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To: StockDung who wrote (4915)5/23/2002 3:29:51 PM
From: rrufff  Respond to of 6847
 
(OT as this appears to be the OT thread for Truthie.)

Wow - no wonder you guys always had such good "information." I thought it was "smarts." Rather it was apparently paid for under the table as part of a conspiracy to manipulate.

San Diego Union Tribune: Encinitas stock adviser faces charges; Short-seller, associates accused of paying FBI agents for inside info Encinitas stock adviser faces charges
signonsandiego.com.

Short-seller, associates accused of paying FBI agents for inside info

By Don Bauder
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

May 23, 2002

Encinitas' Amr I. (Anthony) Elgindy – an internationally known short-seller – appeared in U.S. District Court in San Diego yesterday on multiple charges of stock manipulation, extortion, misuse of confidential law enforcement information and obstruction of a grand jury investigation of his alleged scheme.

Short-sellers borrow stock, sell it and hope to replace it at a lower price, thus raking in money on a decline.

But the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York charged that Elgindy and his associates used their Internet clout to influence stocks' collapse, paid FBI employees to feed them inside negative information on companies, and extorted money from executives who feared the Elgindy shorting machine would destroy their companies.

Elgindy and Troy M. Peters, an associate at his companies – Pacific Equity Investigations, Insidetruth.com and AnthonyPacific.com – came before Magistrate Judge John A. Houston yesterday afternoon.

Peters' bail was set at $200,000. Elgindy's bail will be set this morning. Both are in jail here. They will have an identification hearing June 6, then go on to Brooklyn for arraignment.

Also charged in different courts were Jeffrey A. Royer and Lynn Wingate, FBI agents who allegedly supplied secret information to Elgindy and his associates, and Derrick Cleveland, an Elgindy employee.

Late last year, Royer resigned from the FBI and began working directly for Elgindy, according to the government.

Two years ago, Elgindy spent 105 days in prison on a mail-fraud conviction in Texas.

Initially in San Diego, he worked for a brokerage house that was connected with the stock manipulator Melvin Lloyd Richards, who has been given prison time in Los Angeles, San Diego and New York.

Elgindy then claimed he went straight, and wanted to help investors who have been fleeced. He set up his Internet operation, and short-sellers paid him money for recommendations.

He succeeded. He lives in a house worth more than $2.2 million, according to the indictment. The government wants to seize a Rolls-Royce Bentley, Jaguar and Hummer registered in his or his companies' names.

His Encinitas home was raided by the FBI Tuesday, and documents and assets were seized.

The indictment charges that Elgindy and his associates would short a stock, then put out a barrage of negative information about it on Web sites, sometimes anonymously.

Elgindy, Peters and others "sometimes reported negative information about the targeted companies to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the FBI in order to initiate or hasten regulatory and law enforcement action, which they knew would cause the stock prices to fall sharply," said the indictment.


There have been curious cases that were not cited in the indictment. On Jan. 17 of this year, Elgindy's Web site blasted San Diego's New Energy. The next day, the SEC suspended trading in the stock and in March filed a fraud suit against the company.

On Oct. 23 of last year, Elgindy sent out a negative report on North Carolina's Vital Living Products, then touting an anthrax antidote. By the end of November, the FBI had raided the company and the SEC was probing it. Early this year, it settled a case with the Federal Trade Commission.

Yesterday, the SEC refused to comment.

Tor Ewald, chief executive of New Energy, reached a consent decree with the SEC, promising not to break securities laws but not admitting his complicity in any stock-inflating scheme. Yesterday, he refused to comment on Elgindy.

When Elgindy's Texas case was ongoing, the U.S. Attorney's Office in San Diego wrote a letter on his behalf, saying he had been instrumental in the case against Richards. But the office later refused to comment on the letter.

Yesterday's indictment charges that Cleveland wired more than $30,000 to Royer while he was an FBI agent. Royer did not report the payment to the FBI, according to the government.

After getting secret reports from the FBI, Elgindy and his associates assessed whether companies were susceptible to blackmail, according to the complaint. "Sometimes extortionate demands were coupled with threats to report a company's activities to the SEC or FBI," said the complaint.

Covering shorts

Once the extortion scheme succeeded, Elgindy and his associates would tell subscribers to cover their shorts, or buy stock to close out their short positions, according to the complaint.

In court yesterday, New York prosecutors said one of the companies that the group tried to extort funds from was Idaho-based Nuclear Solutions. The Elgindy group put out word that a top executive of the company was a felon, shorted the stock, and passed the word to the company through Peters. Then in late January, the group quit following the company, presumably a recommendation for investors to cover their short positions. The company's stock moved higher.

Nuclear Solutions did not return calls yesterday.

Elgindy has had personal and psychological problems. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Texas charged him with fraud over a disability insurance policy. It charged that he overstated his income by about 100 percent in the early 1990s in trying to boost his collection from the policy.

"I was diagnosed with severe depression," he said at the time.

He said the Texas authorities were looking into him for immigration fraud and drug dealing, but the government never affirmed that.

In his early days, he worked for disreputable brokerages, including Richards' now-defunct Armstrong McKinley and Denver's Blinder Robinson, which came to be known as "Blind 'em and Rob 'em."

"I ran with some bad people who took advantage of me when I was a young kid," said Elgindy at the time of his Texas indictment. "I have done some crazy things in my life," including living an excessively lavish lifestyle, he said.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Union-Tribune library researcher Erin Hobbs and staff writer Michael Kinsman assisted with this story.
Don Bauder: (619) 293-1523; don.bauder@uniontrib.com

© Copyright 2002 Union-Tribune Publishing Co.



To: StockDung who wrote (4915)5/23/2002 3:34:43 PM
From: rrufff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6847
 
(OT - Since you like multiple posts Truthie.)

To:Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (3057)
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell Thursday, May 23, 2002 12:33 PM
View Replies (1) | Respond to of 3069

Re: 5/23/02 - [Elgindy] USA Today: Stock scam allegedly abuses FBI database
05/23/2002 - Updated 08:44 AM ET

Stock scam allegedly abuses FBI database

By Adam Shell, USA TODAY

NEW YORK — The FBI, already under fire for intelligence failures related to Sept. 11, got more bad news Wednesday: A special agent and former agent were indicted for allegedly helping a Web stock tout pull off an insider-trading scam.

Prosecutors charged agent Lynn Wingate and Jeffrey Royer, a former agent who quit in December, with lifting damaging information on public companies from confidential FBI databases and giving it to trader Amr "Tony" Elgindy.

Elgindy, the alleged mastermind of the scheme, profited from the leaks by "shorting" the stocks of the targeted companies through a Canadian brokerage firm. He then launched smear campaigns via Internet sites he ran in an attempt to drive the stock prices down and inflate his profits. (In a short sale, an investor sells borrowed stock with the hope of buying it back later at a lower price.)

"The allegations reveal a shocking partnership between an experienced stock manipulator and law enforcement agents," says U.S. Attorney Alan Vinegrad.

The indictment included charges of insider trading, extortion and obstruction of justice.

As payment for sharing the inside secrets, prosecutors allege that Royer, while still working for the FBI, received $30,425 in four wire transfers in 2000 and 2001 from Elgindy's associate, Derrick Cleveland. Troy Peters, who allegedly helped Elgindy manipulate stock prices, was also charged.

In March and April, Wingate accessed the FBI database to see if Elgindy or any of the four other defendants were the subject of an FBI investigation. Royer was also accused of a similar act in October 2001. That resulted in an obstruction of justice charge.

"That a current and former FBI special agent are among the defendants is particularly distressing," says Kevin Donovan, assistant director-in-charge of the FBI investigation in New York.

This isn't the first time Elgindy, who gained a wide following on the Silicon Investor stock chat site under the alias Anthony@Pacific, has run afoul of the law. In May 2000, he was sentenced to four months in federal prison by a Texas judge for felony mail fraud.

Elgindy and Cleveland also allegedly extorted stock from companies in exchange for agreeing to stop their smear campaigns.

Contact information for the defendants was not available Wednesday night. Each could face up to 20 years in prison.

And in a civil forfeiture action, prosecutors are seeking cash from Elgindy's and Royer's bank accounts, as well as Elgindy's Bentley, a Jaguar, a Hummer and his primary residence, bought a year ago for $2.2 million.

usatoday.com



To: StockDung who wrote (4915)5/23/2002 3:37:05 PM
From: rrufff  Respond to of 6847
 
(More OT) You might want to check out this guy's posts. He seems to be on to something. Anything on those computers that might affect you?

To:Jorj X. McKie who wrote (3062)
From: 1001nights Thursday, May 23, 2002 9:27 AM
View Replies (1) | Respond to of 3069

I bet there are some people who are breathing more than a sigh of relief that they aren't going to be considered part of "The Enterprise". I saw a post from someone recently talking about how someone was the target of a Grand Jury Investigation with posters questioning how he could possibly know that information. Maybe it was just a guess on his part...but now we know that Grand Jury Target information was up for sale.

Here is an interesting question. Since Silicon Investor forum was used as a primary outsourcing for the scheme, it would seem likely that their records need to be throughly investigated. Since they have a private message system, is it possible to permanently delete possible relevant information simply as a means of housekeeping....or is all that information available by accessing a server somewhere. Thousands of private messages between parties could be relevant in the Aiding and Abetting investigation.

How many people have tried to expose Anthony@Pacific over the years.....fascinating story. Perhaps part of the 'exposition' was to make damn sure they didn't end up a target themselves. The concept of Aiding and Abetting The Enterprise could lead to some dicey and scary investigations for some of those people that have lived their persona on Silicon Investor (and other message boards). The Government can seize your property and it is a tough fight to get it back..even for the innocent.



To: StockDung who wrote (4915)5/24/2002 8:44:09 AM
From: Joe Copia  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6847
 
CG, R U pro XYBR? short XYBR?