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Technology Stocks : XYBR - Xybernaut -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Steve who wrote (4609)11/12/2001 7:36:31 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ACTUALLY YOU HIRE MARK BERGMAN THE RENOWN STOCK ANALYST AND FORMER XYBR IR VICE PRESIDENT TO HYPE YOU COMPANIES STOCK? HERE IS ONE OF THE FIRMS MARK BERGMAN WORKED FOR. MARK ALSO WAS INVOLVED IN A SCHEME WITH CONMAN AND CONVICTED FELON REGIS POSSINO THROUGH ACCESS1FINANCIAL AND HYPED XYBR STOCK. UNBEKNOWNST TO DAVID EVANS AT THE TIME.

Hampton-Porter, a brokerage house with a history of disciplinary actions and lawsuits against it, has abruptly departed its office in downtown San Diego.

The firm most recently had been at 101 W. Broadway. "No one is in the suite. They are not answering their phones. No one is there to comment," says the manager of the building. The firm was a sub- tenant, but she would not reveal who has the lease.

Customers of Hampton-Porter complained to me that they could not get through. I couldn't reach the firm through its usual numbers. Neither could Patrick Keegan of Krause & Kalfayan, lead lawyer in a civil securities fraud case against the firm.

"I think they are completely gone. Their Web site has been shut down," Keegan says.

I phoned New York lawyer Simon Kogan, who has represented Hampton- Porter in the past. He no longer does, won't say why, and says he has no idea where the firm might be.

What might lead the firm to close down? "Nice try," Kogan laughs.

Attorney Paul Delmore of San Diego is representing Hampton-Porter in two arbitrations, but he decided not to defend it in the civil class-action suits.

"They would have cost a tremendous amount of money to defend," Delmore says. "I have not been officially informed that they have closed their doors," but there has been such discussion.

Until late last year, the firm had been at One America Plaza. "They did not leave with monies owing," says manager Marie Giere.

Nancy Condon, spokeswoman for the National Association of Securities Dealers, or NASD, in Washington, D.C., says the firm has not filed a broker-dealer withdrawal form. "Customers should contact the clearing firm," she says.

Ah, but that's the rub.

"I don't know what is going on with Hampton-Porter," says an official of the clearing firm, Denver-based Fiserv Correspondent Services. "They haven't filed a broker-dealer withdrawal form. We haven't been notified that they are no longer in business."

She declines to say whether trades have been cleared recently. The Fiserv attorney in that office did not return calls.

Last year and early this year, Hampton-Porter faced a number of civil suits. The main ones claim that it and its personnel manipulated the stock of En Pointe Technologies in El Segundo.

A suit by Krause & Kalfayan claims that John William Laurienti and Gregory Walker of Hampton-Porter "orchestrated the pump-and-dump scheme in conjunction with insiders of En Pointe Technologies."

(In a pump-and-dump ploy, a stock is hyped to the heavens and manipulated upward, enabling insiders to sell at large profits.) At the time of the filing, Walker vigorously denied the allegations.

The suit describes Laurienti as "a recidivist stock manipulator," stating that in 1995 the Securities and Exchange Commission barred him from the business for failure to discharge his supervisory duties in an unregistered stock offering.

He has concealed his role at Hampton-Porter, the suit claims.

NASD records show that in 1995, the SEC barred Laurienti from the business for two years and fined him $10,000 for failure to supervise brokers pushing a Canadian penny stock.

The main offending broker sold more than 60,000 shares of the penny stock without disclosing that he was receiving $234,000 in kickbacks, according to NASD records.

Securities regulators in Massachusetts had investigated the matter, suspended Laurienti, and recommended that the SEC investigate. That same year, Maryland denied Laurienti's registration, according to NASD records.

Walker is defending a case alleging failure to supervise, NASD records show.

Last year, Alabama issued a cease-and-desist against Hampton- Porter. It had sold stocks in the state, which had requested more information several times and received none from the firm.

In 1999, when under a different name, the firm was fined $1,000 by the NASD for misreporting trades.

Don Bauder's e-mail address is don.bauder@uniontrib.com. His phone number is (619) 293-1523.

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To: Steve who wrote (4609)11/12/2001 7:46:09 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6847
 
At the heart of the XYBR ACCESS1FINANCIAL MARK BERGMAN story is a convicted drug dealer and con man named Regis Possino, whose name has shown up in numerous court regulatory filings and other documents as a consultant and shareholder in numerous companies. Further evidence that there might be a widespread conspiracy to defraud investors is provided by the fact that Regis Possino, a disbarred California attorney Apart from disbarment in 1984, Possino's history includes being imprisoned for one year in 1978 for trying to sell $38,500 worth of marijuana to undercover Los Angeles cops, trying to place a monthly order for $680,000 worth of cocaine with the same officers, attempting to sell $5 million of stolen US treasury bills or bearer bonds to an undercover treasury agent, undergoing a $12 million personal bankruptcy and interfering with a witness at his trial on the marijuana offense, leading to her dismissal from the jury and his imprisonment for the rest of his trial. "One evening during the trial, petitioner encountered one of the trial jurors as she was waiting for a table at a restaurant," reads the official record of his appeal against disbarment. "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." Details of all of the above, with the exception of his bankruptcy, which was closed in 1992 with assets of $229,000 and liabilities of $12.18 million, were presented to the California Bar Association at his appeal against disbarment. Although Possino's appeal against disbarment was thrown out, three of the eight members of the panel voted against disbarment and thought his license should only be suspended for five years!

REGIS POSSINO UPDATE;

"the "mastermind of the operations" according to the FBI are the US citizens Regis Possino and Sherman Mazur. 52-year old Possino appeared in Vienna last Summer for the first time where he resided in an "approbiate" luxury flat in Radisson SAS Palais (Rent: 62.500 ATS)"
Police is investigating also in Vienna

FBI is acting against a gang of worldwide active financial artists who allegedly bilked gigantic 15 Billion ATS (1 Billion USD) from clients. Since last Autumn, the instigators of the gang own a banking corporation in Vienna. The police is investigating.

Behind the facades of the small "General Commerce Bank AG" which operated under federal administration since last year [the police] believes to find certain information about a large scale scam. Two weeks ago the US federal police has discovered the scandal after having conducted investigations for more than one year and through infiltration of undercover agents.

After the Australian exchange commission has been pressed by defrauded customers, 10 days ago a big sweep in Bangkok too place: Supported by the FBI, the local police arrested 81 suspects, mostly Europeans. The gang is accused of running a worldwide network of brokerage offices, so called "Boiler Rooms", first artificially raising the prices of worthless stocks and then selling them to thousands of clients. In the next days, sweeps are "scheduled" in further 9 cities on 3 continents.

The FBI dossier: Fraudsters bilked out one Billion Dollar

The format is exclusively in possession of the FBI report in which the shocking dimensions of the deals are described: It lists the names of 18 Boiler rooms, reaching from the Philippines over Thai to Singapore and Czechia, in which the gang has cashed in the amazing sum of 1 Billion Dollars, about 15 Billion Schillings.

For the Austrians it is very revealing what the FBI dossier says about the perpetrators of the affaire: In the organisation hierarchy ranked behind Manila and Los Angeles based Amador Pastrana, the "mastermind of the operations" according to the FBI are the US citizens Regis Possino and Sherman Mazur. 52-year old Possino appeared in Vienna last Summer for the first time where he resided in an "approbiate" luxury flat in Radisson SAS Palais (Rent: 62.500 ATS)

Kashoggi-Coup in Vienna

The Belgian Raoul Berthaumieu who grew up in Canada appeared as the new chairman of the banking corporation which is working with a restricted banking license as broker house: In turn, Berthaumieus particular contacts to glowing con artists resulted in a new shareholder for the bank: the legendary arabian arms dealer Adnan Kashoggi.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

original article:

Die Wirtschaftspolizei ermittelt auch in Wien
Das amerikanische FBI geht gegen eine Truppe weltweit agierender Finanzartisten vor, die von Kunden gigantische 15 Milliarden Schilling abgenommen haben soll. Die Drahtzieher besitzen seit vergangenem Herbst eine Bank in Wien. Die Wirtschaftspolizei ermittelt.
Hinter den Fassaden der seit dem Vorjahr unter Geschäftsaufsicht stehenden kleinen General Commerce Bank AG in der Wiener Schlickgasse 1Bank vermutet man aufschlußreiche Antworten zu einem gigantischen Betrugsfall. Die US-Bundespolizei hat den Finanz-Skandal nach mehr als einjährigen Ermittlungen und durch die Einschleusung von Undercoveragenten vor zwei Wochen hat aufgedeckt.

Nachdem die australische Börsenaufsicht von geleimten Kunden bombardiert worden war, kam es vor zehn Tagen in der thailändischen Hauptstadt Bangkok zur ersten Großrazzia: Unterstützt von FBI-Beamten, nahmen Polizisten 81Verdächtige, großteils Europäer, fest. Der Truppe wird vorgeworfen, in einem weltumspannenden Netz von Börsenmaklerbüros, sogenannten "Boiler rooms", zuerst die Kurse wertloser Aktien künstlich in die Höhe getrieben und sie dann an Tausende Kunden verklopft zu haben. Dieser Tage sind Razzien in weiteren neun Städten auf drei Kontinenten vorgesehen.

Das FBI-Dossier: Finanzbetrüger ergaunerten eine Milliarde Dollar
Das FORMAT exklusiv vorliegende FBI-Dossier beschreibt die atemberaubenden Dimensionen der Deals: In 18 namentlich angeführten Boiler rooms, von den Philippinen über Thailand bis Singapur und Tschechien, hat die Truppe die sagenhafte Summe von einer Milliarde Dollar eingestreift - umgerechnet mehr als 15 Milliarden Schilling.

Aus österreichischer Sicht besonders aufschlußreich in dem FBI-Dossier sind die Protagonisten der Affäre: Hinter dem in Manila und in Los Angeles residierenden Amador Pastrana, laut FBI "Mastermind der Operationen", bekleiden nämlich die beiden US-Amerikaner Regis Possino und Sherman Mazur die wichtigsten Ränge in der Hierarchie der Organisation. Der 52jährige Possino tauchte im Sommer des Vorjahres erstmals in Wien auf, wo er standesgemäß eine luxuriöse Wohnung im Radisson SAS Palais (Monatsmiete: 62.500 Schilling) bezog.

Kashoggi-Coup in Wien
Als neuer Aufsichtsratschef des mit eingeschränkter Banklizenz als Börsenmakler tätigen Instituts, das im Herbst dann in General Commerce Bank AG umbenannt wurde, betrat der in Belgien geborene und in Kanada aufgewachsene Raoul Berthaumieu die Bühne: Berthaumieus einschlägige Kontakte zu schillernden Finanzartisten bescherten der Wiener Bank dann im Oktober einen neuen Aktionär: den legendären saudischen Waffenhändler Adnan Kashoggi.



To: Steve who wrote (4609)11/12/2001 11:33:29 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
MVIS--Donner Corp. International Reiterates its Buy Recommendation on Xybernaut Corporation

PR NEWSWIRE - March 28, 2000 08:31
SANTA ANA, Calif., Mar 28, 2000 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The following is being issued by Donner Corporation International, a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, CRD number 37702.
Donner Corp. International, an Investment Banking firm headquartered in Santa Ana, California, today reiterated its Buy Recommendation on Xybernaut Corporation (Nasdaq: XYBR), Fairfax, Virginia. Xybernaut holds the largest number of patents in the wearable computer industry and is recognized as the leader in wearable computing and mobile convergence solutions with numerous Fortune 500 customers.

Donner cited several recent developments for reiterating its Buy Recommendation:

-- Xybernaut reported a 382% increase in revenues for year ended December 31, 1999 compared to the prior year. Revenue for fourth quarter increased 481% compared to the same period prior year. Donner said it believes the dramatic increase in revenue is the beginning of accelerated growth as general acceptance of Xybernaut products and technologies continues.

-- Xybernaut and Microvision, Inc. (Nasdaq: MVIS), the leader in retinal
scanning display technology, will collaborate on co-marketing a
wearable-computing system for medical and industrial workers featuring
the world's first fully daylight-readable and "see-through" virtual
display. "This new PC-to-Display Interface sets the stage for
establishing a standard in the industry," Donner said.

-- Xybernaut has been granted a patent for a "transferable core" which the
Company believes will radically change mobile computing. Business
users and consumers will be able to easily insert and remove the
"brains" -- memory, processor, operating system and applications --
from one computing or communications device to another. The
"transferable core" unit becomes a true personal computer. Donner
said, "Xybernaut's 'transferable core' technology has the potential to
revolutionize the computer and communications industries."

-- Xybernaut is the leader in the hands-free wearable computer market with
25% of Fortune 100 customers including IBM, Ford and General Electric.
Key industries are using Xybernaut products including manufacturing,
distribution, transportation, government and utilities.

-- CNBC's "The Edge," a daily segment that tracks emerging cutting-edge
products and technologies, recently featured Xybernaut's Mobile
Assistant(R) IV (MA IV(R)) wearable PC in action at a GE Power Systems'
turbine manufacturing plant. This segment shows how a Fortune 100
company is saving time and money using wearable computers. The
(MA IV(R)) was also recently featured in an episode on Fox Networks'
"The X-Files." "Xybernaut products are getting more exposure and
recognition. Wall Street is beginning to take notice of Xybernaut's
potential as the leader in the multi-billion dollar wearable computing

and mobile convergence solutions market," Donner said.
"We believe that Xybernaut is in the forefront of the new generation of wireless wearable computers that could take significant market share from traditional desktop and notebook personal computers and believe Xybernaut's 'transferable core' technology has the potential to revolutionize the mobile computing market," Donner said.

Copies of the Donner report on Xybernaut are available at 1-800-324-6050.

(The information contained herein is based on sources believed to be reliable but is not guaranteed by this company and is not comprehensive. It is not to be construed as an offer or the solicitation of an offer to sell or buy securities mentioned herein. The Company, its members, affiliates and employees may have long or short positions, which could be substantial, in securities discussed or recommended and may purchase, sell, or trade these securities from time to time in the open market or otherwise. In addition, this Company may from time to time perform investment banking, corporate finance, provide services for, and solicit investment banking, corporate finance, or other business from the issuers of such securities for a fee.)



To: Steve who wrote (4609)11/12/2001 11:37:05 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
re:DONNER CORP->Silk purse in penny stocks

Tech stocks have been decimated by the market downturn, but Jeff Baclet has kept the faith.

After all, he's paid by companies that have slipped so far in value that they've fallen into the netherworld of penny stocks.

Selling for less than $5 a share, they dwell in the low-rent district of the Nasdaq's Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board and the Pink Sheets - thinly traded, rarely followed by analysts, little known to investors and subject to wild bursts of volatility.

That's where Mr. Baclet, 31, comes in.

Using a mix of Bible-thumping zeal and unrelenting optimism, he hypes a stable of companies for a fee through Donner Corp. International. He founded the Santa Ana, Calif., broker-dealer after a peripatetic career on the fringes of the financial services industry.

``It's like a public relations firm,'' says David E. Rubbins, a New York securities lawyer.

``The SEC would likely look hard at this kind of arrangement,'' adds Barry Barbash, a partner in Washington with Shearman & Sterling who once ran the Securities and Exchange Commission's division of investment management.

Full disclosure

That arrangement is strictly cash, carry and buyer beware.

Given the precipitous decline of the Nasdaq Composite Index since its peak last year, the OTC market has become the elephant's graveyard of dozens of once-highflying tech companies. Many are willing to shell out big bucks to try to regain some of the glory of the tech boom.

Donner is one of about 200 firms that bottom-feed on the hopes and dreams of wannabe moguls, according to Key Ramsey, chief executive of Knobias.com, a website he started after being victimized in a penny stock scam. He follows 6,300 micro-cap companies trading publicly on the Nasdaq Small-Cap market and the Pink Sheets.

He says that Mr. Baclet and other brokers who tout penny stocks for a fee are taking advantage of a legal loophole to pump the price of a stock.

``Regulators we've talked to wish this would go away,'' says Mr. Ramsey.

God and money

Mr. Baclet, however, is unlikely to disappear anytime soon. He opened the doors of his broker-dealer in 1996, and he has never run afoul of Securities and Exchange Commission regulations, according to the federal agency.

However, some of the seven securities firms, one insurance company and two realty firms he worked for between 1989 and 1996 have.

Capital International Securities Group Inc. of Boca Raton, Fla., the last company he worked for before opening Donner, was hit with a class action in 1999 for allegedly defrauding investors in a pump-and-dump stock scheme that ran from August 1997 to August 1999.

Another of Mr. Baclet's former Florida employers, GKN Securities Corp., was ordered in 1997 to pay $2.1 million in fines and restitution, according to NASD Regulation Inc., the independent enforcement arm of the National Association of Securities Dealers.

Between December 1993 and April 1996, the firm and 29 brokers and supervisors allegedly controlled the immediate after-market trading in eight stocks it underwrote, and excessively inflated those prices, according to the NASDR.

Mr. Baclet worked for Capital International Securities from July 1995 to December 1996 and GKN Securities from August to November 1994. He was not named as a defendant in the class action against Capital International Securities, nor did the NASD name or fine him for a role in the GKN Securities case.

As well as pumping the hopes and dreams of penny stock moguls, Mr. Baclet mixes Christian evangelism with his investment advice.

His website, for example, provides a biblical justification to shun trading on margin and gives investors an opportunity to donate to a fundamentalist Christian charity that rails against Hollywood, pornography and homosexuals.

Sliding scale

For companies that pay a one-time fee, ranging between $3,000 and $7,000, Donner publishes press releases and ``research reports'' touting its penny stocks.

The higher Mr. Baclet can drive the stock, the greater the reward, which can include stock options, monthly retainers and fees that typically rise on a sliding scale along with the stock price.

Mr. Baclet is quick to point out that his fee arrangements are fully disclosed in accordance with SEC rules.

``It's clear it's a fee-paid [service],'' he says.

However, the information has a habit of finding its way into investor chat rooms or onto computer bulletin boards, where the disclaimer is sometimes not mentioned or has been deleted.

In the case of Tickets.com Inc. (TIXX), an online ticket service, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter analysts gushed about the Costa Mesa, Calif., company when it handled the initial public offering Nov. 4, 1999. The stock jumped to $32 a share, from an IPO price of $12.50, before closing that day at $19.25 a share.

Thursday the stock closed at 39 cents a share, and the Nasdaq says the company is in line to be taken off the exchange for failing to meet minimum listing requirements.

Tickets.com was caught in last year's tech-stock riptide and has traded below $1 since November.

Donner took the company on as a client in December after the NASD warned Tickets.com for the first time that it was in danger of being delisted.

On Jan. 22, Donner issued a press release that glowingly described the company's prospects.

Donner's research report on Tickets.com didn't include a projection of the company's future earnings on its cover or on any of its pages. Such projections are standard fare for analysts' reports.

The report does include, however, a quote from the Book of Jeremiah.

``Before I formed you in the womb I knew you; before you were born I sanctified you,'' reads the quote, which appears under a box listing Tickets.com's revenue.

The report gave the stock a ``speculative buy'' rating.

According to ratings group First Call Corp., a ``speculative buy'' rating falls between a rating of ``buy'' and ``hold'' and means a stock has more risk.

``We believe Tickets.com is highly undervalued considering it is moving forward with a business plan to revolutionize the online ticketing industry,'' Donner wrote.

But in its annual report this month, Tickets.com warned investors that it soon might cease to exist.

``If we are unable to obtain additional funding on satisfactory terms in the near future, we'll have to modify our business plan, reduce or discontinue some or all of our operations, seek a buyer for substantially all of our assets or seek bankruptcy protection,'' the company cautioned.

Even so, Donner's January press release caused a stir among investors in chat rooms on Yahoo! Inc.'s financial website.

A volatile swing

The morning the press release was published by an online news service, one stock jockey, Mtanda_ 2000, copied it in full, without the disclaimer, in a message with the subject as ``good buy recommendation.'' The identity of the writer could not be learned.

Over three days, Jan. 19, 22 and 23, Tickets.com saw its volume surge, respectively, from 374,000 shares, to 829,000 shares, to 2.2 million shares. The price climbed to 84 cents over that time, from 50 cents.

The next day, both the volume and price fell back - to 925,000 and 78 cents.

``Like a lot of penny stocks, it fluctuates quite a lot,'' says David Kathman, a stock analyst who has watched, but not formally covered, Tickets.com for Morningstar.com.

Donner would have benefited greatly from any strong move in the stock price, according to the release. It said Tickets.com was to pay Donner 1,000 shares of stock for its work.

If the stock had closed at $10, $15, $20 or $25, Donner stood to receive an additional 1,000 shares of stock for reaching each plateau.

In another release, Donner disclosed that it would receive $7,000, plus a $2,500 monthly retainer.

But in its research report, it says merely that it received a $5,250 due diligence fee and a $6,000 retainer. The report also made no mention of shares potentially owed to Donner.

``They're following the letter of the law, but not the spirit,'' says Mr. Kathman.

Bullish

Mr. Baclet says that in all but one of the sectors it covers, his team has no specialists. He says, ``It's a team effort when we go into a project.''

He likens his practice of taking a fee to cover companies with market caps barely in the millions to Wall Street's practice of refusing to write ``sell'' recommendations of companies worth billions.

Indeed, once a business has signed up with Mr. Baclet, it is just about guaranteed to get a bullish rating.

Donner has pulled at least one company from the list - Far East Adventures, a phone card company that Mr. Baclet says didn't give his analysts correct financial information.

Since March 6, 2000, Donner has produced at least 104 favorable press releases and not one ``hold'' or ``sell'' rating, according to a search of Dow Jones Interactive.

In that time, the Nasdaq Composite Index has fallen more than 60%, and all 18 companies that Donner lists as clients on its website have seen their prices tank.

Mr. Baclet says huge swings in stock price are part of investing in penny stocks, and he insists that he is not a stock touter. In fact, in the past, his clients have been winners, he says.

Copyright © 2001 Crain Communications Inc.