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Microcap & Penny Stocks : SEVU: New Invention of Great Potential... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (1557)2/16/2001 9:39:26 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1992
 
By: shamus $$$$
Reply To: None Friday, 16 Feb 2001 at 1:19 AM EST
Post # of 24734


The most fundamental question posed in these 24,000-plus posts is this: If SecureView is such a great product that "sells itself," why hasn't the company produced some? After two years worth of excuses, I am convinced that the answer is not lack of financing, not lack of UL approval, not lack of parts, etc., etc., etc.

No, the only logical answer is that THE PRODUCT DOESN'T WORK. It didn't work for Elcom and it apparently doesn't work for SeaView. I submit that this is the only logical conclusion because it's the only thing that explains each and every stall tactic employed by McBride over these many months.

So what about all those "awesome" demonstrations at SeaView headquarters? Well, give me a little time and a good electrician and I can make a three dimensional virtual stripper dance across my patio. Just don't ask me to do it in the real world.

It's time to Follow Da Money, which AnthonyPacific has so far failed to do. In the next day or two, I'll talk about the money trail and explore some possible ways to find it.

All comments are my opinion. Address inquiries to The Shamus Presidential Library, Denise Rich, Chairman.

ragingbull.lycos.com



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (1557)2/16/2001 1:37:31 PM
From: vampire  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1992
 
<< Elgindy was a car salesman and a penny-stocks broker before he got
on the Internet. He was suspended for 30 days and fined $30,000 by the
National Association of Securities Dealers in 1997 for violating
stock-trading rules. Previously, he had been fined $60,000 by an
arbitrator in a dispute with a former employer, Bear Stearns & Co.
Elgindy lost his broker's license after refusing to pay the fines.
His 115-day jail sentence last year was for a mail fraud conviction
related to a 1993 disability claim. He had claimed that a
securities-fraud investigation of another former employer, Armstrong
McKinley, pushed him into depression and out of work. Prosecutors said
Elgindy had continued to collect disability checks after he was hired
by Bear Stearns. >>

i shoulda figured there was a reason yoiu're always knocking bear stearns
grudges die hard, dont they?
just cause they kicked your butt!