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To: Verendus who wrote (78)11/27/2001 12:19:26 PM
From: Fast Eddie  Respond to of 93
 
I received this exact write-up from stocklemon last week, 10/19. Are you the author? Or just taking credit for it.

Fast Eddie

P.S. NYTimes disavowed the pump piece sent out by them
nytimes.com



To: Verendus who wrote (78)11/28/2001 11:54:10 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93
 
A gift for your fine work. web.archive.org

wayback machine saves all information ever published on a web site.

The Lord works in mysterious ways

Praise the Lord for HE is good!!



To: Verendus who wrote (78)11/28/2001 11:54:11 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93
 
A gift for your fine work. web.archive.org

wayback machine saves all information ever published on a web site.

The Lord works in mysterious ways

Praise the Lord for HE is good!!



To: Verendus who wrote (78)2/18/2002 11:21:24 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 93
 
"Brian Hay, V.P. of Paradigm Advanced Technologies, Inc. (OTC-BB: PRAV), spoke of the details surrounding the company’s recent work at Ground Zero of New York’s World Trade Center"

Medical Laser Technology Advances
Hollywood, CA-Emerging Company Report is the nationally syndicated television program profiling emerging-growth
companies (http://www.emergingcompany.com), featuring informative interviews with the CEOs, insights into their operations and outlooks for their futures.

Free information packages from the featured companies can be requested by sending an email to info@emergingcompany.com.

The television program can also be viewed online immediately at www.emergingcompany.com.

Featured companies on this week’s show include:

Archer Medical Technologies, Inc. CEO Bill Swor spoke of his company’s patented Quadralaz laser, which “combines the utility of four most-used lasers for medical purposes, saving hospitals and physicians 75% of the purchase cost”, he said. The company has also begun FDA-approved clinical trials for a laser procedure called Heartbeat, for use in treating coronary heart disease.

Brian Hay, V.P. of Paradigm Advanced Technologies, Inc. (OTC-BB: PRAV), spoke of the details surrounding the company’s recent work at Ground Zero of New York’s World Trade Center.

Elroy Fimrite, CEO of Landstar, Inc. (OTC-BB: LDSR) spoke of his company’s devulcanization process for recycling rubber.

Anthony Lapine, CEO of Semotus Solutions, Inc. (AMEX: DLK) reported the company is without debt and heading towards reporting profitability.

ValCom, Inc. (OTC-BB: VACM) CEO Vince Vellardita announced details of the company’s activities in Indonesia. “We have a five-year contract to provide management and on-air TV content’, he said.

Viewers of Emerging Company Report can receive free information in the mail about featured companies by calling the toll-free phone number on their TV screen. The weekly television program debuted in 1996 and is seen nationally on Friday evenings at 11:00 ET, 8:00 PT and Sunday mornings at 11:00 ET, 8:00 PT. The program is broadcast to over 35 million cable TV homes weekly in more than 350 cities nationwide.

A complete menu of cable TV channels is available at the Emerging Company Report web site, emergingcompany.com

Emerging Company Report television program, Copyright MMII, all rights reserved. Emerging Company Report does not provide an analysis of companies' financial positions and is not soliciting to purchase or sell securities of the companies, nor are we offering a recommendation of featured companies or their stocks. Information discussed herein has been provided by the companies and should be verified independently with the companies and a securities analyst. Emerging Company Report has been paid a cash fee of $11,500.00 by the featured companies, does not accept company stock as payment for services, does not hold any positions, options or warrants in featured companies. The information herein is not an endorsement by the producers, publisher or parent company of Emerging Company Report.



To: Verendus who wrote (78)2/18/2002 11:23:46 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 93
 
GOAT CARCASSES?
Donald Baillargeon AKA dbmedia is hyping under is new alias today. For those that do not know Donald go to this link
sec.gov
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.
Litigation Release No. 16223 / July 28, 1999

SEC v. ALLIANCE INDUSTRIES, PETER H. NORMAN, AND DONALD A. BAILLARGEON, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California, No. CIV-F-99-6073(RECDLB)(July 27, 1999)

SEC SUES TWO OFFICERS OF ALLIANCE INDUSTRIES
IN MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR MICROCAP FRAUD

Norman and Baillargeon Touted Alliance On the Internet,
Making False, Fanciful Projections and Claims About Its
Fast-Growing Paulownia Trees, Nationwide Chain of
Chiropractic Clinics, and Goat-Raising Business

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that it filed a civil injunctive action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California alleging that two top officers of Alliance Industries, Peter H. Norman and Donald A. Baillargeon, carried out a wide-ranging manipulation of Alliance's stock from January to November 1996, causing investors to lose millions of dollars. Norman is the chairman and CEO of Alliance, a small holding company based in Bakersfield, California. Baillargeon served as Alliance's vice president for marketing and public relations.

The Commission's complaint alleges that Norman and Baillargeon used Alliance's internet web site to make materially false representations about businesses in which various Alliance subsidiaries were supposedly engaged, including the cultivation and sale of fast-growing "paulownia" hardwood trees, the breeding and selling of live goats and goat carcasses, and the development of a nationwide chain of chiropractic clinics. The complaint alleges that, contrary to the representations, Alliance owned no paulownia tree technology or plantations, did not own or operate a goat business, and was not developing a chain of chiropractic clinics. Nonetheless, according to the complaint, Norman and Baillargeon projected that Alliance's various businesses would generate $4.8 billion over a projected ten-year period, and that the paulownia tree business alone would bring Alliance more than $l billion in annual revenue by 2006. The complaint alleges that those and other projections had no reasonable basis and were materially false and misleading.

According to the complaint, Norman controlled about 80% of the 24 million shares of Alliance common stock outstanding. The complaint states that the stock, which was listed for trading on the OTC Bulletin Board, rose from $1.00 per share in January 1996 to a split-adjusted high of $46 on November 21, 1996, when the Commission issued a ten-day trading suspension.

The complaint also alleges that Norman engaged in a series of manipulative securities transactions, including "wash trading," designed to make it appear that there was an active market for Alliance stock. According to the complaint, Norman's own purchases and sales accounted for 100% of the trading in Alliance on numerous trading days. The complaint further alleges that Norman sold more than 2.2 million shares of Alliance common stock to the public between May 1996 and March 1997, making millions of dollars in illegal profits.

The Commission seeks an order enjoining Norman, Baillargeon, and Alliance from further violations of Section Section 17(a) of the Securities Act, Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act, and Rule 10b-5, and enjoining Norman and Alliance from further violations of Section 5 of the Securities Act. The complaint also seeks an order directing Norman to pay disgorgement, imposing civil monetary penalties upon Norman and Baillargeon, barring Norman from serving as an officer or director of any public company, and other unspecified relief.

This enforcement action is part of the Commission's four-pronged approach to attacking microcap fraud: enforcement, inspections, investor education and regulation. For more information about the SEC's response to microcap fraud and the litigation releases for these cases, visit the SEC's Microcap Fraud Information Center at http:// www.sec.gov/news/extra/microcap.htm.

Investors are advised to read the SEC's "Cyberspace" Alert before purchasing any investment promoted on the internet. The free publication, which alerts investors to the telltale signs of online investment fraud, is available on the Investor Assistance and Complaints link of the SEC's home page on the World Wide Web . It can also be obtained by calling 800-SEC-0330. Investors are encouraged to report suspicious Internet offerings (or other suspicious offerings) via e-mail to . A user-friendly form to assist you in making a report is available at the Enforcement Complaint Center, Mail Stop 8-4, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549



To: Verendus who wrote (78)8/26/2006 4:48:31 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 93
 
SEC fines Florida tout Barhonovich $164,082 (U.S.)

2006-08-24 17:47 ET - Street Wire

by Mike Caswell

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has reached a $164,082 civil settlement with Marc Barhonovich, a Florida newsletter writer whose publication allegedly touted a Vancouver-connected company by using unrealistic revenue projections in 2001. Although the SEC negotiated the settlement over two years ago, it did not publicly close the file until it released news of the deal Wednesday. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.)

Mr. Barhonovich, 43, allegedly touted Dtomi Inc., a research company, in his OTC Investor's Edge newsletter, driving the stock from $1.95 to $2.36. Dtomi had just changed its name from Copper Valley Minerals Ltd., which was a Vancouver-based OTC Bulletin Board listing with a Nevada property and two directors, Jack Barley and Geoffrey Goodall.

The SEC filed a civil suit in Florida against Mr. Barhonovich and two others in 2001, charging them with fraudulently touting companies while selling the stock.

According to the suit, Dtomi hired Mr. Barhonovich for investor relations in the fall of 2001 and paid him with shares. His newsletter, which he arranged to go out in 12.5 million spam faxes, apparently stated "without any basis in fact" that Dtomi could achieve annual revenue of $80-million.

The newsletter did not mention the company had no clients, was in default on its debts and had $4.8-million in accumulated losses since inception, among other problems, the SEC says. In the days after the spam "the average number of shares traded per day rose 600 percent" while Mr. Barhonovich was selling his stock, according to the SEC. The stock reached a two-cent low one year later, down from its $2.36 high.

The SEC identified two other companies touted in a similar manner by Mr. Barhonovich, New Millennium Media International Inc., of Florida, and Nebo Products Inc., a New York tool manufacturer.

In 2003 the SEC won a combined $963,925 in civil fines against two other defendants in the case, Houston resident Thomas Loyd and Tampa resident Paul Spray. The pair wrote the newsletters and arranged the mass faxing, the SEC says.

"Barhonovich, acting as a consultant for the companies, hired the newsletter writers and paid for the mass faxing, but failed to review the newsletters before they were publicly disseminated," the SEC said in Wednesday's news release. Mr. Barhonovich did not admit to any wrongdoing in his settlement. As part of the deal, the SEC dropped the civil case against him and instead filed a settled administrative suit.

Dtomi rolled back its shares 1:400 last year and became Vocalscape Networks Inc., a provider of Internet phones, or VoIP. While the company lists its headquarters as a New York address, regulatory filings show most of its business is located in Vancouver.

The stock trades very thinly, last at 30 cents.

Mr. Barhonovich is still writing about stocks, and may be better known now for his current newsletter, the Common Sense Investor, a subscription-based website.