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To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (316)10/18/2001 6:25:05 AM
From: oryx  Respond to of 574
 
Does anyone have any idea how long the trade halt will last for?

What are the precedents for this type of halt/investigation?



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (316)10/24/2001 4:35:12 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 574
 
IN THE MATTER OF MADERA INTERNATIONAL, INC.

On October 22, Chief Administrative Law Judge Brenda P. Murray revoked
the common stock registration of Madera International, Inc., a Nevada
corporation headquartered in Coral Gables, Florida, pursuant to Section
12(j) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Judge Murray granted the
motion of the Division of Enforcement and found Madera in default
because Madera received notice but failed to appear at a prehearing
conference on October 18, 2001 (See Rule 155(a)(1) of the Commission's
Rules of Practice, 17 C.F.R. 201.155(a)(1). Chief Judge Murray found
that Madera violated: (1) Section 13(a) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 and Exchange Act Rules 13a-1, and 13a-13 by failing to file
annual and quarterly reports for periods following its fiscal quarter
that ended December 31, 1999, and (2) these provisions and Exchange Act
Rule 12b-20 by including fictitious sales in its annual report for the
fiscal year ended March 31, 1998, and its quarterly report for the
quarter ended June 30, 1998, as alleged in the Order Instituting
Proceedings. (Rel. 34-44966; File No. 3-10577)



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (316)10/24/2001 4:36:24 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 574
 
In re Possino , 37 Cal.3d 163

[L.A. No. 31914. Supreme Court of California. November 5, 1984.]

In re REGIS MICHAEL POSSINO on Disbarment

(Opinion by The Court.)

COUNSEL

Theodore A. Cohen for Petitioner.

Herbert M. Rosenthal and Truitt A. Richey, Jr., for Respondent.

OPINION

THE COURT.

This court reviews and adopts a recommendation of the State Bar that petitioner Regis Michael Possino be disbarred following his conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude. (Bus. & Prof. Code, 6101, 6102; Cal. Rules of Court, rule 951.) fn. 1

Petitioner was admitted to practice in 1972. He was privately reproved in 1976 for wrongfully causing an employee to make a false notarial declaration. The present proceeding arises from his 1978 conviction for offering to sell marijuana. (Health & Saf. Code, 11360.) Following this conviction, [37 Cal.3d 166] the superior court placed petitioner on probation for five years with various conditions of probation including confinement in county jail for one year. That judgment was affirmed on appeal on June 18, 1979.

In November 1978, following the superior court's probation order, this court referred the matter to the State Bar for a hearing and report on whether the facts surrounding the marijuana offense involved moral turpitude or other misconduct warranting discipline and, if so, for recommendation as to the discipline to be imposed. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 951(c).) No interim suspension was ordered. (See 6102, subd. (a).)

Based on stipulated facts and on testimonial evidence, the hearing panel found that the circumstances of the offense involved moral turpitude. Disbarment was recommended. The review department unanimously adopted the hearing panel's findings of fact. However, it adopted the panel's recommendation of disbarment by a divided vote. Three of the eight members recommended suspension for five years, to be stayed on conditions including four years' actual suspension.

The facts giving rise to the Health and Safety Code section 11360 conviction arose from petitioner's attempt during November and December of 1975 to sell 350 pounds of marijuana to undercover Los Angeles police officers. In November of that year, petitioner offered to sell 1,000 pounds to the officers, but the officers indicated interest in only a lesser amount. At several meetings over the next few weeks, petitioner negotiated the terms of the sale, delivered samples of the "merchandise," and calculated that his profit on the sale of 350 pounds of marijuana would be $38,500.

In the course of the marijuana negotiations, petitioner also sought to purchase cocaine from the undercover officers. He told the officers that he was an attorney and was acting on behalf of several groups who could purchase 8 to 10 kilograms of cocaine twice a month at a price of $34,000 per kilo. However, these negotiations ended when one of the undercover officers said he would not be able to obtain any cocaine until Christmas.

Additionally, at one of the meetings petitioner offered to sell undercover officers $5 million worth of stolen treasury bills or bearer bonds. At a subsequent meeting, the officers brought along an undercover agent of the United States Treasury Department, introducing him as a cousin of one of the undercover narcotics officers and a dealer in stolen securities. Petitioner and the agent negotiated a purchase price of 20 percent of the face value for the securities. However, petitioner never delivered the securities. He later informed the agent that he had negotiated a better price with another buyer, and cancelled the transaction. [37 Cal.3d 167]

During these negotiations, petitioner represented himself as an attorney and produced identification as a deputy or former deputy of the Los Angeles District Attorney's office. He was in fact a former deputy of that office.

Petitioner was arrested on December 23, 1975, while attempting to deliver the first shipment of 50 pounds of marijuana to the undercover officers. He was charged with three counts of violating Health and Safety Code section 11360 and one count of violating Health and Safety Code section 11359 (possession of marijuana for sale). He was released on his own recognizance pending trial The trial was held in late 1977 and resulted in a conviction for one count of violating Health and Safety Code section 11360.

One evening during the trial, petitioner encountered one of the trial jurors as she was waiting for a table in a restaurant. He approached her, initiated a conversation, and bought drinks for her and her companions. Although they did not discuss the merits of the case, petitioner asked the juror what she thought of the prosecutor. He also talked to her about himself, other persons involved in the trial, and the judge. Learning that the juror was a religious person, petitioner discussed his own religious beliefs with her. The conversation ended when the juror and her friends were called to dinner.

After the juror finished dinner, she approached petitioner and said she was upset about their conversation, which she believed was improper. Petitioner said that whatever she did about it would be "all right" with him. She subsequently reported the conversation to the trial judge. Thereafter, she was excused from the jury.

The judge stated that petitioner's conduct amounted to contempt of court, and that petitioner had indirectly attempted to influence the juror and had violated his ethical obligations as an attorney. The judge revoked petitioner's own recognizance release and remanded him to custody for the remainder of the trial. A transcript of the juror's testimony concerning the restaurant conversation was sent by the judge to the State Bar for possible discipline.

The hearing panel noted in mitigation that petitioner was only 27 years old at the time of his arrest. He was not engaged in full-time legal practice but instead was doing legal research and making minor court appearances for other attorneys. He ceased practicing law altogether during 1976 and 1977, and again from April 1980 through April 1981. In 1979 and 1980, he performed free legal services for the Los Angeles Free Clinic and participated in the State Bar's "Volunteers in Parole Program." The panel also [37 Cal.3d 168] found that petitioner sought psychological evaluation and counselling during the two years following his arrest. fn. 2

I.

Petitioner's sole contention is that the recommended discipline is excessive. He notes correctly that the purpose of a disciplinary proceeding is not to punish but to ascertain an attorney's present fitness to practice law and to inquire into the need to protect the public, the courts and the legal profession. (In re Conflenti (1981) 29 Cal.3d 120, 123 [172 Cal.Rptr. 203, 624 P.2d 253].) He argues that in his case such protection can be achieved through a lesser discipline than disbarment.

[1] Absent mitigating circumstances, conviction of a felony involving moral turpitude may justify disbarment. ( 6102, subd. (b).) fn. 3 [2] Petitioner bears the burden of demonstrating that the State Bar's recommendation, made with the objective of protecting the public, is erroneous. (In re Conflenti, supra, 29 Cal.3d at p. 124.)

On several occasions, discipline short of disbarment has been imposed on attorneys who were involved in illegal drug transactions. However, a review of these cases reveals the existence of mitigating factors not present here [37 Cal.3d 169]

In In re Kreamer, supra, 14 Cal.3d 524, this court ordered three years' probation with no actual suspension for an attorney who had engaged in two separate transactions to distribute large quantities of marijuana. The court noted that the attorney had no prior discipline, that his illegal actions were motivated by a domestic financial crisis, and that he had withdrawn from the practice of law before engaging in the illegal conduct. The offenses were committed during a period of protracted emotional difficulties for which the attorney had received psychiatric counselling. Moreover, the attorney presented extensive and uncontroverted testimony concerning his rehabilitation, his value to the profession, and his past and present good moral character. (Id., at p. 531.)

In In re Cohen (1974) 11 Cal.3d 416 [113 Cal.Rptr. 485, 521 P.2d 477], suspension for three years including two years' actual suspension was imposed where the attorney had received no financial gain from a marijuana transaction but had merely assisted a friend in transporting the contraband. The attorney had no prior disciplinary record and cooperated with the authorities upon his arrest. (Id., at pp. 421-422.)

Similarly, in In re Higbie (1972) 6 Cal.3d 562 [99 Cal.Rptr. 865, 493 P.2d 97], two years' suspension including one year's actual suspension was held sufficient for an attorney whose involvement in a marijuana importation scheme arose from a desire to help a friend. The friend, who later turned out to be an informer, appeared to the attorney to be in serious financial difficulties. The attorney's continued involvement in the scheme was due chiefly to the informer's prodding. This court noted that the attorney neither received nor expected any financial reward from the transaction and that he had no prior disciplinary record. (Id., at pp. 572-574.)

More on point is In re Giddens (1981) 30 Cal.3d 110 [177 Cal.Rptr. 673, 635 P.2d 166]. There, disbarment was found appropriate where the attorney lent substantial sums of money to an acquaintance after learning that the money was used to finance illegal drug transactions. The attorney realized a large profit from these loans. This court noted that he offered no satisfactory explanation for his conduct. He was not suffering from any financial hardship, emotional distress, or alcohol or drug dependency. Further, it was noted that the attorney took no steps to terminate the drug distribution scheme or to inform the authorities about it. (Id., at pp. 115-116.)

[3a] In light of these precedents, disbarment is not an excessive sanction in this case. Petitioner's sole apparent motive for the marijuana transaction was financial gain. It is undisputed that he anticipated a substantial profit. He acted on his own initiative and not on behalf of others. He stood willing and able to deliver a large quantity of contraband. These facts, together [37 Cal.3d 170] with his expressed interest in promoting other illegal transactions, indicate that the marijuana sale was not an isolated incident or aberrational conduct. Furthermore, even though petitioner was not engaged in the full-time practice of law during the drug negotiations, he held himself out as an attorney in these negotiations and claimed to be acting on behalf of clients in at least one of the proposed transactions. (Cf In re Kreamer, supra, 14 Cal.3d at p. 531.)

Most importantly, petitioner's conduct in approaching and conversing with a juror in his trial nearly two years after the marijuana offense illustrates a flagrant disrespect for the judicial system. Even though petitioner did not discuss the merits of his case with the juror, the record amply supports the trial judge's conclusion that petitioner attempted indirectly to influence her. By initiating a friendly conversation, buying drinks, and discussing his personal history and religious beliefs, petitioner attempted to arouse sympathy on his behalf. "The harm inherent in deliberate contact or communication can take the form of subtly creating juror empathy with the party ...." (Rinker v. County of Napa (9th Cir. 1983) 724 F.2d 1352, 1354.)

Petitioner's conduct may in itself have been criminal. (See Pen. Code, 95. fn. 4) At the very least, it was grossly unethical. As an attorney, petitioner must have been aware that any outside influences on the jury's deliberative processes are inimical to our system of justice. "In a criminal case, any private communication, contact, or tampering, directly or indirectly, with a juror during a trial about the matter pending before the jury is, for obvious reasons, deemed presumptively prejudicial, if not made in pursuance of known rules of the court and the instructions and directions of the court made during the trial, with full knowledge of the parties." (Remmer v. United States (1954) 347 U.S. 227, 229 [98 L.Ed. 654, 656, 74 S.Ct. 450].) [4] Thus, it is unethical for an attorney to communicate with a juror outside the courtroom during the course of a trial. (Rules Prof. Conduct, rule 7-106(B). fn. 5) [3b] Petitioner's blatant violation of this rule plainly demonstrates an unfitness to practice law.

Petitioner asks this court to consider a number of mitigating circumstances which are neither reflected in the State Bar's findings nor supported by the [37 Cal.3d 171] evidentiary record. Alternatively, he requests this court to remand for further proceedings so that he may present mitigating evidence.

Petitioner asserts that his offenses were committed while he was addicted to cocaine and that psychological disturbances caused him to seek self-aggrandizement through criminal activity. In support of these claims, he submits to this court a declaration by a social worker from whom he received counselling between 1981 and 1983. fn. 6 The social worker describes the personality problems which led to petitioner's addiction and criminal behavior. He minimizes the extent of petitioner's actual involvement in criminal activity, and suggests that petitioner exaggerated his ability to deliver contraband to undercover officers. The social worker also asserts that petitioner's rehabilitation, via therapy and religion, has been continuous since the date of his arrest.

[5] This court has on occasion considered matters extrinsic to the record which are relevant to an attorney's fitness to practice law. (Doyle v. State Bar (1976) 15 Cal.3d 973, 980, fn. 2 [126 Cal.Rptr. 801, 544 P.2d 937] [court considered declaration from psychiatrist not presented to hearing panel]; Demain v. State Bar (1970) 3 Cal.3d 381, 386, fn. 1 [90 Cal.Rptr. 420, 475 P.2d 652] [court considered new evidence concerning attorney's participation in Alcoholics Anonymous]; but see Palomo v. State Bar (1984) 36 Cal.3d 785, 797 [205 Cal.Rptr. 834, 685 P.2d 1185]; In re Bloom (1977) 19 Cal.3d 175, 180 [137 Cal.Rptr. 168, 561 P.2d 258].) However, the strong preference is for such matters to be submitted to the hearing panel, which is better suited to determine what weight to give them. This preference is particularly strong where, as here, the extrinsic evidence consists of opinions about petitioner's mental attitude, and is based largely on petitioner's own out-of-court statements. Such evidence is virtually

impossible to evaluate in the absence of cross-examination. fn. 7

In any event, the new evidence here does not compel a lesser discipline. The social worker's explanation of the psychological roots of petitioner's conduct fails to demonstrate his present fitness to practice law. [6] "We realize that in many cases psychoneurotic problems may underlie professional misconduct and moral turpitude. In this area our duty lies in the assurance that the public will be protected in the performance of the high duties of the attorney rather than in an analysis of the reasons for his delinquency. Our primary concern must be the fulfillment of proper professional [37 Cal.3d 172] standards, whatever the unfortunate cause, emotional or otherwise, for the attorney's failure to do so." (Grove v. State Bar (1967) 66 Cal.2d 680, 685 [58 Cal.Rptr. 564, 427 P.2d 164].)

Petitioner's action in obtaining counselling for his problems in 1981 through 1983 must be acknowledged as a mitigating circumstance. However, his social worker's assertion that petitioner understands and has corrected those problems lacks persuasive force. The declaration speaks only in conclusory fashion of petitioner's "recovery" and offers no factual basis for this court to find a demonstrated fitness to practice law. fn. 8

[7] Nor do petitioner's youth and inexperience mitigate his actions. Thousands of young and inexperienced attorneys begin practice each year, yet few of them engage in large-scale drug transactions or in ex parte communications with jurors sworn to decide their fate. (See In re Petty (1981) 29 Cal.3d 356, 361 [173 Cal.Rptr. 461, 627 P.2d 191].) Furthermore, youth and inexperience at the time of the offenses do not establish petitioner's present fitness to practice law, which is the controlling consideration in these proceedings. (Ibid.)

[8] For the same reason, the passage of time and petitioner's abstention from the practice of law during some of the intervening years do not, standing alone, justify discipline short of disbarment. Such factors are persuasive only where there is substantial evidence that petitioner has used the time to rehabilitate himself and has regained his fitness to practice. (See In re Dedman (1976) 17 Cal.3d 229, 233-234 [130 Cal.Rptr. 504, 550 P.2d 1040]; In re Cadwell (1975) 15 Cal.3d 762, 772-773 [125 Cal.Rptr. 889, 543 P.2d 257]; but see conc. and dis. opn. of Wright, C. J., id., at p. 773.) Here, petitioner presented no evidence at all on this issue to the hearing panel, and the evidence presented to this court is insufficient. Petitioner's volunteer work in 1979 and 1980 is commendable. However, it sheds little light on the critical question of present fitness to practice law.

II.

On this record, it does not appear that the objective of protecting the public, the courts, and the legal profession can be met "unless petitioner is required to undergo the evaluation process of a proceeding for reinstatement before he is again permitted to practice law. [Fn. omitted.]" (In re Duggan [37 Cal.3d 173] (1976) 17 Cal.3d 416, 424 [130 Cal.Rptr. 715, 551 P.2d 19]; see also In re Petty, supra, 29 Cal.3d at p. 362; In re Cadwell, supra, 15 Cal.3d at p. 773 (conc. and dis. opn. of Wright, C. J.).)

Accordingly, it is ordered that Regis Michael Possino be disbarred from the practice of law and that his name be stricken from the roll of attorneys. In addition, it is ordered that he comply with rule 955 of the California Rules of Court, and that he perform the acts specified in subdivisions (a) and (c) of that rule within 30 and 40 days, respectively, after this opinion becomes final.

-FN 1. All statutory references are to the Business and Professions Code unless otherwise noted.

-FN 2. The hearing panel's decision is unclear as to whether the mitigating facts it recites were found to be true. As petitioner did not testify or present any witnesses before the hearing panel, this recitation is drawn entirely from a stipulation. This stipulation recited that "f called as a witness herein, [petitioner] would testify as follows with reference to mitigating circumstances of the acts underlying his conviction ...." The panel's findings recite only that "[t]he following facts were submitted by [petitioner] in mitigation ...." Thus, the recitation does not make it clear whether the panel adopted the proffered facts as true.

However, the panel did delete several of the mitigating circumstances which petitioner had proffered in the stipulation. The panel deleted the assertion that petitioner had "acknowledged the responsibilities of his actions," as well as the somewhat inconsistent assertion that at the time of the negotiations with the undercover officers, petitioner exaggerated his ability to purchase and sell the various items of contraband discussed in those negotiations. The panel also deleted the assertions that petitioner's acts were entirely unrelated to the practice of law, and that his capacity as an attorney did not "enter into the situation." In light of the evidence presented against petitioner at the State Bar hearing, these deletions appear to reflect judgments by the hearing panel as to which mitigating circumstances were true.

It is well settled that this court must conduct an independent review of the record. (Chefsky v. State Bar (1984) 36 Cal.3d 116, 121 [202 Cal.Rptr. 349, 680 P.2d 82].) Such a review merits the conclusion that the panel's findings include all mitigating circumstances which are supported by the evidence or are objectively verifiable. Accordingly, these findings will be deemed true.

-FN 3. Petitioner does not challenge the finding of moral turpitude, which was based on the stipulation. While the Health and Safety Code section 11360 offense does not involve moral turpitude as a matter of law (see In re Kreamer (1975) 14 Cal.3d 524, 530 [121 Cal.Rptr. 600, 535 P.2d 728]) this court has held that circumstances such as those present here ¶ petitioner's role as a principal rather than an assistant, his motive of financial gain, and his awareness of the illegality of his actions ¶ may justify a finding of moral turpitude. (Ibid.)

-FN 4. Penal Code section 95 declares that "[e]very person who corruptly attempts to influence a juror, or any person summoned or drawn as a juror ... y means of any communication, oral or written, had with him except in the regular course of proceedings" is guilty of a felony.

-FN 5. Rule 7-106(B) provides that "[d]uring the trial of a case: (1) A member of the State Bar connected therewith shall not communicate directly or indirectly with any member of the jury. (2) A member of the State Bar who is not connected therewith shall not communicate directly or indirectly with a juror concerning the case."

-FN 6. The evidentiary hearings before the State Bar were held during 1982.

-FN 7. It should be noted that several mitigating circumstances proffered in the social worker's declaration were also recited in the first stipulation, but omitted from the hearing panel's findings of fact concerning mitigation. This omission appears to be intentional. (See fn. 2, ante.)

-FN 8. The social worker's further assertion that petitioner has never wavered in his commitment to recovery from the time of his arrest is seriously undermined by petitioner's conduct in approaching the juror two years after the arrest. This conduct also suggests that no mitigating weight should be given to the psychological assistance which petitioner apparently received in 1976 and 1977, as this counselling evidently accomplished little.

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To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (316)10/25/2001 11:04:23 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 574
 
Khashoggi Firm May Have Kept $125M After GenesisIntermedia Fall
By David Evans

Los Angeles, Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) -- A company headed by Saudi financier Adnan Khashoggi may have reaped as much as $125 million by borrowing against a stake in a money-losing telemarketer and failing to make good when the stock collapsed.

Khashoggi's Bermuda-based Ultimate Holdings Ltd. controlled 75 percent of GenesisIntermedia Inc.'s stock when a person, still unidentified, used 7.2 million shares as collateral in a chain of loans that reached an estimated $125 million. Ultimate Holdings alone controlled a block that large, according to filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

``It appears that Khashoggi is the only person who could have borrowed money secured by 7.2 million shares,'' said Frank Partnoy, professor of securities law at the University of San Diego Law School, after reviewing the filings at the request of Bloomberg News.

Khashoggi, 66, is best known as an arms broker in the Iran- Contra scandal of the mid-1980s, when he served as middleman for illegal sales of weapons to Iran. He was often described then as one of the world's richest men. He is wanted by police in Thailand on suspicion of loan fraud in connection with the failure of the Bangkok Bank of Commerce in May 1996, according to the Economic Crime Division of that nation's police.

SEC Probe

GenesisIntermedia said on Oct. 8 that the SEC and the National Association of Securities Dealers were investigating transactions involving Ultimate Holdings, GenesisIntermedia Chief Executive Officer Ramy El-Batrawi and Native Nations Securities Inc., a New Jersey brokerage that accepted the 7.2 million shares as collateral. El-Batrawi resigned as CEO the same day.

Trading in GenesisIntermedia shares was halted after they plunged 65 percent last month. The wreckage caused the failure of MJK Clearing Inc. of Minneapolis, saddled the Securities Investor Protection Corp. with a $42 million payout, and exposed nine firms, including E*Trade Group Inc. of Menlo Park, California, Ferris, Baker Watts Inc. of Baltimore, Pax Clearing Inc. of Chicago and Robert W. Baird & Co. of Milwaukee, to $60 million in potential losses. E*Trade is at risk for as much as $29 million.

Khashoggi, the president of Ultimate Holdings, couldn't be reached for comment. Colette Johnson, corporate secretary of Ultimate Holdings, declined an interview. El-Batrawi and GenesisIntermedia officials did not return calls seeking comment. The SEC and NASD declined comment.

Close Relationship

El-Batrawi, 40, has operated businesses that chartered jet planes, offered vacation and travel services and built customized vans. He said in a January interview that he talked to Khashoggi almost every day, adding, ``He knows me real well.''

In 1993, El-Batrawi founded GenesisIntermedia as a telemarketing and infomercial company. In 1999, the company's 100 sales agents made more than 1 million calls a month selling courses such as ``Secrets of Stock Investing'' and ``Ted Thomas' Personal Fortune Real Estate Investment Program'' with price tags of as much as $5,000.

El-Batrawi took the company public that year after acquiring an Internet-related business called Centerlinq that installed kiosks in shopping malls through which people could access the Internet for free. The service would be supported by advertising revenue, said the company. The IPO raised $17 million.

The plans fizzled. GenesisIntermedia suffered eight consecutive quarters of red ink, with cumulative losses of more than $50 million. Still, the company's shares did well. After hitting a low of $1.17 in Dec. 1999, they hovered between $5 and $6 for a year starting in April 2000 and then climbed to between $16 and $18 from June through early September, giving the company a market value of about $400 million.

Rule Violation

The shares rose as Ultimate Holdings traded them more than 200 times from Feb. 2000 to August of this year and ran afoul of a U.S. regulation forbidding major shareholders from making so- called short-swing profits. Ultimate Holdings relinquished almost $7 million in gains because of the violations.

Positive public statements about GenesisIntermedia's prospects and the involvement of Carl Icahn, a corporate raider of the 1980s who owns the Stratosphere casino in Las Vegas, also boosted the shares.

Money manager Courtney Smith recommended the shares on 18 television appearances on CNBC, CNNfn and Bloomberg Television, helping them rise as much as 70 percent in a day, without revealing that GenesisIntermedia purchased and wrote off a Web site developed by Smith in March 2000. The company paid Smith through an intermediary with shares that were worth more than $3 million early this year.

A GenesisIntermedia shareholder, David Osher, filed suit in Los Angeles last Thursday, alleging the company, El-Batrawi and Smith plotted to inflate the price of the shares and thus committed securities fraud. Smith was paid the stock to tout the shares on television, the suit alleges. Smith didn't respond to messages seeking comment.

Rising Shares

The shares soared again the week of May 7 after former stockbroker Rafi Khan met with GenesisIntermedia officials and issued a report suggesting a short squeeze would drive up the stock price. Khan was convicted of filing a false tax return in 1999 and was banned from the securities industry by the SEC for five years on stock manipulation charges.

In a short squeeze, investors demand the return of shares they had lent to people who sold them short in the hope of making money on a price drop. Such a demand forces the borrowers to buy shares, driving up the price.

Price Spike

GenesisIntermedia shares spiked a third time on June 29, hitting $25 after the company issued a press release stating it received a ``conditional commitment'' from Icahn for a $100 million line of credit to help GenesisIntermedia make acquisitions.

An SEC filing disclosed that Icahn's involvement had a price: the company paid him $275,000 and stock options worth $74 million. There have been no loans or acquisitions. Icahn declined comment.

GenesisIntermedia shares began plummeting Sept. 17, the day trading resumed after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Over seven consecutive trading days they fell from $17.03 to $5.90 before trading was halted.

At that point, according to September regulatory filings, Ultimate Holdings owned 9.5 million shares and held 8 million shares as collateral for a loan extended to El-Batrawi, who had authorized Khashoggi to use his shares as security for further borrowing. Together, the two blocks gave Ultimate Holdings control of three quarters of GenesisIntermedia's stock.

Stock Lending

The stock's plunge exposed Ultimate Holdings to a loss of more than $100 million on just the shares it owned -- unless Khashoggi had found a way to recoup the money without selling. One shareholder did that through stock lending transactions involving 7.2 million shares.

Stock lending is transaction used by brokerage firms to accommodate investors who want to borrow shares for short selling. A firm that needs such shares borrows them from a firm that has them in return for a cash loan of 100 percent of their value. As the price of the shares fluctuates, the firms engage in a process called marking the shares to market that equalizes the value of the shares and the money loaned.

If the shares rise, the stock borrower gives the cash appreciation to the stock lender, and the loan grows. If the shares fall, the stock lender is required to return the amount of the cash loss, and the loan shrinks. Stock can be lent from one brokerage firm to another along a chain.

Chain of Transactions

The 7.2 million GenesisIntermedia shares moved through a chain that involved nine brokerages beginning with Freeman Securities, a Jersey City, New Jersey-firm that served institutional investors, and ending with Deutsche Bank AG, Europe's largest bank.

Freeman and Native Nations Securities, which acquired Freeman, accepted the shares and loaned the shareholder their value before moving them to MJK Clearing and recouping the funds, said Matthew Kyler, executive vice president of Stockwalk Group, former parent of MJK Clearing.

MJK Clearing disbursed the shares among four brokerages: 3.3 million shares at E*Trade; 2 million shares at Ferris, Baker Watts; 1 million shares at Pax Clearing; and 885,000 shares at Robert W. Baird. Those firms moved the shares to AG Edwards Inc. of St. Louis, Nomura Securities Co. of New York, and Wedbush Morgan Securities of Los Angeles before all the shares were turned over to Deutsche Bank, Kyler said.

On the Hook

Mark-to-market payments flowed along the chain to and from the shareholder and Deutsche Bank until the shares plummeted. By Friday, Sept. 21, Native Nations was on the hook to repay MJK Clearing $60 million of the $125 million it had borrowed against the stock. MJK Clearing owed the same amount to its lenders.

Kyler said MJK Clearing met its obligations by exhausting its $18 million net capital and tapping $42 million of customer funds, expecting to receive payment from Native Nations. The money never came. SIPC took control of MJK Clearing and reimbursed its customers.

``We want to know if Khashoggi has the money,'' Kyler said.

Native Nations Chief Executive Officer Valerie Red-Horse, a 42-year-old actress and former Drexel Burnham Lambert office manager, declined to discuss her firm's business with Ultimate Holdings.

She said the lending transactions began at Freeman Securities before her firm bought the company and that Native Nations fired the executive responsible for them. She declined to identify the individual. Native Nations spokesman Michael Mandelbaum said last month that the executive had misrepresented the source of the stock and ``completely doctored the books.''

Big Losses

If GenesisIntermedia shares never resume trading, the firms holding them as collateral face a cumulative loss of $65 million. Based on their value when the shares were was last marked to market, E*Trade is at risk for up to about $29 million, Ferris, Baker for about $18 million, Pax Clearing for about $9 million and Robert W. Baird for about $8 million.

Nomura filed suit in Manhattan federal court this week, alleging that E*Trade had refused to return $9.9 million loaned against 1.6 million GenesisIntermedia shares on June 21. The New York Stock Exchange has advised Nomura to value GenesisIntermedia shares at zero, the court papers state.

Spokesman for Nomura, A.G. Edwards, Wedbush Morgan and Pax declined comment. E*Trade spokesman John Metaxas said the firm ``is working to formulate a fair resolution to the situation.'' Ted Urban, general counsel for Ferris, Baker said, ``We have some exposure,'' and declined further comment. Robert W. Baird spokesman John Rumpf said, ``We don't think we have any exposure. Any loss would be less than $8 million and would not be material to our business.''

Persons close to Deutsche Bank said that before trading was halted, Deutsche Bank returned the stock to AG Edwards, Nomura and Wedbush Morgan and recouped its money



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (316)10/27/2001 11:12:56 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 574
 
ATTENTION CLASS ACTION ATTORNEYS. I KNOW EXACTLY WHERE THE 125 MILLION IS. IF YOU DO NOT FILE FOR A TRO AND PERMINENT RESTRAINING ORDER AND FREEZE THIS MONEY YOU MOST LIKELY HAVE ZERO CHANCE OF RECOVERING ANY MONEY FROM kHASHOGGI AND HIS WORLD WIDE BOILER RING OPERATION. THE MONEY IS LITTERED IN PRIVATE PLACEMENTS AND OTHER INVESTMENTS IN THE OTC BB STOCKS.

kHASHOGGI IS MOST LIKELY IN BARCELONA SPAIN AND THIS MONEY WILL SOON DISAPPEAR.

PLEASE PM ME WITH A PHONE NUMBER AND I WILL BE HAPPY TO CALL YOU AND FILL YOU IN ON THE DETAILS.



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (316)10/27/2001 11:28:29 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 574
 
THE MARGIN CLERK FROM NATIVE AMERICAN COULD BECOME JUST ANOTHER LORENZO FORMATO WHO WAS PLANTED BY LIONEL REIFLER IN A BROKERAGE TRADING FIRM AND THEN BECAME PART OF THE WITNESS PROTECTION PROGRAM.

'PENNY' STOCKS NO CHEAP DEAL FRAUD REPORTEDLY COSTING BILLIONS

Published on FRIDAY, September 8, 1989
© 1989 The Arizona Republic
Byline: Republic Wire Services, Compiled from Knight-Ridder and The Associated Press.

Consumers lose about $2 billion a year investing in so-called penny stocks, according to a 50-state survey of security regulators issued Thursday that concludes the industry is in the grip of con artists and organized crime.

A convicted stock swindler corroborated the report as he told a House subcommittee Thursday that penny-stock brokerages routinely manipulate stock prices, and that organized crime controls the industry.

''I needed the protection and I needed the strength of organized crime,'' said Lorenzo Formato, a former New Jersey stockbroker and promoter who is serving a six-year prison term for tax evasion, wire fraud and illegal conversion of funds.

''They needed me to be a money machine. And that's just what I was.''

The North American Securities Administrators Association report was released at a hearing of the same subcommittee, the House subcommittee on telecommunications and finance. The association is a Washington-based organization of state securities regulators responsible for investor protection.

''The penny-stock industry increasingly is dominated by utterly worthless or highly dubious securities offerings that are systematically manipulated by repeat offenders of state and federal securities laws and other felons, some of whom have been identified as having ties to organized crime,'' the report concluded.

Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., the subcommittee chairman, called Formato's testimony ''a blistering, scalding indictment of the entire penny- stock market.'' He said he would press for tougher regulation of the industry.

Formato, a participant in the federal Witness Protection Program, wore a gray hood to hide his face when he entered the subcommittee meeting room and removed it only after he was seated behind orange wall dividers that shielded him from spectators, but not lawmakers. His voice was altered electronically to prevent identification.

He testified that penny-stock brokers prey on unsophisticated investors contacted by telephone and subjected to hard-sell sales pitches. Firms routinely manipulate the price of a company's stock, he said, and even sell stock in non-existent companies.

Formato said he helped sell stock in a Laser Arms Corp., which he said was the invention of stock swindler Marshall Zolp.

''This company was completely fictitious,'' he said. ''There were no directors of the company. The people that he (Zolp) used as directors were simply pictures of actors that he had taken.''

The pictures were printed in reports to shareholders, which also included made-up sales and earnings figures. Stockholders lost $2.4 million before the scheme collapsed; Zolp and Formato were sentenced to prison for their parts in the scam.

Although their price -- a few cents up to a few dollars a share -- makes penny stocks attractive to small investors with limited funds, many are prone to abuse because information about the issuing company often is hard to obtain and fraudulent claims are difficult to dispute.

Small or young companies, or those that trade infrequently or in a limited area, are often listed only on ''pink sheets'' published by the National Quotation Bureau rather than with larger and more stable companies. Roughly 13,000 stocks are traded this way.

Brokers and investors must call a broker that deals in a specific company's shares to get a price quote.

Penny stocks are considered highly risky. Investors lose all or part of their money 70 percent of the time, according to the security regulators' report. When penny-stock prices are being manipulated by a brokerage house, investors lose money 90 percent of the time, according to the report.

''Comparing this to a night at the casino seems an unfair slap at casino operators,'' Markey said.

According to a survey by state securities regulators, American investors have been cheated out of at least $2 billion a year by crooked schemes involving penny stocks.

The National Association of Securities Dealers, a self-regulating organization that oversees over-the-counter stockbrokers, said any investigation of organized crime links to the industry was in government hands.

''We're cracking down hard on unscrupulous penny-stock brokers, but we're not Elliott Ness,'' said Robert Ferri, a spokesman for the security dealers' group.

''If an investigation has to go farther than our purview, the law enforcement agency we're dealing with will take it from there. And that's quite often the FBI or the Justice Department.''



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (316)10/31/2001 12:03:38 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 574
 
excerpt from the Opal Files ...

google.com

excerpt from the Opal Files ...

February 1972: Onassis and Rockefeller help associate Adnan Khashoggi buy the Security Pacific National Bank in California and take control of the United California Bank through CIA-linked Lockheed Aircraft Corporation. Both banks used by Onassis and Khashoggi to funnel bribes and payoffs via the CIA's Deak Bank to captive Japanese and other crooked politicians. Security Pacific also used to 'launder' over $2 million for Nixon's re-election campaign. Khashoggi also buys 21% of Southern Pacific Properties, which is the major stockholder in Travelodge (Aust), thereby establishing direct links to New Zealand, and U.E.B. and Fletchers through its equity links with Travelodge