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To: rrufff who wrote (335)11/5/2001 8:26:48 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 574
 
lineone.net

Tycoon once worth billions is £1.5m indebt
BY matthew mervyN jones
INTERNATIONAL arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, once described as the world's richest man, has been ordered by the courts to pay nearly £1.5 million.

Playboy Khashoggi, Dodi Fayed's uncle, owes Tiny Rowland's old company Lonrho two million dollars plus tens of thousands in interest.

The former billionaire is said to have lost millions since his heyday in the 70s and 80s when he was estimated to be worth £2.4billion.

Lawyers for Lonrho, now called Lonmin, have been trying to get back the millions they say he borrowed from Lonrho in the mid-80s when it was run by Tiny Rowland. They issued a High Court writ in February when Khashoggi failed to pay two million dollars he had promised to give Lonmin back in 1996.

Khashoggi failed to respond to the writ and on August 12 the High Court in London ruled that "as he had given no intention to defend" he must now pay the money.

Lonmin insiders say if he does not hand over the cash immediately they will have to start to seizing his assets.

At one stage Khashoggi owed Lonrho nearly £4.5million and in 1994 the company seized his 120-seat DC9 private jet, complete with circular bed, and a villa in Cannes.

Khashoggi paid some of the debt and the villa and jet were returned. He then signed two promissory notes which are now due.

Khashoggi is believed to have made the introductions that led the Libyan Foreign Investment company to buy a third of Lonrho's Metropole Hotels business in 1991.

He made his millions brokering the vast arms deals for the Saudi royal family and is said to have acted as an intermediary between the US and Iran. He is reported to have been the middle man in the secret £20 billion Al Yamamah arms deal between the UK and Saudi Arabia.

At his peak he ran homes in Cannes and Switzerland, a 10,000-acre ranch in Kenya and a luxury yacht named after his daughter Nabila. He boasted that he spent £1 million a week on the upkeep of his houses, yachts and two private planes. But signs that things were starting to go wrong began appearing in 1987 when Crest Tankers seized assets of his US property company in Utah.

In New York in 1990 he was cleared, along with Imelda Marcos, wife of the former Philippines dictator, of criminal charges over stolen property. Last year he was forced to pay more than £3 million to the Ritz Casino after it sued him over gambling debts he ran up on bounced cheques.

Rowland and Khashoggi were old friends but quite why the colourful mining tycoon agreed to lend Lonrho's money to Cayman Island companies linked to Khashoggi remains unclear. London lawyer Sam Evens, who acts for Khashoggi, refused to comment last night.Khashoggi, son of a personal physician to the Saudi king Abdul-Aziz, has been married three times and now divides his time between Paris and Saudi Arabia. His late sister, Samira, was married to Harrods owner Mohamed Fayed.
© Express Newspapers Ltd



To: rrufff who wrote (335)11/5/2001 8:26:48 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 574
 
lineone.net



To: rrufff who wrote (335)11/5/2001 8:39:55 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 574
 
YET ANOTHER MADISON AND WALL FRAUD GETS HALTED BY THE SEC.

Consider the strange story of ESafetyworld (SFTY),

It's hard to know precisely what Madison & Wall did for ESafetyworld. I couldn't get Madison & Wall's chief, Dodi Handy, to call me back. But just like some of its clients, Madison & Wall has an interesting history. Once called Continental Capital & Equity, the firm was founded by John R. Manion, 53, who has had a series of run-ins with securities regulators.

Though the company since has been bought out by employees who say that Manion's problems have no relation with the firm, a close look at developments this year suggests that investors might pause before buying the stock of Madison & Wall's clients.

Two weeks ago, Nasdaq stopped the trading in one of those companies, GenesisIntermedia (GENI) as the Securities and Exchange Commission began probing dealing in its shares by Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi. Another Madison & Wall client, Ursus Telecom (UTCC), filed for bankruptcy protection in April. That came a little more than a month after a former Ursus official filed to sell 200,000 shares while the stock enjoyed a brief rebound during a Madison & Wall-sponsored product campaign.

Like I say, what happened with ESafetyworld's new product is shrouded in mystery. The company has announced that none of its officers or directors profited from last week's boom. But you can't help but think that news has become a commodity like anything else in the age of the Web, capable of being manipulated in the same way as the iron content in nails.

For that, we have mostly ourselves to blame. The lessons of the Internet debacle didn't stick. In our ignorance and our greed, we've given new birth to a variety of hucksterism that would have made P.T. Barnum proud

Title: San Jose Mercury News, Calif., Stocks.comment Column

Summary: After the Internet bubble popped, you'd think that wild speculation would have cooled. You'd think that investors trading on rumors had somehow learned a lesson. You'd think that the battlefield of active trading had adopted rationality and caution as its new passwords.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: San Jose Mercury News
Date: 10/25/2001
author(s): Scott Herhold



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San Jose Mercury News, Calif., Stocks.comment Column

After the Internet bubble popped, you'd think that wild speculation would have cooled. You'd think that investors trading on rumors had somehow learned a lesson. You'd think that the battlefield of active trading had adopted rationality and caution as its new passwords.

Well, think again. Welcome to the mini-bubble caused by the anthrax scare. Even as the government copes with hot spots in Washington, D.C., investors are trying to cash in. And some of them have touched off land mines.

Consider the strange story of ESafetyworld (SFTY), a company registered in Nevada but now doing business out of Bohemia, N.Y. ESafetyworld, which says it produces industrial-safety gear, recently set the Nasdaq market on its ear with an announcement directed at our deepest fears.

In a press release that was picked up Friday by Briefing.com -- one of CNBC's main sources of information -- ESafetyworld announced that it had invented a new "containment chamber" that would allow someone to safely open potentially anthrax-tainted mail.

From the picture on the company's Web site ( www.esafetyworld.com), the new invention, called "MailSafe," looks like an eighth-grade wood-shop project: a box with two holes on the side. By placing your hands into rubber gloves in each hole, you can open the letter, much like a nurse might change a baby in an incubator.

Now common sense might raise alarms here. First, you might ask how you put the mail in the containment box. A postal worker will tell you that sorting and handling is as dangerous as opening. Second, it's not clear that ESafetyworld has a product anywhere close to the market. The press release had no price and no schedule.

Finally, there are questions about the staying power of ESafetyworld itself. The last quarterly report it filed with the SEC was for the period ending March 31. And until Friday, its stock was trading at about 50 cents to 60 cents a share.

None of this mattered to the market. As soon as its press release hit the wires Friday morning, SFTY soared. It reached nearly $4 a share before finishing the day at $3.18. More than 6 million shares traded -- double the number of shares outstanding -- meaning the stock turned over several times.

Finally, on Monday, Nasdaq halted trading at $2.49 a share, demanding more information. An ESafetyworld investor-relations spokesman, Matt Henderson, told me Wednesday that company officials were making a presentation to Nasdaq. Suffice it to say there's plenty of skepticism here. Nasdaq doesn't do this when Intel or Dell announces a new product.

This little saga provides a couple of insights. First is the gullibility, or assumed gullibility, of the public. The vast majority of day traders who drove up the price of the stock Friday probably didn't care whether ESafetyworld had a product or not. They were simply trying to make a buck by outdancing the investors who followed.

Yet this approach contains enormous perils. If a stock is suddenly worth nearly eight times what it was worth the day before, the risk matches the reward -- as the halt in trading amply showed. To outdance other investors, you need the agility of Rudolf Nureyev.

The second lesson lies with how news is produced. One intriguing link in this story is ESafetyworld's public-relations company, Florida-based Madison & Wall, which tries to raise the profile of struggling companies by cultivating the media and sending out "blast" e-mails to financial professionals.

It's hard to know precisely what Madison & Wall did for ESafetyworld. I couldn't get Madison & Wall's chief, Dodi Handy, to call me back. But just like some of its clients, Madison & Wall has an interesting history. Once called Continental Capital & Equity, the firm was founded by John R. Manion, 53, who has had a series of run-ins with securities regulators.

Though the company since has been bought out by employees who say that Manion's problems have no relation with the firm, a close look at developments this year suggests that investors might pause before buying the stock of Madison & Wall's clients.

Two weeks ago, Nasdaq stopped the trading in one of those companies, GenesisIntermedia (GENI) as the Securities and Exchange Commission began probing dealing in its shares by Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi. Another Madison & Wall client, Ursus Telecom (UTCC), filed for bankruptcy protection in April. That came a little more than a month after a former Ursus official filed to sell 200,000 shares while the stock enjoyed a brief rebound during a Madison & Wall-sponsored product campaign.

Like I say, what happened with ESafetyworld's new product is shrouded in mystery. The company has announced that none of its officers or directors profited from last week's boom. But you can't help but think that news has become a commodity like anything else in the age of the Web, capable of being manipulated in the same way as the iron content in nails.

For that, we have mostly ourselves to blame. The lessons of the Internet debacle didn't stick. In our ignorance and our greed, we've given new birth to a variety of hucksterism that would have made P.T. Barnum proud.

-- Scott Herhold's Stocks.comment appears every Monday and Thursday. Write him at the San Jose Mercury News, 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, Calif. 95190; e-mail sherhold@sjmercury.com; phone (408) 920-5877. To read the columns online, see www.siliconvalley.com/opinion/herhold/

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To see more of the San Jose Mercury News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to sjmercury.com

(c) 2001, San Jose Mercury News, Calif. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. SFTY INTC, DELL, GENI, UTCC,