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To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)11/30/2000 9:15:02 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 609
 
ZiaSun, Former President Anthony Tobin, and Promoter Bryant Cragun Drop Lawsuit and Agree to Pay Opposition Thousands

SAN DIEGO, Oct 25, 2000 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Plaintiffs in two closely watched "cyberexpose" lawsuits have agreed to drop all of their charges against a group of online message board posters and have also agreed to pay one of the defendants $60,000.

ZiaSun Technologies Inc. (OTCBB: ZSUN chart, msgs), a San Diego-based company, sued unrelated Internet posters George Joakimidis, Michael Morelock, Floyd Schneider and Stephen N. Worthington in mid-1999 for allegedly waging a cyberexpose campaign against them in Internet chatrooms.

ZiaSun, its former president Anthony Tobin and a ZiaSun promoter and fundraiser, Bryant Cragun, alleged that the defendants disseminated false information linking them to criminal behavior, pornography, improper financial interests, false corporate disclosures and illegal business practices.

Plaintiffs sought court injunctions against further posting by defendants. They also demanded $500,000 in lost earnings and earning capacity, reimbursement of their costs and attorneys' fees, a public apology and that defendants retract all of their postings.

Defendants contended that everything they posted about plaintiffs was absolutely true and therefore, as a matter of law, they could not be held liable. One of the defendants, George Joakimidis, cross-sued ZiaSun, Tobin and Cragun for fraud.

In a settlement agreement reached by the parties, plaintiffs dismissed all of their charges against defendants, dropped all of their demands for monetary compensation, dropped their demands that defendants apologize and retract their postings and agreed to pay George Joakimidis $60,000. Except for one news release per side, the parties agreed to make no future publications about one another.

George Joakimidis stated: "I am relieved that it is all over. It is perhaps unfortunate that the cases did not go to trial, where I would have been given the opportunity to prove that everything I posted on the various message boards was true.

"Cragun and ZiaSun, on the other hand, would have been compelled to substantiate their allegations against me. So why did I agree to an out-of-court settlement? To save time, effort and money and to put this lawsuit behind me."

Michael Morelock stated: "I was looking forward to my day in court, but this settlement was too good to pass up. I view this lawsuit as an attempt to stifle free speech that backfired."

Floyd Schneider stated: "I feel vindicated. For the same reasons that companies use the Internet as a promotional vehicle, it has also provided the individual investor with the tools to seek out the facts and to be heard."

Stephen N. Worthington stated: "This is, in no uncertain terms, a victory for free speech. If you know your facts, you should not be afraid to stand up and fight for the truth. The suit appeared to be an attempt by ZSUN to silence those who have raised questions concerning the operational and valuation issues associated with the company.

"The securities markets require full and open discussion of information, including all viewpoints. A public company should not be using its power to sue those with opinions different from the company's, since that would chill the exercise of free speech protected by the First Amendment and thwart the goals of the securities laws."

James A. Shalvoy, the defendants' lawyer, noted: "We are seeing more of these cases as the Internet's role in securities transactions increases. Honest posters have nothing to fear. The Internet may be the New Frontier, but the rule of law still applies."

For additional information, contact: James A. Shalvoy, attorney for George Joakimidis, Michael Morelock, Floyd Schneider, and Stephen N. Worthington, at 310/796-0447 or jshalvoy@earthlink.net.
Contact:

Law Offices of James A. Shalvoy
James A. Shalvoy, 310/796-0447
jshalvoy@earthlink.net



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)11/30/2000 11:13:44 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 609
 
He is makin a list, checking it twice, gonna find out who has been naughty or nice Santa Truthseeker is looking around. He sees you when your hiden, in SEC filings he has found, The Truthseekers internet forensic research is second to none so be good for goodness sake. He is makin a list, checking it twice, gonna find out who has been naughty or nice Santa Truthseeker is looking around.

Total Results : 49 tenkwizard.com



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)11/30/2000 8:29:29 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 609
 
Are Brokers Being Paid Off to Sell These Stocks?
businessweek.com



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)11/30/2000 8:33:42 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 609
 
HOW BRIBES WORK--FROM ONE WHO'S BEEN THERE

businessweek.com

Bribes grease the wheels of the chop-stock business. How does bribery work? How commonplace is it? What follows are excerpts from an interview between BUSINESS WEEK Senior Writer Gary Weiss and a veteran of the chop-stock business, who has worked for five chop houses since 1993.

Q: When corporate officials are confronted with charges of market manipulation, they protest that they don't know anything about it. What's the real situation?
A: In my experience, there has been an incestuous relationship between the small, unproven, speculative corporation and the broker backing his company.... Say Company A needs to get its stock up for many reasons: (1) to allow insiders to sell their own positions at a handsome profit; (2) to make an acquisition; or (3) to remove fear of a declining stock. It's not rare for a corporate officer to approach a broker and, in nonincriminating language, ask: ''What will it take to have you recommend my shares?''

Q: What is that supposed to mean?
A: Compensation. The corporate representative might suggest to the broker there might be additional compensation to the broker if he can ''put away'' [sell to customers] so many shares of the company's stock. It could be 10,000, 100,000, 1 million shares. The payoff occurs as the broker can document the amount of shares he put away. Usually, the broker is asked to supply a copy of each transaction sheet, each customer confirmation, showing the amount of shares that were purchased. And on that basis, a forum would be arranged in which the broker would be paid off in cash or in near-cash items. Near-cash items would be a trip to Hawaii, maybe a luxury car, and so on.

Q: Would payoffs come direct from the company?
A: It could be either way. A cautious company, of course, would always use intermediaries. It could be another broker at the same firm. It could be the brokerage firm itself.

Q: How much are the payoffs?
A: That depends on the amount of shares put away and the price of the shares. Say the stock is 2 [bid] 2 1/2 [asked]. The company wants the stock to go from 2 1/2 to 5. They find a corrupt broker...[and pay] maybe a $5,000 cash payment up front and maybe $5,000 for every half-point the broker can show he lifted the stock.... The deal calls for the broker to buy, say, 100,000 shares of the stock, 200,000 shares of the stock. The broker shows copies of customer confirmations. That way, the intermediary is convinced the broker is doing what he said.

Q: How knowledgeable were officials you encountered from the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD)?
A: I would say very weak in their knowledge--not in the rules and regs of the NASD but in the actual goings-on in the brokerage firms. They didn't have a clue as to what was going on! When I was there, my experience was that they were easily deceived by the broker-dealers, particularly chop shops. The chop shops would work overtime just to cover the books. They're not fools. They're notified by the NASD that they're going to be examined, so they know when to prepare. They know which trades to eliminate from the books. They know how to work the capital out.

Many brokerage firms were in a rush to get into the business. New brokerage firms, in many cases an offshoot of a firm that had gone out of business, would need a PMI--that is, a ''pre-membership interview''--by the NASD. This can be a long process because each of the principals' backgrounds is thoroughly examined, [they] have to be in compliance with rules and regs, proper forms have to be filed, and so forth.

And in many cases, there were certain members of the regulatory authorities who were known to approve the PMIs in a relatively short period of time. So in many cases, those officials might have been short of cash, and intimations were made that the PMI process would be speeded up if certain things were done.

Q: Such as?
A: Some kind of cash gratuity, usually $10,000, $15,000, as high as $25,000. Remember, what you're talking about here, you're talking about the entrance of a hot broker-dealer into these markets. The quicker they can make it, the faster they make money.

Q: Do you know of specific instances where this has happened?
A: Yes, I do.

Q: Did you see it happen?
A: I was there.

businessweek.com



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)11/30/2000 8:54:40 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 609
 
Well I guess Business was right about AXXESS A/K/A FWEB tenkwizard.com

Are Brokers Being Paid Off to Sell These Stocks?

Here are some of the stocks that sources say have been the subject of payoffs
to brokers within the past few months. Company officials who could be reached
for comment denied knowledge of any payoffs.

COMPANY PRICE 52-WEEK
DEC. 1 HIGH

APPLETREE ART 3 3/4 10
AXXESS 2 1/2 8 3/4
HARVEST RESTAURANT GRP. 1 7/8 8 1/4
IMMEDIATE ENTERTAINMENT 4 3/4 7
JUNGLE STREET 4 1/8 7 1/2
LEGEND SPORTS* NA 8
SCOTTSDALE CIGAR 41 5/16 9 1/2
TCP RELIABLE 5 1/8 7 3/4
TELLURIAN 5 9/16 7 1/2
TTR 9 11/16 16 23/32

*Not trading

DATA: BW; BLOOMBERG FINANCIAL MARKETS



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)11/30/2000 10:31:41 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 609
 
Its interesting how Isaac and Shalom Weiss got the same amont of shares.

Good friends Isaac?
Message 14661332

Isaac Winehouse 125,000
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sholom Weiss 125,000

tenkwizard.com

Fugitive Financier Weiss Found; Faces 845-Year Prison Term

Tampa, Florida, Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Shalom Weiss, a financier who has been on the run since his conviction last November for racketeering and fraud linked to the collapse of the National Heritage Life Insurance Company, was found and now faces a 845-year prison term.

Weiss, 46, was arrested yesterday in Vienna, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation said. National Heritage collapsed in 1994 with losses of more than $400 million, authorities said.

Investigators' search for Weiss went across three continents and numerous countries.

``Fugitives may run, but with this kind of international cooperation, they cannot hide,'' said Frank Gallagher, the special agent in charge of the Tampa division of the FBI.

Weiss disappeared in October 1999, shortly before the end of his nine-month trial in federal court in Orlando, Florida. He was convicted in absentia of 78 charges, including conspiracy, wire fraud, money laundering and obstruction of justice.

Fourteen other individuals have been convicted in relation to the National Heritage collapse, the FBI said. Less than $150 million has been recovered.

Oct/25/2000 15:27 ET

For more stories from Bloomberg News, click here.

(C) Copyright 2000 Bloomberg L.P.

...



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)12/1/2000 2:04:47 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 609
 
Hey Chump, maybe you can get some SELF HELP from Stockreporter.de again?
CHEERS CHUMPS!!

SHZI - SELF HELP ZONE INC Exchange:OTC
Last Price: 0.07 at 15:53 EST
Change: Unchanged (0.00%)High: 0.08 Low:0.06

Stockreporter Announces Investment Opinion on Self Help Zone Inc.

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 27, 2000--

Stockreporter issued a research report covering Self Help Zone

Inc. (SHZI) with a share price target of $1.63 in the next 12 to 18

months and $5.25 in 24 months.

Self Help Zone Inc. (Pink Sheets: SHZI) today was featured in a research report from Stockreporter, a leading European financial Internet publication located at www.stockreporter.de that specializes in the coverage of micro-cap stocks and undervalued companies.

Stockreporter initiated coverage of this unique self-help retailer located at www.SelfHelpZone.com with a 12 to 18 month stock price target of $1.63 and $5.25 in 24 months, assuming a PE Ratio of 20x projected earnings.

"Just last month, Self Help Zone Inc. launched the world's first-ever self-help Internet superstore targeting the multi-billion dollar self help industry. Stockreporter anticipates that Self Help Zone will carve out an attractive niche in this lucrative market by providing a unique offering that truly meets customer needs," said Torsten Prochnow of Stockreporter. "Stockreporter believes that the Company has a winning combination for this marketplace and an exciting position in this multi-billion dollar industry with a unique service designed to fulfil unmet consumer-driven demand.

"The Company also has strong management expertise in related fields, a consumer-oriented approach and a solid business model," Prochnow continued. "Based on this model, and the anticipated resulting competitive advantages, SHZI foresees rapid growth and earnings. The Company believes that in year one it will generate $2.7 million in net income after taxes on $4.5 million in sales."

View the complete Stockreporter report covering SHZI, prepared by Christina Skousen, Registered Investment Advisor, at www.stockreporter.de.

DISCLAIMER

For more information, see www.stockreporter.de. We maintain close contact with institutional and private investors. Please feel free to contact us with any inquiries or suggestions.

Stockreporter, a service of World of Internet.com AG, is a leading European financial Internet publication located at www.stockreporter.de specializing in the coverage of micro-cap stocks and undervalued OTC and BB companies. Please read the complete Disclaimer and Discloser Statement at the web site. All statements are the opinion of Stockreporter, information is from sources believed reliable but cannot be guaranteed. Stockreporter personnel and associates may hold positions in securities mentioned and these positions may be increased or decreased in the future. Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a solicitation or offer to buy or sell securities or as investment advice. You are advised to obtain such advice from a qualified securities broker or investment advisor. Securities mentioned involve a very high degree of risk - please be sure to examine the company's financial statements and SEC filings (www.sec.gov) and perform other due-diligence.

World of Internet.com AG was engaged to provide a package of investor relations services (e.g. consulting, technical chart analysis, board discussions, listings, production and dissemination of a research report, investor roadshows, etc.) and received a typical consideration for the whole package of 175,000 shares of SHZI at $0.50 per share, of which a certain amount compensates Stockreporter for dissemination of the research report and subsequent updates regarding SHZI.

CONTACT:

Stockreporter, Hamburg/Germany

Torsten Prochnow: 011-49-172-4031383

Dennis C. Hass: 011-49-172-4062621

contact@stockreporter.de

KEYWORD: NEW YORK GERMANY INTERNATIONAL EUROPE

BW2486 NOV 27,2000

11:27 PACIFIC

14:27 EASTERN



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)12/1/2000 2:06:09 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 609
 
SEC v. Torsten Prochnow d/b/a/ Stockreporter.de, Dennis C.
Hass and World of Internet.com AG
(U.S. District Court, Northern District of California)
(SEC Contact: Donald Hoerl, 303-844-1060)
The SEC alleges that Torsten Prochnow and Dennis C. Hass,
residents of Germany, touted the stocks of approximately 64 U.S.
public companies under the name Stockreporter.de. The touts have
been disseminated through postings on Stockreporter.de's Internet
website and numerous press releases. As set forth in the
complaint, Prochnow, Hass and WorldofInternet.com AG (a German
corporation owned by Prochnow and Hass) targeted U.S. investors
and these investors purchased the touted stocks based on the
Stockreporter.de recommendations. The Stockreporter.de website
contained false statements concerning the purportedly "long-term"
trading intentions of Stockreporter.de's principals. The website
also contained baseless financial and/or stock price projections
concerning one of the touted issuers. The website also falsely
stated that Stockreporter.de's principals were not compensated
for their touting, and both the website and press releases failed
to disclose both the nature and source of the compensation. The
touts caused the price and trading volume of the stock of certain
issuers to increase significantly in the short term. Baseless
recommendations resulted in price and volume for 28 stocks
increasing an average of between 28 percent and 390 percent. On
at least 15 occasions, the SEC alleges that Prochnow and Hass
sold their holdings of the touted stocks into the resulting
inflated market, realizing profits of $111,530. Without
admitting or denying the SEC's allegations, Prochnow and Hass
have agreed to the entry of an order that enjoins them from
future violations of Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933,
Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-
5 under the Exchange Act. The order also requires them, jointly
and severally, to disgorge $111,520 plus prejudgment interest,
and for each to pay a civil penalty of $50,000.
sec.gov



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)12/1/2000 2:14:01 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 609
 
"Dennis Haas, the 29-year-old executive vice president and co-founder of
World of Internet, says he and two friends came up with the idea for the
business a few years ago when they were humanities students at a college
near Hamburg. Although Mr. Haas often appears as the author of the
analyst reports, he cheerfully admits to having scant business training.
Stockreporter relies on the companies to provide information for the reports.
"We don't have the time or the capacity to do all of the reporting," he says.
"We're not analysts.""
Some Pretty Lonely U.S. Stocks Call Hamburg Exchange Home

August 24, 2000
By CHRISTOPHER COOPER
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

HAMBURG, Germany -- Some obscure U.S. companies, tired of being
ignored by American investors, are seeking relief in an unlikely place: the
tiny Hamburg Stock Exchange.

Driven to the brink of obsolescence by the far larger bourse in Frankfurt, the
Hamburg exchange now offers a new specialty: micro-cap U.S. stocks. A
new trading board, launched in January, currently features about 40
companies, all of them based in North America, few with any deep
connection to Europe.

Yet some of these stocks generate more trading volume in Hamburg than
they do in the U.S. The board, called the High Risk Market, is the product of
an unusual alliance between the exchange and a Hamburg-based
stock-promotion firm, World of Internet.com AG.

World of Internet, which operates a financial Web site called
Stockreporter.de (stockreporter.de), is one of many paid stock touts, offering
publicity and analyst reports about tiny U.S. firms in return for cash and
stock options. With its deal in Hamburg, World of Internet also offers clients
a stock listing there. About half of its 50 or so customers have signed up.

Who's Trading Here?

Typical of the companies on the exchange is Rhombic Corp., which
describes itself as a scientific research company working on, among other
things, a material the company says may one day replace silicon. The
company, founded in Nevada but based in Vancouver, British Columbia,
reported a first-quarter loss of $605,000 on revenue of $1,207. It is listed on
the OTC Bulletin Board in the U.S., where investors have shown little
interest.

In March, after Rhombic paid World of Internet $18,000 for "a package of
investor relations services," which included a listing in Hamburg, interest in
the outfit picked up. These days, some 200,000 Rhombic shares change
hands in a single session in Hamburg, according to local securities firm
Borsenmakler Schnigge AG, more than double the average volume in the
U.S.

"Peculiar, isn't it?" says Larry Horowitz, a spokesman for Rhombic. "The
Germans understand our company better than investors in the U.S."

Bids and Beer

For the Hamburg exchange, Germany's oldest bourse but one of its smallest,
creating the High Risk Market is an attempt to stand out from the crowd of
regional bourses, says Deputy Business Manager Kay Homan. "People need
to know that Frankfurt isn't the only exchange in Germany," he says.
Walking through the cavernous trading floor, all but deserted on a recent
midday, he passes a lone trader, who monitors a trading screen in between
swigs of beer. "We need to advertise, but we don't have any money," Mr.
Homan says.

At this point the new board is "pretty much a hobby," Mr. Homan says,
generating little income for the exchange. The bourse hopes it will grow into
something more lucrative.

The bourse doesn't claim to offer much oversight of companies listed on the
new board. Instead, officials say, they rely on the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission for policing. The name alone should make investors
wary, Mr. Homan says: "It's called the High Risk Market -- that should be
warning enough."

The market has proved a boon to World of Internet, which charges its
customers a fee, generally several thousand dollars, to list in Hamburg.

Not all of the companies are as happy as Rhombic with World of Internet's
services. Houston-based Adair International Oil & Gas Inc. also listed in
Hamburg in March but has yet to catch on with German investors. The
company, which lists an oil lease in Yemen among its assets, recorded a loss
of $1.14 million for the first quarter. Over the past year, the company's stock
price has fluctuated between a high of $3 and a low of about 12 cents.

Glowing Reports

As payment, World of Internet received 270,000 shares of Adair at 10 cents
apiece. In return, World of Internet's Stockreporter service provided a
Hamburg listing and a glowing analyst report, calling Adair a "strong buy"
and predicting a "conservative" price target of $3.90 a share.

Indeed, shortly after Stockreporter issued its report, Adair hit its 52-week
high. But the Hamburg listing has been a bust, says the company's chief
executive officer, Bill Adair. "Stockreporter pitched this as a way to build
active interest in our company, but ####, I haven't seen it," he says.

Other World of Internet clients listed here include Hartcourt Cos., Long
Beach, Calif., which has at various times been involved in gold mines, real
estate and Chinese Internet ventures. Winners Internet Inc., St. Augustine,
Fla., a former mining company that now says it is developing software, is
also listed. Other firms listed on the Hamburg bourse were recently delisted
from the Bulletin Board in the U.S., leaving them to trade in the so-called
Pink Sheets, where price quotes aren't readily available and regulatory
scrutiny is light.

Dennis Haas, the 29-year-old executive vice president and co-founder of
World of Internet, says he and two friends came up with the idea for the
business a few years ago when they were humanities students at a college
near Hamburg. Although Mr. Haas often appears as the author of the
analyst reports, he cheerfully admits to having scant business training.
Stockreporter relies on the companies to provide information for the reports.
"We don't have the time or the capacity to do all of the reporting," he says.
"We're not analysts."

Disclosure of the Arrangement

Generally, U.S. securities laws allow companies such as World of Internet to
provide paid analyst reports, so long as they disclose the payments. World of
Internet does so, behind a link on its Stockreporter Web site. Asked if he
thought all Stockreporter readers know of the disclosure, Mr. Haas shrugs.
"Maybe some people don't know," he says.

To arrange for its listings in Hamburg, World of Internet relies on
market-making firms, usually Borsenmakler Schnigge. That company's
Hamburg broker, Klaus Pinkernell, also sits on World of Internet's board of
supervisors.

Portly and pony-tailed, Mr. Pinkernell hunches over his computer in Berlin,
watching the trading on the Hamburg Exchange and occasionally exclaiming
at the screen. "Robbers!" he cries, as he watches a lowball bid for Rhombic
flash over the monitor.

The Market Maker

Mr. Pinkernell makes his money primarily through arbitrage between the
U.S. and German exchanges and by charging a small fee for executing
trades. Because Hamburg requires its companies to be sponsored by a
market maker, he also charges World of Internet about $2,500 per listing.
"Believe me, they charge their clients much more," he says.

Mr. Pinkernell takes an existential view of the High Risk Market and the
companies and people who trade there.

"People who buy stock in these companies, I wouldn't call them investors,"
he says. "I'd call them gamblers."

Write to Christopher Cooper at christopher.cooper@wsj.com



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)12/3/2000 6:26:54 PM
From: blebovits  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 609
 
TTRE - TTR TECHNOLOGIES INC Up 0.21875 (+3.37%)

Exchange: Nasdaq SC
Delay: at least 15 minutes
Last Price: 6.71875 at 15:57 EST
Change: Up 0.21875 (+3.37%)
High: 6.75 at 13:13 EST
Low: 6.15625 at 10:03 EST



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (69)12/4/2000 11:02:42 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 609
 
Wall & Broad Equities, Inc. 1,300,000(4) 7.89 1,300,000

tenkwizard.com

(4) Includes 503,202 shares issuable upon exercise of warrants. As required by
SEC rules, the number of shares shown as beneficially owned includes shares
which could be purchased within 60 days after the date of this prospectus.
However, the terms of the warrants held by this selling stockholder specify that
the stockholder can not exercise its warrants to the extent that such exercise
would result in the selling stockholder and its affiliates beneficially owning
more than 4.99% of our then outstanding common stock. Thus, although some of the
shares listed in the table might not be subject to purchase by the selling
stockholder during that 60 day period, they are nevertheless included in this
table. The actual number of shares of common stock issuable upon the exercise of
the warrants is subject to adjustment and could be materially less or more than
the number estimated in the table. This variation is due to factors that cannot
be predicated by us at this time. The most significant of these factors is the
future market price of our common stock.