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Pastimes : Whodunit? Two Stockbrokers Murdered in Jersey; No Clues -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (1034)4/16/2001 11:11:18 PM
From: Gary E  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1156
 
It's about time this guy got his.....I only wish that he would be made to return the money he stole from honest people.....

TRENTON, N.J., April 16 (Reuters) - After deliberating for seven days, a federal jury on Monday convicted Robert Brennan, a penny stock salesman and target of state and federal securities regulators, of bankruptcy fraud and money laundering.Brennan, 57, faces six to 10 years in prison after being convicted on seven of 13 counts by the jury in U.S. District Court in Trenton, New Jersey.

biz.yahoo.com



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (1034)6/19/2001 5:26:15 AM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1156
 
interactive.wsj.com

June 18, 2001

Ex-Finance Chief of A.S. Goldmen Receives
Sentence in $100 Million Stock-Fraud Case

Associated Press

NEW YORK
-- A stock swindler, already serving 25 years for plotting to
kill a judge, was sentenced Monday to three to nine more years behind
bars for his role in a $100 million securities scam.

Stuart Winkler, 49, former chief financial
officer of A.S. Goldmen & Co., pleaded guilty
to enterprise corruption.

Mr. Winkler was among 33 Goldmen
employees accused of bilking thousands of
clients through unauthorized trading and
forgery. He must repay $3 million.

In December, Mr. Winkler was convicted of offering a fellow inmate
$50,000 to kill state Supreme Court Justice Leslie Crocker Snyder, who
was hearing the fraud case. He said he wanted her dead because she
wouldn't set affordable bail. The inmate recorded Mr. Winkler.

A different judge sentenced Mr. Winkler on Monday.

The original indictments alleged that Goldmen, based in Naples, Fla., and
the individual defendants cheated investors by lying, trading without
authorization, forging, ignoring sell orders and stealing.

Some investors, most of them elderly, were persuaded to get as much cash
as possible through their credit cards or from retirement accounts to invest
with Goldmen. Virtually all of that money was lost.

KJC