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


To: jjs64 who wrote (908)4/17/2002 11:07:05 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 924
 
cdddc, pretty in pink pinksheets.com



To: jjs64 who wrote (908)4/18/2002 10:37:59 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 924
 
Ding Dong! The Witch is dead.

Which old Witch? The Wicked Witch!

Ding Dong! The Wicked Witch is dead.

Wake up - sleepy head,

Rub your eyes, get out of bed.

Wake up, the Wicked Witch is dead.

She's gone where the goblins go,

Below - below - below. Yo-ho,

Let's open up and sing and ring the bells out.

Ding Dong' the merry-oh,

Sing it high, sing it low.

Let them know The Wicked Witch is dead

CDDD
Last Price: 0.12 at 10:22 EDT
Change: Not Available
High: 0.15
Low: 0.05 at 9:34 EDT
Open: 0.27
Previous Close: Not Available
Volume: 234,900
Currency Units: US Dollar
Exchange/Delay: Other OTC: 15 minutes

Confirm all data with your broker or financial advisor before trading.

Data by: S&P ComStock



To: jjs64 who wrote (908)7/14/2002 10:19:04 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 924
 
.Constellation 3D co-founder sues Hamouth of Howe Street

CONSTELLATION 3D INC CDDD
Tuesday July 2 2002 Street Wire
by Brent Mudry

Controversial West Vancouver stock promoter Rene Hamouth faces a $316,000 enforcement action from Lev Zaidenberg, a key founding executive and major shareholder of Constellation 3D Inc., previously known as C3D Inc. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) In a statement of claim filed Thursday in the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Mr. Zaidenberg claims he won a default judgment against Mr. Hamouth on Feb. 7 in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.
The allegations in the suit, filed by Vancouver lawyer David Edinger of Heenan Blaikie, have not yet been proven in court and a statement of defence has not yet been filed. The suit describes Mr. Zaidenberg as a businessman, with a legal address care of C3D's headquarters in New York.
The enforcement suit claims Mr. Hamouth executed a $300,000 promissory note in favour of Mr. Zaidenberg on May 2, 2001, to secure $300,000 in funds delivered by the New York executive to the Howe Street penny stock promoter. The current suit makes no mention of what the loan was for, and the only term disclosed is the June 2, 2001, repayment date.
Constellation shares, which traded at $5.15 when the short-term loan was made and $6.04 when it was due a month later, had slumped to 67 cents by Nov. 15, when Mr. Zaidenberg filed a civil suit in New York against Mr. Hamouth. Shares of C3D, by far the most successful promotion Mr. Hamouth has been involved in, peaked at $97.87 on Dec. 30, 1999. The once lofty stock now trades in the nickel range. After starting this year at 86 cents, the stock bottomed out at four cents in late April and closed at six cents on Friday.
By coincidence, that same day its stock peaked, C3D disclosed a $1.6-million investment from "Winburn (sic) Advisory," described as a private investment group. A few days earlier, on Dec. 27, C3D revealed in a regulatory filing that it had agreed to issue $16-million in convertible debentures to Winnburn Advisory, based in the secretive offshore haven of Nevis. In the Dec. 24 agreement, Mr. Hamouth served as signatory for Winnburn, which uses an address at the Geneva airport.
The current suit claims that while Mr. Hamouth was personally served on Dec. 14, the promoter made no legal reply or defence, although his lawyer sent a letter acknowledging the New York suit and indicating that Mr. Hamouth would voluntarily default in responding to it. Mr. Zaidenberg subsequently served a show cause order on Mr. Hamouth on Jan. 28, and after the promoter made no court response, a judge granted default judgment on Feb. 7. The total tally in the default judgment is $316,588, including $16,333 in interest at 8 per cent from June 2, 2001.
Left unexplained is the nature of business dealings between Mr. Hamouth and Mr. Zaidenberg, one of Constellation 3D's three most important executives. As of Dec. 7, Mr. Zaidenberg, Constellation's director of business development, had shared voting over 41 per cent of the company's shares, along with chief executive officer Eugene Levich and senior vice president Leonardo Berezowsky, through a series of trusts in several secretive offshore enclaves.
Constellation 3D Inc.'s biggest shareholder is Constellation 3D Technology Ltd., a British Virgin Islands company 55-per-cent owned by United European Enterprises Ltd. of Nevis, which features Mr. Zaidenberg as president. Constellation Group Investments Inc., another British Virgin Islands company, in turn owns 54.9 per cent of the voting shares of United European.
All the voting shares of Constellation Group Investments are owned by three trusts in Liechtenstein: the Alex-L Foundation, the Lion & Heart Foundation and the Lediligi Foundation. While the trusts' respective sole trustees: Markus Banzer, Hubert Buchel and Criterion Treuunternehmen reg., are claimed to have "beneficial ownership" of the Constellation Group Investments shares, the true beneficiaries of Lion & Heart, Alex-L and Lediligi, respectively, include Mr. Zaidenberg, Mr. Levich, Mr. Berezowsky and members of their families.
In addition to watching its once stellar stock collapse, Constellation 3D also endured several other misfortunes in the past year.
On March 28, 2001, the company's recently retired chairman, former Israeli Brigadier-General Itzhak Yaakov, a respected military scientist who had served as Chief of Defence Research for the country's Ministry of Industry and Trade, was quietly arrested and detained in Israel on an indictment accusing him of passing on dated state secrets. Few details of the bizarre case, which The New York Times describes as "more Kafka than le Carre," have emerged, as the indictment was sealed.
Mr. Yaakov is no small fish to fry. Besides his extensive military and academic credentials, he has served as consultant to the World Bank, the Organization of American States, the governments of Taiwan, Venezuela, Singapore, Peru and Chile, and the Korean Technology Development Corp.
Mr. Yaakov, now 76, ended his distinguished career with the Israeli army in 1973 when he retired, so any state secrets of the country's nuclear program or other defence details he may have leaked are as dated as disco. While Mr. Yaakov has lived as an expatriate in the United States for several decades, he was arrested at Ben-Gurion Airport after checking in for a flight to Istanbul. Four days earlier, he was feted on his 75th birthday at a party near Tel Aviv attended by numerous prominent Israeli political and business figures.
Constellation 3D received even more distressing news more recently. On April 19, the company revealed its $15-million survival financing flopped and placed the blame on Austrian offshore financier Andre Khayyam of TIC Target Invest Consulting LLC, which is domiciled in Nevis and has an office in Switzerland. Constellation claims it sent Mr. Khayyam shares for a $2-million first tranche of the financing, but the cash never arrived as the financier's wiring instructions were a sham.
Making things messier, the shares sent offshore to TIC Target had been pledged by Constellation's biggest shareholder, Constellation 3D Technology, one of the British Virgin Islands companies. "We are obviously very upset by Andre Khayyam's apparent dishonesty, lack of integrity and what we believe may be criminal activity," stated an unidentified Constellation 3D Inc. spokesman in Russia. The company claimed it intended to "appropriate legal authorities in the United States and Europe and local authorities in Austria, Nevis and Switzerland."
"Mr. Khayyam's behavior has put this company on the brink of going out of business; certainly we cannot sit idly by and allow him to get away with this." Perhaps to prove Mr. Khayyam really did exist, Constellation also published numerous phone, fax, cellular and E-mail contacts for him and TIC Target.
Mr. Khayyam fired back a few days later in a muddled press release, denying he failed to fulfill the financing, and blaming the fiasco on everyone else, including an unidentified bank, an unidentified lender, Constellation 3D, and most importantly, trading restrictions on the shares.
"The securities were refused at other broker dealers but TIC thought this was due to a bias against penny stocks, but TIC received notice of the true problem approximately 60 days after certificate receipt with following text message by email from the Securities House to TIC: 'Unfortunately these shares are not DTC-eligible due to the S3 restrictions on the shares.'"
This alleged financing fiasco provided a good smokescreen while Constellation 3D crumbled, amid being delegated to the OTC Bulletin Board and being deserted by a trio of directors, including lawyer and former main spokesman Michael Goldberg.
In early January, 2000, after Stockwatch revealed Mr. Hamouth's involvement with C3D, Mr. Goldberg abruptly turned gruff and tough when asked to explain Mr. Hamouth's role. "There are no more questions for that -- nope," stated Mr. Goldberg, a former federal prosecutor, before quickly hanging up on a reporter.
In a previous article, a more-talkative Mr. Goldberg praised controversial Howe Street promoters Phil Garratt and Clair Calvert, linked by Stockwatch to C3D, and stressed that C3D was a real company. "It is unfair for anyone who thinks this is a bullshit company, excuse my French," stated the prosecutor-turned-penny-stock-spokesman.
bmudry@stockwatch.com

(c) Copyright 2002 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com



To: jjs64 who wrote (908)1/21/2006 8:58:37 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 924
 
Smart Video foe Hamouth says he is being watched

2006-01-20 15:01 ET - Street Wire

by Stockwatch Business Reporter

Smart Video Technologies Inc.'s court opponent, West Vancouver promoter Rene Hamouth, is in court again. He is not suing Smart Video, or any other company, however. This time Mr. Hamouth is suing the Canadian government and the Municipality of West Vancouver for invasion of privacy.

Mr. Hamouth claims West Vancouver police have tapped his phone, bugged his house and followed him around town. He says the government is "illegally investigating" him and is eavesdropping on him at every chance.

He also says CSIS, the Canadian spy agency, has been spying on him since 2004.

The suit names the Attorney General of Canada, the Municipality of West Vancouver and West Vancouver chief of police Grant Churchill as defendants. The suit also names six John Does, all members of the RCMP and the West Vancouver Police.

Nobody will say why investigators could have bugged Mr. Hamouth's house. Not his lawyer, not the police and not the government.

"I can't comment on the merits of the claim," says Keitha Elvin-Jensen, the government lawyer.

The West Vancouver Police department declined to comment on the matter.

The lawsuit of few details

Mr. Hamouth's lawsuit does not contain many details of the alleged invasion of privacy. For example it does not say what led Mr. Hamouth to believe the government planted listening devices in his walls.

Based on the lack of detail, government lawyers asked a judge to toss the suit earlier this month.

The judge did not throw the suit out, but he did order Mr. Hamouth to include more information.

"In its original form, the statement of claim, for the most part, fails to state the material facts," B.C. Supreme Court Justice Thomas Melnick said.

The phone, the VCR, the TV and the computer are bugged

In what details are available, Mr. Hamouth claims his phone calls are monitored and the electronics in his house are bugged.

Mr. Hamouth says somebody has "compromised" his VCR, TV and computer and they do not work properly. He says he has other electrical problems stemming from "bugging, wiring and other electronic surveillance devices."

Apparently his plumbing has even suffered a diversion "which can not be attributed to any lawful conduct."

Mr. Hamouth also complains plainclothes police are regularly watching outside his house. When he leaves he says they follow him and photograph anybody he meets.

A threat to national security?

Mr. Hamouth says CSIS and the police have never told him what they are investigating. He claims the police and CSIS sent him letters in late 2004 telling him he was under investigation, but nobody said why.

"At no time has there existed reasonable grounds on which [Mr. Hamouth] could be suspected of constituting a threat to national security," Mr. Hamouth's lawyer says in court filings.

Mr. Hamouth also says his bank, CIBC, stopped doing business with him after government agents had a talk with his banker.

The judge gave Mr. Hamouth until Jan. 26 to refile his lawsuit.

Mr. Hamouth sued Smart Video

Mr. Hamouth is a veteran of many civil suits. Last June he sued Smart Video, an OTC Bulletin Board listing, for libel. He said the company damaged his reputation when it told his broker he was illegally trading the stock.

He lost that suit.

In another suit Mr. Hamouth claimed New York stock promoter Lev Zaidenberg ripped him off in the collapse of OTC-BB listing Constellation 3D Inc.