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To: Kevin Podsiadlik who wrote (9629)4/11/2002 10:35:21 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
INFO ON JAMES MARTIN THE FOUNDER OF "SIRS"

Boiler room racket hits investors
By ADRIAN TAME and MANDI ZONNEVELDT
05aug01

HUNDREDS of Australians have lost millions of dollars in the world's largest sharemarket scam.
The racket was masterminded by a shady Filipino, Amador Pastrana, 31, who has made $6 billion in eight years.
Pastrana is on the run.

The FBI will move soon to close the global operation, but it will be too late for the

Australians ? two of whom are known to have been cheated of $400,000 each.

Last week's raid on a boiler room ? a sophisticated, "cold calling" operations centre ? in the Thai capital of Bangkok was the
tip of a fraudulent iceberg.

Pastrana, according to one of his victims, has built an empire of 50 boiler rooms in nine countries, and also receives "dirty"
money from criminal groups and from arms deals.

The victim says Pastrana then launders the money through his sharemarket scam, doubly profits.

Pastrana regularly works 20-hour days, seven days a week and has become one of the world's richest people. He is
close to the Thai royal family, various archbishops and also is a friend of disgraced former Philippines president Joseph
Estrada.

Australia has been one of the countries most heavily targeted by Pastrana and his army of high-pressure telephone salesmen.

But last week's arrest of 80 people in Bangkok was just the "tip of the iceberg", according to the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission. ASIC officials warned that unlicensed brokerage firms are still operating in Asia.

Thailand's securities watchdog, the Securities and Exchange Commission, has asked police to file criminal charges
against seven men who allegedly ran Bangkok-based stock trading firms that tried to scam investors, mostly in Australia
and New Zealand.

The SEC alleges the seven men headed stock brokerage firms without a licence from the Thai Government. It says they
sought to sell shares of non-existent or dubious companies to investors.

The seven are John Martin Kealy, Ronan Joseph Murray, Paul Mary Hickey, Scott Campbell Fisher, Jason Garrick Rich,
Adrian Robert Wallis and Steven Hooper.

The SEC provided no details about them. Hickey, an Irishman, and Fisher, an Australian, are in custody.

The unlicensed firms employ English-speaking backpackers in Asia to "cold call" people, encouraging them to buy shares
on the stock market. People are pressured into investing thousands of dollars ? which usually disappears.

ASIC's executive director of consumer protection, Peter Kell, said the latest arrests were only a deterrent.

"Quite a few cold callers will continue to exist and consumers need to be vigilant to make sure they are not tricked," Mr Kell said.

ASIC has been flooded with thousands of phone calls since the Thai arrests.

Overall losses are believed to be billions of dollars and by fraudulently using the stock of just one company, Berten USA
, Pastrana has fleeced Australian investors of $25 million.

The company's president, James Martin, claims if US authorities and the FBI had listened when he warned them a year
ago of fraudulent transactions in his stock, up to 90 per cent of the Australian losses could have been avoided.

Instead, US authorities told Mr Martin there was nothing they could do about the scam because it had not taken place on
American soil and they had received no complaints from US victims.

It was not until Pastrana made his first major mistake in nine years ? he forged Mr Martin's signature on a document ? that the
FBI began an inquiry.

Berten USA started as a legitimate manufacturer of men's cologne.

After being dormant for a decade, Berten was purchased by an American known as "Dan", who is implicated in Pastrana's
operation, and is a suspect in a $1.8 million US security fraud.

"Dan" sold Berten as a shell company to Pastrana shortly before he introduced the Filipino to Mr Martin.

At the time, Mr Martin was operating a legitimate Silicon Valley company called Stratasys and needed investment capital.

"Dan" suggested Pastrana to Mr Martin as a potential source of the investment capital.

Pastrana agreed to invest $US7.5 million on condition Mr Martin used Berten as the

vehicle and became company president.

Pastrana's background appeared impeccable and among his references was then-president Estrada.

"He was going to put in $US7.5 million to add to the $US2.5 million my colleagues and I had invested," Mr Martin said.

"When I first met him in December 1999, he was charming and deeply concerned I was happy with everything he was
doing. It was a class act, very accomplished and polished."

Mr Martin and Pastrana met regularly over the next year and all went well until Mr Martin caught two employees planning
to embezzle $600,000 from Stratasys.

"I fired them immediately, and then I received a quite forcible call from Pastrana

saying I should reinstate them," he said. "That's when I first smelled a rat."

His suspicions were soon confirmed when he started receiving phone calls from Pastrana's friends asking when he was
going to float Berten USA. Information of that nature is illegal insider trading.

In August last year, following his float, Mr Martin went to the authorities and asked them to take his stock off the market.
But it already was too late.

Mr Martin and his friends lost their $US2.5 million original investment and Mr Martin lost a further $US27.5 million. He was
declared bankrupt but later discharged.

He then set off to trace investors who had lost money. So far he has been to Australia, New Zealand, Germany, Austria,
Switzerland and South Africa.

The FBI had Pastrana under surveillance for weeks and was due to arrest him and close his operation any day. But last
week's Thai-led raid on the Bangkok boiler room, which snared 10 Australians and 70 other foreigners, was premature.

Mr Martin said Thai officials had needed a boost for a local election and the raid provided the opportunity.

The original plan was for simultaneous raids on 25 boiler rooms in 15 countries but the other boiler rooms have now been
warned.

And, Mr Martin said, one of the two companies named by Thai police after the raid, Benson Dupont Capital Management,
was one of the least effective cogs in Pastrana's operation.

"Everybody they picked up in the raid was very small fry," he said.

Mr Martin left Australia on Wednesday after meeting defrauded investors.

"For the past two months I have been touring the world tracing investors who have been burned," he said. "There is no legal
obligation to do this, but I see it as a moral obligation. These people placed their faith in my company and have lost large
amounts.

"Their reaction to me has been understandably suspicious to begin with, but I have

addressed a lot of meetings now, and generally my version of events has been accepted."

Mr Martin has compiled detailed lists of many of the 4000 victims worldwide who bought worthless shares in Berten USA
and has put together an international "hit parade" of the worst-hit countries.

He believed it was almost impossible to work out global losses on companies manipulated by Pastrana.

"He picks up five new companies every month, aiming for 60 a year. He plugs and dumps them at the same rate," Mr Martin said. "Berten is the only one
I know about in detail and investors lost $25 million in Australia alone in under a year.

"If you start multiplying that figure by 60 times a year for nine years, you are probably starting to get close."



To: Kevin Podsiadlik who wrote (9629)4/11/2002 4:26:45 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
Herbalife, Other Ephedra Marketers Face Soaring Insurance Rates
By David Evans

Los Angeles, April 11 (Bloomberg) -- Herbalife International Inc. continues to sell weight-loss products containing ephedra, following lawsuits blaming the substance for customer deaths, and a six-fold increase in product-liability insurance expense.

Herbalife, which faces two wrongful death suits blaming its ephedra weight-loss products, still includes the herb in its line of diet products, which made up 42.7 percent of last year's $1.66 billion in sales, according to its annual report.

Late yesterday, the company agreed to be taken private for $685 million, or $19.50 a share, by Whitney & Co. LLC and Golden Gate Capital Inc.

Robert Hartwig, chief economist for the Insurance Information Institute, said ephedra insurance premiums have increased along with adverse incident reports and lawsuits. ``You have a situation where the house is on fire,'' said Hartwig. ``If your house was already on fire, it's very unlikely we'd write a policy.''

More than a half dozen other publicly traded companies also continue to sell ephedra products, while unable to obtain desired levels of insurance.

Herbalife said in its federal filing that its product- liability insurance premium soared from $400,000 in 2000 to $2.5 million last year, even as its deductible increased 10-fold to $5 million, and its coverage limit fell by $10 million to $40 million.

Ephedra is an herbal stimulant also used for bodybuilding. The National Football League banned ephedra last year after it was linked to the deaths of several athletes. Health Canada ordered a voluntary recall of the products in January, after finding ``these products pose a serious risk to health.''

Dozens of Deaths

Ephedrine, the active ingredient in ephedra, also called ma huang, is a chemical cousin of amphetamines and increases both blood pressure and heart rate, say experts. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has linked ephedra to hundreds of adverse reactions and dozens of deaths.

Herbalife, based in Los Angeles, said in its annual report it might discontinue selling ephedra products because insurance is ``becoming prohibitively expensive.'' It said the company had ``substantial defenses'' to the lawsuits and said ``they will not have a material impact on us.''

An Herbalife spokeswoman, Tammy Taylor of Sitrick & Co., said Herbalife believes ephedra products are ``safe and effective when used as directed.'' Francis Tirelli, company president, didn't return telephone calls.

Nine other public companies say they sell ephedra products. Advantage Marketing Systems Inc. received 52 percent of its $28.4 million of 2001 revenue from ephedra. The company's product liability insurance excludes ephedra claims, according to its annual report. The company didn't indicate any ephedra lawsuits in its annual report.

Reggie Cook, chief financial officer, said the coverage would be too costly. ``If I paid $100,000, I could get $100,000 of coverage,'' he said.

No Complaints

Natrol Inc. of Chatsworth, California, has sold ephedra supplements for 18 years, without a single complaint, said Elliot Balbert, president and founder. Still, the company can't find product-liability insurance for the products, which include Natrol High, Metabolfirm and Therma Pro.

``We couldn't even get a damn bid,'' said Balbert. ``I don't like the exposure.'' He said Natrol might stop selling ephedra products, which generate less than three percent of revenue.

Three other public companies said they are selling ephedra products although their insurance now provides less protection.

Wrongful Death Suit

Twinlab Corp. of Hauppauge, New York, faces a lawsuit over a customer death following use of its Metabolift ephedra product. Chattem Inc. of Chattanooga, Tennessee, cautioned in its annual report it might not have sufficient insurance coverage to cover sales of Dexatrim after its policy expires on May 31.

Weider Nutrition International Inc., which distributes diet products from its Salt Lake City headquarters, is defending three ephedra lawsuits. Daniel Thomson, Weider's general counsel, didn't return telephone calls. William Rizzardi, Twinlab's chief information officer, and Scott Sloat, Chattem's controller, declined to comment.

Four other companies that sell ephedra products don't indicate any lawsuits in their annual reports. Nutraceutical International Corp. said its liability insurance excludes ephedra, and the Park City, Utah-based company said it recently halted sales of some ephedra products. Les Brown, chief financial officer, didn't return telephone calls.

Mannatech Inc. of Coppell, Texas, reported selling ephedra products. Steve Fenstermacher, chief financial officer, didn't return phone calls.

Both Natures Sunshine Products Inc. of Provo, Utah, and NBTY Inc. of Bohemia, New York, sell ephedra supplements. Harvey Kamil, NBTY's chief executive, didn't return telephone calls. Natures Sunshine Products executives weren't available.

`Natural Reaction'

Among a group of 140 FDA adverse reaction reports, 104 show ephedrine was the ``very likely'' cause of a medical problem, according to Ray Woosley, who examined the reports. Woosley, dean of the University of Arizona College of Medicine, said there were 10 reported ephedrine cases of ``sudden death'' and 15 severe strokes.

Woosley, who joined Public Citizen in its petition for an FDA ephedra ban, said he's not surprised that insurers are shying away from companies selling ephedra.

``That's a natural reaction to reckless behavior,'' he said.