
threatened to step in and order electronic links if the markets
couldn't agree on a plan to give customers better access to
potentially better prices on different markets.
``Linkages will be good for customers and the options
industry,'' said Gary Katz, senior vice president of the
International Securities Exchange, which began operating as an
options market in Mary. ``They'll give investors the confidence
that they're getting the best price, and thus increase
participation and the size of the market.''
Dealers on one options market currently have to manually
access many orders on another market if it has the best available
price. Electronic links would speed trading of orders placed on
different markets, Katz said.
The five options markets are at an impasse over whether price
should be the primary factor in deciding where an order should be
sent, a concept known as ``price-time priority.'' If price were to
be the primary factor, it would give competitive opportunities to
the smaller markets, while the larger markets would benefit if
liquidity and technology benefits also were to play a role in the
decision.
The SEC didn't say where its order plan comes out on the time-
price priority issue. The Justice Department, which is
investigating possible price-fixing in U.S. options markets, has
said it supports a plan of the Pacific Exchange, one of the
smaller markets. The Pacific's plan calls for the routing of small
orders to the exchange that displays the best price.
Some options dealers have argued that linkages will
accomplish little now that the exchanges have moved during the
last year to list many of the most active options on all the
markets.

--Neil Roland in Washington (202) 624-1868 or
nroland@bloomberg.net /bd/ba



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 6:51:45 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 10354
 
Bullshoy, you complete piker: "BASHERS NEVER Bash A BAD STOCK." I don't know if you are callng shorters "basher's" (pretty effeminate of you Franky) but if you are, you're lying.



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 8:35:18 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10354
 
Seventeen-Year Locust, Starnet was a Canadian Company. There servers were in Canada.

Now Ziasun is a company in the United States with servers in California. Anything run on those servers is under U.S. jurisdiction. That includes the high preasure Boiler Room that is being promoted on those servers. Especially the one that is being sued by one of the defendants.

Very nice how Anthony L. Tobin tried to have International Asset Management pay off George for the money they crooked from him by selling him shares of Bestway USA, Titan, ect. This happened after they sued him. They were to pay him in instalments. They paid him the first then stopped.

Tobin is a real nice guy. I guess it was hard to report it to the SEC especially since 24% of the companies income came from them in 1998. That is according to their own SEC filings.



To: Frank_Ching who wrote (8813)7/18/2000 11:23:28 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 10354
 
Frankie, why dont you give Anthony Tobins side of the story. This is my version. It is what really happened;

Very nice how Anthony L. Tobin tried to have International Asset Management pay off George for the money they crooked from him by selling him shares of Bestway USA, Titan, ect. This happened after they sued him. They were to pay him in instalments. They paid him the first then stopped.

Tobin is a real nice guy. I guess it was hard to report it to the SEC especially since 24% of the companies income came from them in 1998. That is according to their own SEC filings