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To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (1774)4/17/2001 1:07:41 AM
From: LaShark  Respond to of 1992
 
I hope Mcbribe goes to Prison for years and years and doesnt get to enjoy the ill gotten gains.

I hope so as well. Ugly 10k, real ugly.



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (1774)4/17/2001 9:44:05 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1992
 
SeaView founder at center of company's storm

tampabay.bcentral.com

Pamela Griner Leavy Staff Writer
ST. PETERSBURG -- A stormy technology business story that arose in a southern Pinellas County beach community continues to evolve but in a different location.

At its center is Rich McBride, founder and former chief executive officer at SeaView Video Technology Inc., an underwater camera design and manufacturing firm headquartered -- until last week -- on Tierra Verde.

SeaView relocated last week to the Republic Bank building in downtown St. Petersburg. At press time, McBride, who resigned his CEO post in February, was still connected to the company, serving as a marketing and research consultant under a three-year contract, he said.

While McBride agreed to telephone interviews, he canceled two face-to-face appointments with The Business Journal Serving Greater Tampa Bay and declined to be photographed. He has received "death threats" and wants to protect his family, McBride said.

"I don't want to have my photo used at all," he said. "Life is getting to be unbearable here in the community with these things."

These "things" are many.

SeaView currently is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission and continues to deal with controversy involving former employees.

0n March 19, the company reported to the SEC that while preparing its annual report for the fiscal year ending Dec. 23, 2000, it found inaccuracies in its unaudited financial statements for the quarters ending June 30 and Sept. 30. Those statements, prepared under McBride's watch, had been filed previously with the SEC.

The inaccuracies were found during a review undertaken by SeaView's new chief financial officer, Douglas Bauer.

The inaccuracies involve revenue as related to certain purchase orders received by the company, stated the SeaView report sent to the SEC.

The report stated it is believed the inaccuracies are likely to materially affect the company's revenues ... income, assets and equity for the reported periods and subsequent year-end statement.

McBride has faced accusations by former employees of hyping SeaView sales projections in news releases, a practice frowned on by the SEC under Regulation FD (fair disclosure).

But he and SeaView have followed all SEC "safe harbor" disclaimer regulations, said McBride.

In February, George Bernardich III succeeded McBride as SeaView CEO.

The SEC investigation, although it is not open to the public, revolves around "massive" stock shorting at the end of 2000 of the over-the-counter traded SeaView stock, said McBride.

People who "short" stock bank on the price of the stock dropping through increased trading. Stock certificates are then available for purchase at a lower price.

What makes the SEC stand at attention is dramatic changes in the way a stock is traded, said Pam Lagano, president of Lagano & Associates Inc., a Clearwater-based investor relations firm.

"People short all the time, but the SEC looks at trends," said Lagano. "They have ways of tracking to see if company management and relatives are buying and selling stock from inside information."

As for SeaView, the SEC will make no statements about the company being involved in stock manipulation or fraud, said McBride.

McBride said he welcomes the investigation.

Meanwhile, public criticism of McBride and SeaView on some online message boards and stock information sites such as ragingbull.com and insidetruth.com dates back to the end of 2000 and continues.

Posting information about McBride and the SeaView company is online stock guru Anthony Elgindy, better known as Anthony@pacific of Pacific Equity Investigations.

On the insidetruth.com site -- called an investigative stock information site -- Elgindy posts stocks he claims to have helped short.

Ragingbull.com is an online message board accessible to anyone, and while it is owned by the Lycos Corp., Lycos does not take responsibility for its content.

While SeaView continues to operate, former employees with concerns about falling stocks have taken to posting complaints on online bulletin boards and going on SeaView property.

The Pinellas County Sheriff's Department was called to the Tierra Verde location on more than one occasion about trespassing, including responding to an incident on SeaView property by former staff members at a recent stockholders' open house, department reports show.

Also included on the online sites were reports that McBride is a convicted "con man," charged in Pinellas County in 1996 with felony -- forging sales reports for broadcast advertising videos that did not air.

While McBride was charged with the crimes, he entered a plea of no contest. Adjudication was withheld and he remains on probation.

"Adjudication was withheld," said Nancy Ham, deputy regional director for the Florida Department of Corrections.

As for SeaView's continuing support of its founder McBride, Bernardich did not return calls seeking comment.

SeaView traded at $1.06 this week.

To reach Pamela Griner Leavy, call (813) 342-2479, or send your e-mail to pleavy@amcity.com.



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (1774)4/17/2001 9:59:31 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1992
 
MCBRIDE ADDED COMMENTS-> SeaView founder at center of company's storm

investorshub.com

Posted by: Rich McBride
Date: 4/17/2001 8:48:52 PM (ET)
Post # of 7732

Another interesting article

Pam got her information from of all people (Ken COOK)
She also was not happy that I would not meet with her
to discuss all the details. She told me how bad she
felt about all the terrible lies on insidetruth.com?

Exclusive Reports
From the March 23, 2001 print edition

SeaView founder at center of company's storm
Pamela Griner Leavy Staff Writer

ST. PETERSBURG -- A stormy technology business story that arose in a southern Pinellas County beach community continues to evolve but in a different location.

At its center is Rich McBride, founder and former chief executive officer at SeaView Video Technology Inc., an underwater camera design and manufacturing firm headquartered -- until last week -- on Tierra Verde.

SeaView relocated last week to the Republic Bank building in downtown St. Petersburg. At press time, McBride, who resigned his CEO post in February, was still connected to the company, serving as a marketing and research consultant under a three-year contract, he said.

(EVEN IN THE ABOVE SHE TRIES TO MAKE IT LOOK LIKE WE LEFT
TOWN TO AVOID THE PROBLEMS.)

While McBride agreed to telephone interviews, he canceled two face-to-face appointments with The Business Journal Serving Greater Tampa Bay and declined to be photographed. He has received "death threats" and wants to protect his family, McBride said.

"I don't want to have my photo used at all," he said. "Life is getting to be unbearable here in the community with these things."

These "things" are many.

(HERE SHE GOES TO THE EXTREME SIDE, AGAIN I ALWAYS SAID I
DID NOT WANT TO DO AN INTERVIEW. THIS IS WHAT MADE HER MAD)

SeaView currently is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission and continues to deal with controversy involving former employees.
(SHE WAS NEVER TOLD THIS BY ANYONE AT SEVIEW. KEN COOK FAXED
HER A COPY OF ARCHS SUPOENA)

0n March 19, the company reported to the SEC that while preparing its annual report for the fiscal year ending Dec. 23, 2000, it found inaccuracies in its unaudited financial statements for the quarters ending June 30 and Sept. 30. Those statements, prepared under McBride's watch, had been filed previously with the SEC.

The inaccuracies were found during a review undertaken by SeaView's new chief financial officer, Douglas Bauer.

The inaccuracies involve revenue as related to certain purchase orders received by the company, stated the SeaView report sent to the SEC.

The report stated it is believed the inaccuracies are likely to materially affect the company's revenues ... income, assets and equity for the reported periods and subsequent year-end statement.

McBride has faced accusations by former employees of hyping SeaView sales projections in news releases, a practice frowned on by the SEC under Regulation FD (fair disclosure).

(PAM NEEDS TO GET SOME HELP HERE. FD REGULATIONS HAVE NOTHING
TO DO WITH CONTENT OR HYPING STOCK. AGAIN WE ARE TALKING ABOUT
KEN COOK)

But he and SeaView have followed all SEC "safe harbor" disclaimer regulations, said McBride.

In February, George Bernardich III succeeded McBride as SeaView CEO.

The SEC investigation, although it is not open to the public, revolves around "massive" stock shorting at the end of 2000 of the over-the-counter traded SeaView stock, said McBride.

(SHE WAS NEVER TOLD BY ME ABOUT ANY INVESTIGATION OF SEAVIEW)

People who "short" stock bank on the price of the stock dropping through increased trading. Stock certificates are then available for purchase at a lower price.

What makes the SEC stand at attention is dramatic changes in the way a stock is traded, said Pam Lagano, president of Lagano & Associates Inc., a Clearwater-based investor relations firm.

"People short all the time, but the SEC looks at trends," said Lagano. "They have ways of tracking to see if company management and relatives are buying and selling stock from inside information."

(THIS GIRL ALSO NEEDS SOME HELP! SHORTS DO NOT USUALLY INVOLVE
INSIDERS. FOR THOSE OF YOU THAT KNOW THIS BUSINESS HER UNDER-
STANDING OF A SHORT IS WEAK!)

As for SeaView, the SEC will make no statements about the company being involved in stock manipulation or fraud, said McBride.

(WHY WOULD YOU PRINT THIS AND WHY WOULD I SAY IT! WHY WOULD
I SPEAK FOR THE SEC? THEY ARE A PHONE CALL AWAY? MAYBE SHE
DID NOT LIKE WHAT THEY SAID?)

McBride said he welcomes the investigation.

(WHAT INVESTIGATION? I HAD NO COMMENT)

Meanwhile, public criticism of McBride and SeaView on some online message boards and stock information sites such as ragingbull.com and insidetruth.com dates back to the end of 2000 and continues.

Posting information about McBride and the SeaView company is online stock guru Anthony Elgindy, better known as Anthony@pacific of Pacific Equity Investigations.

On the insidetruth.com site -- called an investigative stock information site -- Elgindy posts stocks he claims to have helped short.

(SHE IS THE ONLY REPORTER IN THE COUNTRY TO MAKE INSIDETRUTH.COM
EQUAL TO OR MORE HONEST THEN RAGGING BULL!)

Ragingbull.com is an online message board accessible to anyone, and while it is owned by the Lycos Corp., Lycos does not take responsibility for its content.

While SeaView continues to operate, former employees with concerns about falling stocks have taken to posting complaints on online bulletin boards and going on SeaView property.

(WE DON'T KNOW WHO THE POSTERS ARE ON THE BOARDS;DOES SHE
HAVE A MAGIC CONNECTION. KEN COOK AGAIN!)

The Pinellas County Sheriff's Department was called to the Tierra Verde location on more than one occasion about trespassing, including responding to an incident on SeaView property by former staff members at a recent stockholders' open house, department reports show.

(THE POLICE WAS CALLED, NOT AT THIS MEETING, IT WAS AT MY
HOUSE)

Also included on the online sites were reports that McBride is a convicted "con man," charged in Pinellas County in 1996 with felony -- forging sales reports for broadcast advertising videos that did not air.

(NOW I'M A CONVICTED CON MAN?)

While McBride was charged with the crimes, he entered a plea of no contest. Adjudication was withheld and he remains on probation.

"Adjudication was withheld," said Nancy Ham, deputy regional director for the Florida Department of Corrections.

As for SeaView's continuing support of its founder McBride, Bernardich did not return calls seeking comment.

(I DO NOT BLAME GEORGE)

SeaView traded at $1.06 this week.

To reach Pamela Griner Leavy, call (813) 342-2479, or send your e-mail to pleavy@amcity.com.

SHE NEVER PRINTED WHAT SHE TALKED ABOUT, MY SIDE. IT DOES NOT
SELL NEWSPAPERS! Rich McBride

P.S. I'm going to work on A@P whole story. It will all come
in court anyway. I want the people that did not see all the
information on our website that refuted his lies. Up next!

Copyright 2001 American City Business Journals Inc.
Click for permission to reprint (PRC# 1.1665.409760)



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (1774)4/17/2001 10:17:21 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1992
 
SeaView restates earnings

localbusiness.com

SeaView restates earnings

INDUSTRIAL GOODS, LEISURE

By Bill Holland, LocalBusiness.com
Apr 17, 2001 12:27 PM ET

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., April 17 (LocalBusiness.com) -- Restated sales and earnings figures filed by underwater camera maker SeaView Video Technologies show a drastic decline in the amount of actual revenue it earned. The company - which previously reported itself in the black - lost money in 2000.

The restated financial picture is the result of a new management team put in place last month, a team that included former PricewaterhouseCoopers accountant Doug Bauer as chief financial officer and former JC Penney executive George Bernardich as chief executive. The annual report states the revenue discrepancies were discovered by Bauer.

Company founder serving probation
Company founder Richard McBride stepped down as chief executive last month but remains the company's controlling shareholder. McBride is serving a six-year probated sentence for felony fraud from a 1998 case where his previous business used fake sales orders to bill customers.

SeaView's (OTC BB: SEVU) annual report, filed late Monday, restates the second and third quarter's sales figures downward by hundreds of percent.

Instead of the $1.5 million in second quarter sales the company reported for 2000's second quarter, SeaView now says it sold $335,120 worth of underwater cameras. Third quarter sales of $2.5 million were revised down to $212,592, a difference of 91 percent.

Booked orders prematurely
For the year, SeaView now says sales were $1.13 million with losses of $2.2 million, or 18 cents per share, a far cry from the $155,000 profits it previously had said it earned in the first nine months of 2000.

Sequentially, the annual report shows revenue dropped throughout the year, despite repeated company announcements of record sales volume.

The company explained the differences by saying it booked as revenue products that had been ordered but never sold. The company gave no explanation for the huge difference between products it said were ordered in the second and third quarters, but apparently never shipped.

Company executives did not return phone calls for comment Tuesday morning.

SeaView shares - which spent much of last year selling above $10 on the strength of glowing press releases predicting as much as $40 million in sales and erroneous financial figures supplied to investors and the SEC - gained 3 cents, 4 percent, to 80 cents per share in moderate trading Tuesday morning.

Those shares hit a 52-wwek low of 72 cents last month, struggling to regain ground in the face of heavy selling, including that many company insiders, over the past month.

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