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Non-Tech : Auric Goldfinger's Short List -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kevin Podsiadlik who wrote (9702)4/19/2002 11:37:12 AM
From: benchpress550  Respond to of 19428
 
Done flipped eom!



To: Kevin Podsiadlik who wrote (9702)4/19/2002 3:17:27 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
TIC Target Invest Consulting, LLC Fails to Fulfill Contractual Obligations To Constellation 3D, Inc.

Constellation 3D, Inc. Is in Discussions

For Possible Strategic Acquisition

NEW YORK, April 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Constellation 3D, Inc. ("C3D" or the "Company") (Pink Sheets: CDDD) - developer of Fluorescent Multilayer Disc (FMD) and Card (FMC) technologies, today announced that TIC Target Invest Consulting, LLC ("TIC") of which Andre Khayyam is the sole managing member has failed to fulfill its contractual obligations to the Company, despite repeated assurance by Mr. Khayyam that it would do so. Mr. Khayyam even went so far as to provide the Company with a copy of his wire instructions, wherein a $2 million "first tranche" was purportedly being sent to the Company. The Company now believes that the wire instructions were a sham.

Because Mr. Khayyam has failed to furnish any money whatsoever to the Company, the Company has repeatedly requested that TIC return the shares pledged by the Company's largest shareholder (Constellation 3D Technology, Ltd.) for TIC's loan. Mr. Khayyam has yet to return the shares. The Company believes that this may be evidence of possible criminal intent by Andre Khayyam. Failing a return of the shares, the Company anticipates canceling TIC's shares.

As a direct result of TIC's failure to fulfill its contractual obligations, the Company was unable to maintain the listing requirements for the Nasdaq SmallCap Market. Additionally, as a direct result of TIC's failure to perform and in an effort to conserve remaining funds for day to day costs, the Company decided not to file its Form 10K for 2001. Accordingly, the Company does not currently qualify for listing on the OTC Bulletin Board. The Company's securities are currently traded on the "pink sheets," and transactions are being reported under the symbol "CDDD" at Web sites such as pinksheets.com and bloomberg.com .

A Company spokesman in Russia commented, "We are obviously very upset by Andre Khayyam's apparent dishonesty, lack of integrity and what we believe may be criminal activity. The Company intends to approach the appropriate legal authorities in the United States and Europe and local authorities in Austria, Nevis and Switzerland. In addition, we anticipate that in the very near future a civil suit will be commenced against Andre Khayyam and any co-conspirators. 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. In the interim we are in the process of canceling the shares held by TIC."

Although the Company is currently in negotiations with qualified third-parties for additional financing, no assurance can be made that an investment will be completed or that, if an investment is made, it will be on terms favorable to the Company. In addition, there can be no assurance that absent an immediate substantial cash infusion, the Company will be able to continue as an on-going concern. The Company, through one of its foreign subsidiaries, has secured what it anticipates is minimally sufficient funding for skeleton operations during the next couple of months as the Company explores a sale and/or strategic merger. The Company is currently in discussions with several potential purchasers, however there can be no assurance that a sale will be consummated or, if a sale is consummated, that the purchase price will leave sufficient funds available after the Company's creditors have been paid to provide a return to shareholders.

Andre Khayyam and Tic Target Invest Consulting, LLC

TIC is registered in St. Kitts & Nevis (Sprigate, West 2nd Floor, Government Road Charlestown, Nevis St. Kitts & Nevis) and has offices at Churer Strasse 35, CH-9470 Buchs, SG, Switzerland. TIC's phone number is 011-41-750-5353 and fax is 011-41-81-750-5359. E-Mail for TIC is tic.llc@aon.at. TIC's sole managing member is Mr. Andre Khayyam. Mr. Khayyam's address is St. Veit #1, Abtsdorf, Salzburg, Austria, phone: 011-43-6415-8776, fax: 011-43-6415-8901, mobile Austria: 011-43-664-513-2604, mobile Switzerland: 011-41-79-2332-940, E-mail: andre.khayyam@aon.at.

Constellation 3D, Inc.

The Company is the worldwide leader in the development of high capacity Fluorescent Multilayer Disc and Card (FMD/C) technology. Constellation 3D holds or has made applications for 122 worldwide patents in the field of optical data storage. Headquartered in New York City, the Company has additional offices and laboratories in Israel and Russia. More information is available at c-3d.net .

Safe Harbor Statement

Statements contained in the news release that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements as "The Company now believes that the wire instructions were a sham" and "The Company believes that this may be evidence of possible criminal intent by Andre Khayyam. Failing a return of the shares, the Company anticipates canceling TIC's shares" and "The Company intends to approach the appropriate legal authorities in the United States and Europe and local authorities in Austria, Nevis and Switzerland. In addition, we anticipate that in the very near future a civil suit will be commenced against Andre Khayyam and any co-conspirators" and "The Company, through one of its foreign subsidiaries, has secured what it anticipates is minimally sufficient funding for skeleton operations during the next couple of months as the Company explores a sale and/or strategic merger" are subject to general risks and uncertainties relating to financial transactions and certain "Risk Factors" as stated in recent SEC filings, which may cause actual results to differ materially from expected results.

For more information contact:

Investor/ Broker Inquiries:

Bradley Meyer/Harvey Goralnick

FOCUS Partners LLC

1 212 752 9445

investors@c-3d.net

MAKE YOUR OPINION COUNT - Click Here

tbutton.prnewswire.com

SOURCE Constellation 3D, Inc.

CO: Constellation 3D, Inc.; TIC Target Invest Consulting, LLC

ST: New York

SU: TNM

prnewswire.com
04/19/2002 14:27 EDT



To: Kevin Podsiadlik who wrote (9702)4/22/2002 3:04:59 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
pre-sept 11th? scary->AIG asks SEC, NYSE to investigate trading activity

NEW YORK, April 22 (Reuters) - American International Group Inc. <AIG.N>, the world's leading insurer, on Monday said it had asked the New York Stock Exchange and the Securities and Exchange Commission to look into heavy short-selling of its stock.

Short-sellers look to make profits by selling stock they don't own, in the hope of buying shares later at a lower price.

"AIG stock is trading down significantly," the company said in a statement. "We have observed considerable short selling in the stock and have requested the New York Stock Exchange and the Securities and Exchange Commission to investigate this activity," it added.

Shares of the firm, the largest underwriter of commercial and industrial insurance in the United States and the second-largest U.S. life insurer, were off 1.6 percent at $69.63 in early afternoon trading Monday on the New York Stock Exchange.
04/22/02 13:54 ET



To: Kevin Podsiadlik who wrote (9702)4/23/2002 1:02:29 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
TSX member Canaccord faces $336,000 Mitton-related suit

B.C. Securities Commission *BCSC
Thu 18 Apr 2002 Street Wire
See TSX Venture Exchange (*TSX) Street Wire

by Brent Mudry

Vancouver brokerage Canaccord Capital and controversial broker Brad Scharfe
face a $336,000 share suit stemming from Mr. Scharfe's dealings with
associates and fronts of notorious career fraudster Michael Mitton six
years ago. In an endorsed writ of summons filed Wednesday in the Supreme
Court of British Columbia, Nancy Frost claims she delivered 747,114 shares
of Hillestad Pharmaceuticals in mid-1996 to Canaccord, but the shares ended
up in the account of Alf Kaminsky, one of Mr. Mitton's front-associates.
A full statement of claim has not yet been filed by Vancouver lawyer Perry
Mazzone of Taylor Sourisseau Mazzone Tatchell. The allegations in the suit
have not been proven in court and statements of defence are only due after
a statement of claim is ever filed.
Ms. Frost claims she delivered share certificate No. 02370, representing
the Hillestad shares, to Canaccord on May 1, 1996, and the brokerage
deposited the shares in the account of Mr. Kaminsky, No. 260558A. The
Hillestad certificate was worth $336,200 that day, based on a market price
of 45 cents, but the stock plunged to a dime within five weeks. Unexplained
in the endorsed writ is why Ms. Frost's shares were deposited in Mr.
Kaminsky's account, rather than her own account.
At a current market price of six cents, the shares would now be worth just
$44,800. "In the circumstances the defendants owed to the plaintiff a duty
of care and in particular a duty of care to take such steps as were
reasonable and necessary to ensure that the plaintiff understood the nature
of the transaction and in particular the nature of the risk of depositing
the shares as directed by the defendants," states lawyer Mr. Mazzone in the
suit.
The Frost certificate deposit came at a particularly auspicious time in
Hillestad's history. Six days later, on May 6, regulators halted trading at
42 cents, "pending clarification of market activity." On June 11, as the
stock collapsed when a month-long trading halt was lifted, Hillestad lawyer
and director Ronald Oscar Klassen professed ignorance about the unusual
market activity. The Howe Street lawyer also told Stockwatch two debit
suits filed against him by Vancouver brokerages, totalling $310,000, had no
connection to the regulatory probe.
"To this day we don't know why we were halted ... they never told us what
the irregular trading ever was," Mr. Klassen told a reporter. The lawyer
described Hillestad as one of many "blue chip" companies he has worked for,
including Bill Mallinson and Alec Lenec's ridiculous Consolidated Golden
Unicorn promotion.
The fog of mystery lifted six weeks later, in mid-July, 1996, after
Stockwatch revealed Michael Mitton, using the alias Michael Matt, was the
head of trading ring in the Vancouver suburb of Abbotsford, featuring
another Howe Street lawyer, Oliver Barry Holmes, a law school classmate of
Mr. Hillestad. Mr. Mitton's Abbotsford ring was active in several stocks,
including Hillestad.
The BCSC subsequently imposed a five-year ban on Mr. Klassen in February,
1998. In the consent settlement, Mr. Klassen confirmed that Mr. Holmes told
him that trading for the investment group was to be directed by Mr. Mitton,
that Mr. Mitton had a regulatory history and that the career fraudster had
been banned by securities regulators.
In the current suit, Ms. Frost claims she suffered damages as a result of
the shares being transferred out of her name without her receiving any
consideration whatsoever. On the eve of the sixth anniversary of the share
transfer, Ms. Frost now blames Mr. Scharfe and Canaccord for her alleged
losses.
Although the Frost action makes no mention whatsoever of Mr. Mitton, Mr.
Scharfe has the misfortune of being best known, at least in regulatory
circles, for his role with the incorrigible fraudster's 1996 debit-kiting
rig job of Clay-Tech Industries. Mr. Scharfe was fined $87,500 in April,
2001, by the TSX Venture Exchange, then known as Canadian Venture Exchange,
the exchange formerly known as the Vancouver and Alberta stock exchanges.
The Scharfe fine came a few months after Mr. Mitton was sentenced to four
years in jail, a lengthy term by Canadian standards, that January after
pleading guilty to all six counts in the Clay-Tech criminal prosecution,
bringing his career tally to 103 convictions. The guilty pleas, a few weeks
after Stockwatch revealed Mr. Mitton's appearance in a then-current
cheque-kiting scheme, abruptly ended, in the early stages of a 117-day
criminal trial, which was set to be one of the longest stock-fraud trials
in recent B.C. history.
The CDNX found Mr. Scharfe failed in his duties to establish the identity
and reputation of his clients, failed to fulfill his gatekeeper role by
aiding and abetting improper trading schemes, and ought to have known that
Mr. Mitton's short-selling scheme violated exchange rules. Although the
criminal court judge called Mr. Mitton a "professional swindler" and the
head of the B.C. Securities Commission called him a "financial predator,"
the CDNX, ever-conscious of its fine image, chose not to mention the
infamous client at all its Scharfe notice.
To his credit, however, Mr. Scharfe was quite helpful to the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission in its investigation and prosecution of
Alexandra Montgomery and Bill Nestor, the key perpetrators of the
$19-million (U.S.) brass-bar fraud of International Nesmont Industrial. Mr.
Scharfe and several other Howe Street brokers responded to court-inscribed
invitations from the SEC to tell all under oath, and did so in testimony.
Ms. Montgomery and Mr. Nestor were banned for life by the SEC in April,
2001.
Broker Scharfe is still having troubles shaking off his Mitton baggage. In
January, the BCSC, apparently less than impressed with the modest penalty
handed out by the CDNX, issued a notice of hearing targeting Mr. Scharfe
and Mr. Mitton. A set-date appearance is set for April 26, but it will
likely be some time before the case goes to a full hearing, unless, of
course, Mr. Scharfe is able to cut a deal and settle out.
(c) Copyright 2002 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com