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To: Tom Clarke who wrote (13424)5/25/2002 11:37:30 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21057
 
Anthony@Pacific and Osama?????

TSX member Global wired Elgindy money to Lebanon
TSX Venture Exchange *TSX
Shares issued 0 May 26 2002 close $.000
Friday May 24 2002 Street Wire
by Brent Mudry
In the first detailed revelation of advance Sept. 11 knowledge, the U.S. government
suggests controversial California short Amr Ibrahim (Anthony) Elgindy, an important client
of Vancouver brokerage Global Securities, might have been tipped off about Osama bin
Laden's Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the
Pentagon in Washington, and tried to dump his shares the day before.
The stunning, and unproven, allegation was made Friday morning at a detention hearing
in San Diego by Brooklyn Assistant United States Attorney Ken Breen of the Eastern
District of New York. The Sept. 11 comments formed part of the government's successful
argument that Mr. Elgindy poses a serious flight risk, and he was denied bail.
Mr. Breen also presented verbal evidence to Magistrate Judge John Houston of Mr.
Elgindy moving funds offshore, including $700,000 transferred to Lebanon, and the fact
that the short gave directions for his Web site operation to start sending profits to
Lebanon. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) While Stockwatch reported Thursday that Mr.
Elgindy bought a hotel in Lebanon two months ago, citing an unconfirmed source, Mr.
Breen did not mention the hotel in court.
Court testimony showed that Global Securities was a major origin of these offshore
transfers.
Mr. Elgindy's San Diego attorney, Jeanne Knight, told the court that her client was
buying a vacation home in Lebanon. The government presented no written
documentation in court detailing Mr. Elgindy's financial dealings, including his offshore
transactions, or any other details of the case. Mr. Breen was in transit back to New York
after the California hearing and could not be reached for comment. Ms. Knight was not
able to return calls from Stockwatch.
Mr. Elgindy, born in Cairo, has lived in the U.S. since age two or three, according to U.S.
authorities, but he retains dual American-Egyptian citizenship. To bolster its flight-risk
argument, the government suggests he might have been tipped off about the arrests
Tuesday of several associates in Albuquerque, N.M. When police searched his house, the
fax machine held documents giving power of attorney to Mr. Elgindy's wife to dispose of
his assets.
Mr. Elgindy's brother, Khaled Elgindy, is a Washington-based Arab American activist
involved in Islamic affairs and Amr Elgindy himself has shown a charitable interest in
Muslim issues, but there is no evidence that either are connected to, or in any way
condone, the cause of Mr. bin Laden, his Al Qaeda network or any other terrorist
organizations.
"What we have going for us is the moral high ground," Khaled Elgindy told a Washington
panel discussion on "How to Discuss Jerusalem with the American Public." Mr. Elgindy said
that while the Jewish lobby has the art of manipulation, the skills and the experience,
the Arab Muslim community has the "weapons" of truth and justice in its arsenal.
The San Diego court revelations are particularly striking as one of Anthony Elgindy's most
important and trusted brokers is Art Smolensky, the founder and chairman of brokerage
Global Securities, and Mr. Smolensky is a prominent member of Vancouver's Jewish
community.
According to the government, Mr. Elgindy phoned one of his brokers on Sept. 10 and
requested the liquidation of a $300,000 trust account in the name of his children.
Mr. Elgindy is charged only with securities fraud related offences, none of which relate in
any way to terrorism or treason.
"The allegations under investigation, Your Honour, consistent with how I described them,
which is as part of risk of flight and certainly not something that's charged at this time,
but the investigation is continuing, is that on September 10th, in the afternoon, Mr.
Elgindy contacted his broker at Salomon Smith Barney, the broker who was in charge of
Uniform Gift to Minor trust accounts in the names of Mr. Elgindy's children, and he asked
the broker to liquidate those accounts, and he made a comment predicting the market
was going to drop to 3,000 at a point in time when the market was at approximately
9,600," Mr. Breen told the court.
"He was unsuccessful in doing that because it was late in the day, he didn't have
authority to do that because the accounts were trust accounts. But certainly something
that could be taken from his attempt in that regard is that perhaps Mr. Elgindy had
pre-knowledge of the September 11th attacks and, rather than report it, he was
attempting to profit from that information."
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 9,600 on Sept. 10, plunged to 8,700 when
trading resumed after the Sept. 11-related market halt, and bottomed out just above
8,100 a week later.
The judge told the court he would "disregard" the implication that Mr. Elgindy might have
known in advance about the terrorist attacks, either in specific or in general.
Prosecutor Mr. Breen told the court that, with Mr. Elgindy's illicit access to FBI and grand
jury databases, he would have been privvy to a report, an "FBI-302," describing an FBI
interview with the Salomon broker who was in contact with him that day. "That was
accessed by Mr. Royer (a former FBI Special Agent in league with Mr. Elgindy) and the
information provided to Mr. Elgindy."
Judge Houston asked if this interview related to Sept. 11.
"Regarding Mr. Elgindy's attempt to make those trades on September 10th. And again,
this is not something that at this point in time we have sufficient evidence to charge,
and it may never be charged, but, to the extent that it's relevant here, it's relevant to
the risk of flight and that Mr. Elgindy is potentially facing more serious charges," stated
prosecutor Mr. Breen.
The court was told Mr. Elgindy made the Sept. 10 calls to his Salomon broker at about
12:00 or 12:15 pm Pacific time. Mr. Elgindy and his assistant had a series of
conversations with the broker, asking him to liquidate the accounts, which had an
approximate value of $300,000.
"In the course of the communications between the broker and Mr. Elgindy, Mr. Elgindy
indicated or predicted that the market was going to drop to 3,000. There was no time
frame for that context. But the evidence shows, and this 302 indicates, that Mr. Elgindy
did have a meeting scheduled with the broker the next day but that he was calling on
the 10th in order to try to effect this transaction," Mr. Breen told the court. The
prosecutor confirmed the broker contacted the FBI with the information.
The federal prosecutor then traced out financial details regarding the flight risk
assessment.
"Mr. Elgindy, as the Pretrial Services report indicates, does have significant foreign ties,
including dual citizenship in Egypt. In addition that that, we've determined that he's
transferred approximately $700,000 to Lebanon in a series of wire transfers, some of
which came from Canada where Mr. Elgindy kept one of his securities accounts at Global
Securities."
Two wires were identified: a $125,000 transfer on Nov. 24 and a $300,000 transfer on
Feb. 13. "I've been advised by our forfeiture people that they've found additional
transfers that total approximately $700,000, but I don't have that specific information."
"In addition to that, in February 2002, the defendant gave instructions to somebody who
he was business partners with as to his website, that Mr. Elgindy's portion of the profits
in the website should be sent by wire directly to Lebanon instead of to Mr. Elgindy here
in the United States," Mr. Breen told the court.
"In addition to that, in April 2002, the defendant transferred the assets that he had in
accounts in Canada from his brokerage accounts into a company that was set up in
Beirut, Lebanon."
"In connection with the defendant's arrest, there was a search that was done at his
business and at his residence and, during those searches, the agents found what I would
describe as a getaway stash -- $43,000 in cash, gold jewelry, coins, and a loose
diamond, along with a passport. They also found on the fax machine that the defendant
had been tipped of the arrest shortly before it, presumably by somebody who is in New
Mexico, where two defendants were arrested earlier in the day," states Mr. Breen.
The prosecutor also pointed out that Mr. Elgindy was on probation for his insurance
disability compensation fraud, and that his stock fraud offences were during this
probation period, while he also "has a history of drug abuse, including cocaine and
marijuana."
"Mr. Royer, after being Mirandized, provided information about Mr. Elgindy and, in fact,
indicated that it was likely that Mr. Elgindy would have drugs in his house. He didn't,
although our position on that is because he had time to prepare for the arrest and the
search, that he easily could have disposed of those," Mr. Breen told the judge. While no
drugs were found, ammunition was located in the Elgindy residence, which is a probation
offence.
Defence counsel Ms. Knight presented a better picture of her client.
"A flight risk is someone who is a fugitive or a head of a big drug organization or someone
who has a lot to lose by staying here. Mr. client is a U.S. citizen. His wife is present in
court, as she usually is, Mary Faith Elgindy, who was born in Louisiana. They have three
beautiful sons ... His mother is a pediatrician in Chicago. His father's a professor. He has
brothers -- a brother that works in the White House. All of his family are professionals."
Ms. Knight also pointed out that the liquidation of Mr. Elgindy's children's college fund
accounts was executed on Sept. 18, and while he had $2-million in the market himself at
that time, his accounts were not liquidated then. The defence lawyer stated Mr. Elgindy
moved his brokerage account "to Yukon Territory, Canada, not Beirut, so my concern is
part of this is just smacking of racial profiling."
Mr. Breen countered these points. "The address given for the Yukon corporation is a
Beirut, Lebanon address, so I'm not sure what counsel means by that. The two million in
stock, Your Honour, what he had invested were short positions that would only benefit
from that kind of event. What he did is liquidated the long positions that were vulnerable
to that kind of news."
Judge Houston notes the pretrial services report indicates that Mr. Elgindy travels to
Canada four or five times a year, to Kosovo and Macedonia once or twice a year, and he
was last in Egypt, a country which he needs no visa for, in November. "The court also
notes that, and finds that you have a home in Lebanon." Mr. Elgindy was deemed a
serious flight risk and denied bail.

siliconinvestor.com

Short Seller Elgindy May Have Known Of Sep 11 -Prosecutor

SAN DIEGO (AP)--An Egyptian-born financial analyst charged in a
nationwide stock swindle may have known about the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks and tried to profit from them, a federal prosecutor said
Friday.
Amr I. "Tony" Elgindy telephoned his broker Sept. 10 and asked him
to liquidate his children's $300,000 trust account, Assistant U.S.
Attorney Ken Breen told a federal judge at Elgindy's detention
hearing.
"He made a comment predicting the market would drop to 3,000" at a
time when the Dow Jones stock index was at 9,600, Breen said. "Perhaps
Mr. Elgindy had pre-knowledge of the Sept. 11 attacks. Instead of
trying to report it, he tried to profit from it."
Elgindy, 34, of Encinitas, was ordered held without bond on charges
of racketeering, extortion and obstruction of justice. Before issuing
the order, Magistrate Judge John Houston said he was going to
"disregard" the suggestion that Elgindy had anything to do with the
terror attacks.
Elgindy, wearing a tan jumpsuit, didn't speak during the hourlong
hearing.
His attorney, Jeanne Knight, said Elgindy did call his broker to
make a trade, but the timing was coincidental and the market had been
dropping for months.
"It seems like the government, for lack of factual evidence, has
decided to smear my client with terrorist innuendoes," Knight said.
"This is smacking of racial profiling."
Breen made his accusations as prosecutors tried to convince Houston
that Elgindy was a flight risk and should be denied bail.
Elgindy, one of five defendants in the case, was arrested May 22 on
an indictment issued by a grand jury in New York.
In exchange for money, two FBI agents used confidential databases to
provide Elgindy and other co-conspirators with information on publicly
traded companies, the indictment said.
Elgindy allegedly spread negative information about the companies on
his Web site and to subscribers of his e-mail newsletter,
InsideTruth.com, while betting that the companies' stock would go
down.
In one case, a former FBI agent searched the agency's confidential
National Crime Information Center database and discovered the criminal
history of a top executive for a company called Nuclear Solutions, the
indictment said. The same day, Elgindy began sending e-mail calling
the executive "a convicted felon," then sold the company's stock
short, the papers said.
Earlier this week, FBI agents raided Elgindy's $2.2 million mansion.
Inside, agents said, they found tens of thousands of dollars in cash
and gold coins. The government is seeking to seize Elgindy's fleet of
cars, including a Rolls Royce, a Jaguar and a Humvee.
If convicted of all counts, Elgindy faces a maximum 65 years in
prison.

(END) DOW JONES NEWS 05-24-02
03:58 PM
- - 03 58 PM EDT 05-24-02

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