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To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (609)8/18/2000 10:18:20 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 12465
 
Gee, the origional Titan Motorcycle prospectus says "Intestment Manager: International Asset Management, Barceloa Spain, Via Augusta 13-15, Suit 612, 08006, Barcelona, Spain, tel 34-3-217-5204 fax 34-3-416-0492 and International Asset Management, Brussels, Avenue Louise 149, box 40, 1050 Brussels,Belgium, tel: 32-2-535-7550 fax 32-2-535-7549. The prospectus is being scanned as we speak for all to see.

"Bryant Cragun , the third-party investor, is the principal of an investment banking firm that has assisted the Company in capital raising functions."

TITAN MOTORCYCLE CO OF AMERICA INC filed this 10SB12G/A on 09/02/1998.

tenkwizard.com

the lets not forget oxford

Promissory Note with Oxford International Management dated December 9, 1996. 10.10 Modification of Promissory Note with Oxford International Management dated December 16, 1997. 10.11 Promissory Note with Oxford International Management dated July 22, 1999

TITAN MOTORCYCLE CO OF AMERICA INC filed this S-3 on 10/15/1999
tenkwizard.com

Bryant Craguns letter dated 2/7/97 Director OXFORD INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT, INC. to veiw origional fortunecity.com

OXFORD INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT, INC

February 7, 1997

To our valued clients,

Due to the recent reports in your local media criticizing offshore brokers, discount brokers or a stock wholesaler. Oxford serves as an investment manager focusing on the funding of emerging growth companies. We operate as a venture capital management company. Our aim is to identify young growth companies, participate in ownership through funding these companies and ultimately benefit from their success. Our investment philosophy is not one short term quick profits but long term steady growth. We have shared that philosophy with our clients and client companies since our beginning in 1991.

Oxfords management spends extensive time working with the management of our client companies. We have enclosed messages from the chief executive officer of each company acknowledging Oxford's role in their development and our professionalism.

A point of clarification about the Power Report. The Power Report is an independent market news letter used by investors, investment managers and brokers from New York to London to Hong Kong. The overall advice given in the report over the past years has been outstanding. All investment services world wide use the same tool, which include market research, reports and news releases all communicated via the telephone. As investors, it is important to qualify who is giving you investment advice. The fastest way to qualify any investment service is to qualify the advice or recommendation given by contacting the company directly. We welcome any of our clients to call or visit any of our client companies. Oxford is proud of its past and current client companies and their success which has been shared by clients.

We are aware of a small number of groups, representing themselves as retail brokers or stock wholesalers, who have recently ( Within the last two years) begun operating in Manila.

When requested by our clients to research some of their recommendations, we have on many occassions reported back to the company either did not exist or was substancially different from had been represented. Unlike many media sources, we refuse to instill panic in the investing public with scaremongering.

If there is any additional information we can provide for you, please call your Oxford representative. We look forward to a long term and profitable relationship.

Yours Sincerely,

(His signature here)

Bryant D. Cragun
Chairman

Suite 1402, 14th Floor, PDCP Bank Centre, 8737 Paseo de Roxas corner Makati City, Philippines Swithchboard (632) 893-7713 * Fax (632) 817-0709 * Direct (632) 892-1994 * Fax (^32) 892-6989



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (609)8/18/2000 11:30:13 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 12465
 
Bryant Craguns letter dated 2/7/97 CHAIRMAN OXFORD INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT, INC. to veiw origional fortunecity.com

OXFORD INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT, INC

February 7, 1997

To our valued clients,

Due to the recent reports in your local media criticizing offshore brokers, discount brokers or a stock wholesaler. Oxford serves as an investment manager focusing on the funding of emerging growth companies. We operate as a venture capital management company. Our aim is to identify young growth companies, participate in ownership through funding these companies and ultimately benefit from their success. Our investment philosophy is not one short term quick profits but long term steady growth. We have shared that philosophy with our clients and client companies since our beginning in 1991.

Oxfords management spends extensive time working with the management of our client companies. We have enclosed messages from the chief executive officer of each company acknowledging Oxford's role in their development and our professionalism.

A point of clarification about the Power Report. The Power Report is an independent market news letter used by investors, investment managers and brokers from New York to London to Hong Kong. The overall advice given in the report over the past years has been outstanding. All investment services world wide use the same tool, which include market research, reports and news releases all communicated via the telephone. As investors, it is important to qualify who is giving you investment advice. The fastest way to qualify any investment service is to qualify the advice or recommendation given by contacting the company directly. We welcome any of our clients to call or visit any of our client companies. Oxford is proud of its past and current client companies and their success which has been shared by clients.

We are aware of a small number of groups, representing themselves as retail brokers or stock wholesalers, who have recently ( Within the last two years) begun operating in Manila.

When requested by our clients to research some of their recommendations, we have on many occassions reported back to the company either did not exist or was substancially different from had been represented. Unlike many media sources, we refuse to instill panic in the investing public with scaremongering.

If there is any additional information we can provide for you, please call your Oxford representative. We look forward to a long term and profitable relationship.

Yours Sincerely,

(His signature here)

Bryant D. Cragun
Chairman

Suite 1402, 14th Floor, PDCP Bank Centre, 8737 Paseo de Roxas corner Makati City, Philippines Swithchboard (632) 893-7713 * Fax (632) 817-0709 * Direct (632) 892-1994 * Fax (^32) 892-6989



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (609)8/20/2000 11:02:48 AM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12465
 
Re: 6/20/00 - Bashers: The Terrors of the Internet

Unbiased Reporting on Over-The-Counter Bulletin Board Companies

No paid content.

Bashers: The Terrors of the Internet

By By Brett Hainley
Published by OTCNN.com
06/20/2000 11:16 AM CST

The Internet is a marvelous thing. “Due diligence” is no longer a phrase for brokers and market makers whose quick access to otherwise difficult-to-find files gave them an advantage over the small investor. Direct access to databases at the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the US Patent and Trademark Office, as well as the Copyright Office and company web sites has opened up a new world of readily available information for investors. Investor message boards and chat rooms hosted by such services as Raging Bull and Yahoo! make the sharing of such information with one’s fellow investors as easy as the touch of a button.

But with all its glamour, the Internet, and especially those oh-so-convenient message boards, can be hazardous to the unwise or the unwary. In those areas, the small investor often finds his faith and his company’s good name besieged by bashers – people who use the anonymity provided by the Internet to wage private wars and attacks against companies and, occasionally, other people. Their reasons are many and varied. Some are disgruntled former investors or employees of the company, wishing to spread their misery to others. Many are just trouble-makers, people who, for what ever reason, feel the need to attack and undermine others. And a few are actually paid by individuals or even market makers to assist in illegally and artificially reducing and suppressing the value of certain stocks.

This unfortunate situation is doubly bad for investors in OTCBB stocks. Since OTCBB companies, are, for the most part, development-stage companies, bashers hurt small investors in two ways. First, they strike at the investors’ confidence in the company’s management and direction. Most small investors in OTCBB stocks are long term investors, and, for them, confidence in a company’s management and potential for earnings is paramount. They can usually tolerate a few minor dips and slides as long as they feel confident that management will once again, get the ball rolling.

Bashers strike at the core of this relationship. They often attack company press releases as being propaganda. In one message base on the Raging Bull, a basher suggested that he had visited the company’s new construction site, and that no one there had ever heard of the company. Never mind that the company had never released anything but the most general information about the site.

Possibly the most destructive means that bashers use to undermine the relationship between investor and management, however, is their flagrant use of direct and indirect personal attacks. The same basher who claimed to have visited a company’s construction site also claimed to have met with the company’s new CEO, where, he claims, the CEO drunkenly declared that, since he could not sell his stock for another two years, he didn’t care how the company did. The CEO challenged the basher, denying the claims and inviting the person to meet with him in his office. Personal attacks can get terribly out of hand. Attacks against Talk Visual Corporation’s (OTCBB: TVCP) Chairman, Michael J. Zwebner became so bad that he finally filed suit against several of the bashers, alleging defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

These attacks have another ill effect on small investors. OTCBB stocks are, almost by definition, low-value stocks. The effect of even a few cents drop on many of these securities can result in a high-percentage loss on an investment. Day-traders, and other investors seeking a quick return, are often unduly dismayed by the apocryphal allegations of these bashers, and, in response, have been known to sell off shares at low bids, seeking to receive some value from what they have been led to believe is a bad investment.

How, then, does one minimize the damage done by these dealers in half-truths and unwarranted attacks? The first thing is to take everything one reads with a big grain of salt. The Washington Post’s “two-source” rule applies well here. If someone provides negative or disturbing information about a company, ask for a source, then check it yourself. The source may be erroneous or obsolete. Most news sources publish periodic updates to their stories, especially if new information alters the information held in the original story. SEC filings are generally classified by date and type. Check the company’s most recent filings, both the quarterly and the annual, and be sure to read the “Management’s Discussion and Analysis” (MD&A), which often can explain the company’s operations in a way that the raw data can not.

Another way to deal with bashers is to simply ignore them. Since many bashers are merely trouble-makers and not professional defamers, they will usually go away once they see that their words have no effect. They can also be avoided entirely, many investor groups have a “Long” version of their company’s message base, where only verified reports may be posted and bashers are subject to special Terms of Service.

Most of all, don’t argue with bashers. All that will come from that is a headache.

otcnn.com



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (609)11/27/2001 7:15:24 PM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 12465
 
Re: 11/27/01 - [USAV/CPXP] Newsbytes: California Appeals Court Upholds Message Board Speech

California Appeals Court Upholds Message Board Speech

By Michael Bartlett, Newsbytes
RIVERSIDE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.
27 Nov 2001, 4:34 PM CST

A California court of appeal recently issued what legal experts say is a precedent-setting decision on the right to make comments about a public company on Internet message boards.

In March 2000, ComputerXpress [OTCBB:CPXP], a company that sells computer-related products, filed a complaint against eight defendants after a proposed merger fell through. The company alleged nine causes of action against defendants, including fraud, trade libel and interference with prospective economic advantage.

ComputerXpress claimed defendants made "numerous false and disparaging statements" about the company on the Internet.

Defendants moved to dismiss the suit by seeking protection from a California law written to protect individuals from retaliatory lawsuits by corporations that feel they have been disparaged. These are referred to as "Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation," or SLAPP lawsuits.

The trial court initially ruled three of the nine causes of action were not covered by the anti-SLAPP statute, but the remaining six were. The court subsequently changed its mind, finding that none of the allegations were protected by the statute, and therefore denied the motion to dismiss the case.

The appellate court agreed with the trial court on four causes of action, but reversed on the remaining five. The appellate court found that postings on an Internet message board constituted a "public forum," as defined in the anti-SLAPP statute. The court further ruled the defendants posted opinions as shareholders of ComputerXpress, not competitors, and the matter was therefore "an issue of public interest."

As for the content of the postings, the court said they "certainly could be considered disparaging," but found that, "their tone and content identified them as statements of opinion and not fact."

The court said the postings presented as evidence by ComputerXpress were, "hyperbolic, informal and lacked the characteristics of typical fact-based documents."

The Riverside Court's ruling closely followed - and frequently cited - a May ruling by a U.S. District Court. The federal court ordered Global Telemedia International [OTCBB:GLTIE.OB] to pay over $55,000 in attorney's fees to two defendants. The company had sued several anonymous individuals for posting comments critical of GTMI in an Internet chat room.

In the Global Telemedia case, the court said that, unlike many traditional media, there are no controls on the postings in chat rooms. As a result, such writings are almost always opinions, and therefore are protected under the First Amendment.

The opinion by the Court of Appeal for the Fourth District in the ComputerXpress case is the first published appellate decision on the state level in California, according to Megan Gray, a Los Angeles-based attorney who is an expert on SLAPP lawsuits. She was not involved in the matter, but followed it closely

"It is a great case, and one that is long overdue," said Gray. "The court recognized the dearth of binding case law on this issue, and this ruling takes care of that."

There are many cases pending in courtrooms that stem from Internet message board postings. Gray said she hopes the Court of Appeal decision will encourage some of those cases to, "go away, one way or another, and not clog the court system."

"The ruling does not mean everything you say on a message board is protected," she said. "But, generally, a lot of that talk is along the lines of, 'this stock sucks,' or 'this management sucks.' The Riverside Court said to determine if something is fact or opinion, you must examine the context."

"For example, if Dan Rather says something about ComputerXpress or its management on the nightly news, that is different than someone who can't even spell right posting something on a message board," Gray continued. "This ruling protects John Doe who is just speaking his mind on the Internet to a wide audience."

Paul Levy of the Public Citizen Litigation Group, a non-profit consumer advocacy organization based in Washington, D.C., said the most important part of the ruling is the finding that a discussion of a public company is covered by the anti-SLAPP statute.

"It is wise for people to assume postings on a message board are opinions, not facts," said Levy. "This opinion makes it clear that [the federal court ruling in] Global Telemedia is the state law in California. At least it is for now, unless the California Supreme Court steps in," he added.

The Public Citizen Litigation Group was not directly involved in the ComputerXpress case, but asked the court to publish its opinion - which it had not previously done - to make it binding on state trial courts. Unpublished appellate decisions cannot be cited as precedent.

Yvonne Renfrew, who represented six of the eight defendants (the other two settled out of court with ComputerXpress), said the original, unpublished decision did not include an award of jury fees to her clients.

"We won attorney's fees upon rehearing," said Renfrew. "Not only is this case important in that it clarifies First Amendment protection for Internet postings, it is very important that people have the ability to recover fees. In many cases, people are silenced by the threat of a lawsuit because they cannot afford to spend $200,000 to defend themselves."

Attorneys for ComputerXpress did not return phone calls for this story.

See the opinion at courtinfo.ca.gov .
Public Citizen Litigation Group is at citizen.org .

Reported by Newsbytes.com, newsbytes.com .

16:34 CST
Reposted 17:15 CST

(20011127/Press Contact: Paul Levy, Public Citizen Litigation Group, 202-588-1000/WIRES TOP, LEGAL, ONLINE, BUSINESS/ATWORLD/PHOTO)

© 2001 The Washington Post Company

newsbytes.com

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