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To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/10/2002 4:56:43 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
Specialty Recipe Virginia Crabcakes


Gourmet Governors' Index

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Bed and Breakfast, Country Inns, and Small Hotels on 1st Traveler's Choice
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Virtual Cities After a busy day of governing the Commonwealth of Virginia, I like to sit down to my favorite dinner of Virginia crabcakes. Some days, if I am lucky, I can indulge in my favorite dessert, which is fudge cake. I am including these recipes so that you too can enjoy these delicious treats. I encourage you all to come visit the beautiful Commonwealth of Virginia. James S Gilmore, III, Governor of Virginia

Ingredients
1 Tablespoon butter
1/4 teaspoon garlic, chopped
1 Tablespoon shallots, minced
4 Tablespoons bell pepper (red, green and/or yellow, brunoisc)
1 teaspoon Old Bay seasoning
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 egg
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1/2 lemon, squeezed
1 pound fresh crabmeat, picked to remove any shell
1/8 cup seasoned breadcrumbs
1/4 cup Ritz crackers, crumbled
Salt to taste
White pepper, fresh ground to taste
Combine the butter, garlic, shallots, bell peppers, and Old Bay in a small saute pan and sweat over medium heat.

In a mixing bowl, combine the Dijon mustard, egg, mayonnaise, and lemon juice with the cooked pepper mixture. Add the crabmeat, breadcrumbs, and crackers. Gently mix to combine; season with salt and pepper. Form into cakes and saute to order.

Back to Gourmet Governors' Index
You found this recipe on 1st Traveler's Choice Internet Cookbook. (www.virtualcities



To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/11/2002 2:49:19 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
Gilmore did not do the trick, maybe they can get Clinton?



To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/13/2002 3:27:26 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
rOY, XYBERNAUT IS SILK PURSE OUT OF COWS EAR

DONNER CORP. INTERNATIONAL REITERATES ITS BUY RECOMMENDATION ON XYBERNAUT CORPOR...
81% - Press releases: SANTA ANA, Calif., Feb 22, 2000 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The following is being issued by Donner Corporation International, a member of the National Association of ... 02/22/2000
PR Newswire: Available at NorthernLight.com

82. DONNER CORP. INTERNATIONAL UPGRADES TO BUY RECOMMENDATION ON XYBERNAUT CORPORATI...
81% - Press releases: SANTA ANA, Calif., Jan 18, 2000 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The following is being issued by Donner Corporation International, a member of the National Association of ... 01/18/2000
PR Newswire: Available at NorthernLight.com

Silk purse in penny stocks A tout makes money even as his clients’ shares collapse By Bruce Kelly
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
in-vestors an opportunity to donate to a fundamentalist Christian
charity that rails against Hollywood,
porn-ography 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 re-lease 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.



To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/18/2002 11:43:37 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, JUST WANTED TO UP DATE YOU ON REGIS POSSINO. JUST TO REMIND YOU HE WAS THE ONE THAT PROMOTED XYBR WITH MARK BERGMAN OF ACCESS1FINANCIAL OUT OF 2224 MAIN STREET IN SANTA MONICA CALIFORNIA. AS YOU KNOW MARK BERGMAN WAS ONCE A VICE PRESIDENT OF XYBR.

Laws, raids fail to thwart boiler room activities

By Sheila Samonte-Pesayco
Publish Date: [Wednesday, April 17, 2002]
Click here to read Part II

Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism
(Conclusion)

Even the US Federal Bureau of Investigation is now looking into his companies’ activities, but Pangasinense Amador Apungan Pastrana has managed to elude authorities across the globe who want to pin him down for the shenanigans of his alleged boiler room firms.

Indeed, Pastrana, who is said to head a global network of "collapsible" companies that hype nearly worthless stocks to gullible investors and then just suddenly close shop months later, remains free to enjoy the billions of dollars he is reported to have earned in the few years that he has been in business.

And despite raids last year in Bangkok and Manila, boiler rooms still thrive in both cities as well as other places around the world. Authorities also admit that these operations have grown even more sophisticated as years pass. They say that the heads of some networks have even started to buy banks, intending to use these not only to launder their money, but also to use as centers for their boiler room transactions.

James Martin, who claims to have lost $35 million to Pastrana in a completely different scam and now heads Sydney-based Stock Investigation Research Society (SIRS), says, "Those that were picked up by authorities (so far) were just small fry. They haven’t gotten the big one (like Pastrana)."

Authorities say that the big bosses of boiler rooms are hard to catch largely because the transactions cross borders, giving rise to questions on jurisdiction. Up until last year, in fact, US authorities seemed uninterested in checking boiler room operations, even if the stocks these firms were selling were those listed in the unregulated Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board (OTCBB) of the US NASDAQ. Former boiler room employees themselves say that they were given strict instructions not to call anyone in the US or pitch shares to American citizens, fearing the long arm of US laws.

It was only after US national Christopher Coppola was stabbed to death in Pasig last May that the FBI began scrutinizing boiler room operations, especially those linked to Pastrana. Coppola had reportedly been employed by a Pastrana boiler room in Manila.

The PCIJ has learned that the US Customs police is now also following leads that Pastrana has been laundering proceeds of his illegal operations by amassing properties in the United States.

But Tomas Syquia, acting director of the Compliance and Enforcement Division of the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), echoes Allan Cantado of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) in saying that it is difficult to make a case against boiler room companies because of the inadequacies of local and international laws, and the sheer shortage of official manpower.

Cantado points out, too, that in the Philippines alone, prosecuting agencies should first prove that the company does not really hold a license to deal with securities, and that the transactions really existed for a case involving violations of the Securities Regulations Code to prosper.

"The problem is that the complainants are all foreigners and don’t want to come here (to the Philippines)," he says. "They only send documents. Under our jurisprudence, victims have to physically appear before the fiscal to lodge a formal complaint."

Cantado also does not rule out the possibility that boiler rooms get prior warnings before they are raided, leaving the police with little to show afterwards. "Considering that the syndicate is moneyed," he says, "it’s not totally impossible that they pay off or have paid off insiders to tip them off" whenever a raid was or is going to be conducted.

He suspects this is precisely what happened in an NBI raid of a Makati-based boiler room. Recounts Cantado: "When we came in, the coffee on their office desks was still hot. We found out they had left just minutes ago through the emergency exit at the back door."

Yet in March last year, the Philippine SEC thought it finally had some goods on Pastrana after a raid on 88 Corporate Business Center in Makati. The bust had been conducted after a Saudi national who lost $48,811 to two boiler rooms lodged a formal complaint against the companies that duped him. According to the SEC, the raid on 88 Corporate Business Center established the interlocking relationships of boiler rooms linked with Pastrana: not only were several documents on the illegal stock brokering operations of 21 firms all found in one office, but they also share some names as incorporators.

A month later, the SEC filed a criminal case with the Department of Justice (DoJ) against 21 companies and 14 individuals, including nine foreigners and John/Jane Does believed to be working as brokers or telemarketers. Among those charged with the criminal offense of running an operation that trades securities without a license were Pastrana, Rufina Abad, Noel Galang, Hilda Ronquillo, Greshiela Compendio and British national Gregory Barnes.

The SEC thought it had an airtight case. Apart from documents, it was also able to gather sworn testimonies from witnesses who were privy to the inner workings of Pastrana’s companies.

But Pastrana’s lawyers got an injunction order from the Regional Trial Court of Muntinlupa preventing the SEC, NBI and the Department of Justice (DOJ) from using documents seized from the raid as court evidence. The court ruled that the search warrant used to get the documents was invalid as it violated the legal procedure of stating only one offense. The court also charged the SEC and NBI for contempt after the agencies failed to return the documents within the deadline it imposed.

With the documents declared inadmissible by the court, the DOJ last November decided to junk the case for lack of evidence.

Those close to the case say the police in Hong Kong were dismayed to learn what had happened here. The week after the March 2001 raid in Makati, five Filipinos were arrested in a Hong Kong hotel for allegedly trying to launder some $50 million in proceeds from boiler rooms. All five were believed to be working for Pastrana, and were actually based in Manila. The Organized Crime and Triad Bureau of Hong Kong alleged that many of their victims had paid through Hong Kong accounts set up through company-formed agents there.

Today, only one of the five Filipinos remains in detention, the rest having been released on bail. But one of Pastrana’s ex-employees says the alleged boiler room mogul would have been among those caught in that Hong Kong raid had he not gone to the toilet just minutes before the police arrived. According to the former employee, Pastrana had even left his laptop and coat at the hotel lounge. Pastrana is said to have avoided alerting Hong Kong authorities about his departure for the Philippines by renting a private yacht for P10 million and using this for his trip home.

Some observers speculate that the Filipinos would not have had the need to be in Hong Kong had the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas allowed Pastrana to keep the small Imus, Cavite-based thrift bank he bought two years ago. Although Pastrana’s income tax returns for 1997 to 1999 showed he had "limited sources of income," the Bangko Sentral still concluded that he was "capable of investing" in the Northpoint Development Bank based on his declared assets and liabilities as of March 2000.

But a "tip" from the banking industry that Pastrana and one of the bank’s new directors, Rufina Abad, had an ongoing securities fraud case with the SEC prompted Central Bank authorities to dig deeper.

Asked to explain these reports, the thrift bank, then already run by Pastrana, submitted a photocopy of an SEC order exonerating him and Abad from the criminal case involving an alleged boiler room, the First Federal Capital Inc. Upon verification with the SEC, the Central Bank discovered it had been given a forged document, as the SEC investigation into First Federal and Pastrana’s other companies was still ongoing at the time. Because of this, coupled with reports that he was engaged in "nefarious activities," the Central Bank rejected the sale of Northpoint to Pastrana.

Carmelita Climente, who has been president of Northpoint since its inception as a thrift bank in 1996, says businessman William Hernandez bought it from Pastrana last December. She says the new owner does not have links with Pastrana, and that the two have yet to meet in person.

Climente denies having any knowledge of Pastrana’s alleged boiler room operations. She says, "My only connection with him was through the bank. (When Pastrana left the bank,) I offered to resign but the Central Bank told me to stay out and run it."

Climente admits, however, that Pastrana once tapped her as a consultant in setting up an investment house that would sell nonconvertible preferred shares to foreigners – which the SEC does not allow. She says nothing happened of the plans because "I was not for it."

According to Climente, Pastrana had envisioned Northpoint to be a "technology bank" that would cater to the ATM needs of small banks. A prospectus of AAP Management, Inc. – Pastrana’s flagship company – given to clients does say that what Pastrana had renamed as United Resources Bank (URB) "will be positioned as a full-technology bank that will capitalize on its relationship with Infoserve Inc., a leading software developer for the banking industry." (Infoserve is not a Pastrana company.)

But the same prospectus indicates that Pastrana had more ambitious plans for the bank in which he had agreed to put in a fresh P400-million equity in December 1999. In truth, it maps out Pastrana’s plans to transfer URB’s head office from Cavite to Makati and then set up a branch in Ortigas Center, where most of his companies are located. By pumping in more cash and merging it with more banks, URB was envisioned to grow into a full-fledged commercial bank with a license to offer trust and foreign currency deposit products, hence freely catering to clients across borders.

A former Pastrana employee says URB was supposed to take care of all the banking needs of Pastrana’s companies, including the alleged boiler rooms, instead of giving out the business to other private banks. But lawyer Rodolfo Pineda, who was president of URB when it was still under Pastrana, denies knowing about any plans that would have the bank becoming a depository of any boiler room. Pineda says aside from incorporating some of Pastrana’s companies, he merely helped Pastrana look for a bank to acquire.

"When I met him, he said he made money from investing in the NASDAQ," says Pineda. "I didn’t realize it was illegal until I heard about it in the news."

Reports in the Austrian media, as well as in the Internet, reveal that Northpoint was not the only bank Pastrana had bought. These reports say Pastrana was part of a group that had bought WMP Bank AG in Vienna in November 2000.

In August last year, newspapers in Vienna reported that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had started to look into "a gang of worldwide active financial artists who allegedly bilked a gigantic 15 billion Austrian schillings (US$1 billion) from clients." This syndicate turned out to be the new owner of WMG Bank AG – then already renamed General Commerce Bank (GCB).

Internet reports then said that the bank had been converted into a brokerage house that had become the nerve center of the "large-scale scam." Citing an FBI dossier, the reports said the "perpetrators" of the scam were "Manila- and Los Angeles-based Amador A. Pastrana, the "mastermind of the operations" and US citizens Regis Possino and Sherman Mazur, as well as prominent Saudi arms merchant Adnan Khashoggi.

Two months later, the Banking and Finance Commission of Belgium issued a public warning against the bank, which it said was offering investment instruments to Belgian and foreigners without a license. Various media reports say Austrian police raided the bank, which has since been closed.

The reports had securities regulators in Australia, New Zealand and Thailand scrambling to include GCB in its blacklist of boiler rooms and warning investors not to deal with the bank.

Oddly enough, the Viennese bank to this day maintains a website despite the reported FBI probe and the international blacklist. At its website, www.gcbankag.com, the bank claims to have been in operation for more than 10 years now, and trading on the Vienna Stock Exchange. It even recommends investors to buy shares of Thaon Communications, Inc., an obscure company trading for a fraction of a penny on the OTCBB of the US NASDAQ.

philstar.com



To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/19/2002 11:21:46 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, NEW 52 WEEK LOWS ARE NEVER A GOOD SIGN.



To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/22/2002 1:38:07 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, IT KEEPS TANKIN. MAYBE THEY CAN COME OUT WITH A NEW PRODUCT WITH A POKEMAN THEME TO IT?

Xybernaut's Mobile Pokeman Assistant(R) (MA(R)) Vl product?



To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/23/2002 9:13:25 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
As I've said, Roy, these scammers will eat their young when things get tough.



To: Roy F who wrote (4857)4/23/2002 9:57:07 AM
From: Roy F  Read Replies (23) | Respond to of 6847
 
Xybernaut Receives Patent Grants in U.S., The Republic of China and Hong Kong; U.S. and Asian Patents Recognize Specific Features That Define Wearable Computers
April 23, 2002 09:23:00 AM ET

FAIRFAX, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 23, 2002--Xybernaut(R) Corporation XYBR, today announced that in the first quarter of 2002 seven patents have been issued to the Company for mobile/ wearable computing and related technologies in the United States, the Republic of China and Hong Kong.

These U.S. and Asian patents recognize the specific features that define a wearable computer such as removable/transferable core components; docking stations and connector ports and PC Card and network interface connectivity. Stakeholder value continues to be enhanced as the company protects its most valuable assets on an international basis.

In the U.S., the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) issued two Utility Patents and two Design Patents. Utility Patent 6,359,777 relates to a removable component structure for a mobile/wearable computer and Utility Patent 6,351,388 relates to a mobile/wearable computer with PC housing for PC card and network interface.

The Design Patents relate to a docking station for a portable computer and a connector port for a portable computer.

In the Republic of China, Xybernaut received grant 142992 (Personal Communicator) and grant 142471(Core Computer System).

In Hong Kong, the patent grant extends coverage of Xybernaut's original, "Hands Free User Supported Portable Computer," patent for mobile/wearable computers. Similarly, in 2001 Xybernaut announced recognition of various patents in nine European countries.

Recognition of the company's patents in countries beyond North America is an important aspect of Xybernaut's goal to bring wearable computing and related technologies to international markets. These most recent grants in the Republic of China demonstrate considerable momentum and success.

Xybernaut's original wearable computer patent is now recognized and protected in Australia, Canada, nine countries in Europe, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, the Republic of China and the United States. As such, stakeholder value continues to be enhanced as the company protects its most valuable assets on an international basis.

"Xybernaut has more than 700 patent applications pending or granted worldwide covering its innovative technologies, business methods, and concepts," stated Edward G. Newman, chairman, president and CEO of Xybernaut. "Utilizing aggressive licensing policies and close relationships with industry-leading manufacturers, distributors, resellers and system integrators, we continue to position the Company as the gateway to the mobile/wearable computing market on an international basis."

Xybernaut's IP developments are helping to ensure customers' long-term market success and viability by providing practical enhancements related to design and utilization of current and future wearable computing solutions.

These newly granted and recognized patents represent attractive options for licensee or collaborative companies as well as customers in a wide variety of applications related to field force automation.