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To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (3286)6/10/2002 12:13:42 PM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12465
 
Re: 6/10/02 - Reuters: Alan Bond Convicted of All 6 Fraud Counts

Alan Bond Convicted of All 6 Fraud Counts

Monday, June 10, 2002 12:09 p.m. EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Alan Bond, a prominent money manager who had once been a regular on "Wall Street Week With Louis Rukeyser," was found guilty on Monday of investment advisory and wire fraud.

A Manhattan federal jury convicted Bond after deliberating less than an hour.

Bond, who had been the president and chief investment officer of Albriond Capital Management, was convicted of three counts of investment advisory fraud, which carry a possible maximum term of 10 years each, and three counts of wire fraud, which carry a possible maximum term of five years each.

He was arrested last year for allegedly defrauding clients by sending unprofitable securities trades to their accounts while directing most of the profitable ones to himself.

Prosecutors alleged that the "cherry-picking" scheme ran between March 2000 and July 2001, while Bond was out on bail awaiting trial on 1999 charges accusing him of taking more than $6 million in kickbacks from brokerage firms.

They said Bond made $6.3 million from the cherry-picking scheme while his clients lost more than $56 million.

Copyright © 2002 Reuters Limited.

news.lycos.com



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (3286)6/12/2002 12:52:32 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12465
 
Cel-Sci: Hoax Release Carried on News Wire

biz.yahoo.com

Tuesday June 11, 7:58 pm Eastern Time

Reuters Business Report

By Andrea Orr

PALO ALTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Biotechnology company Cel-Sci Corp. (AMEX:CVM - News) on Tuesday said it had become the victim of a hoax when a news wire carried a false press release stating that it was working on a potential cancer cure.

The phony release did not cause a significant move in its stock and Cel-Sci said it appeared most investors had not believed the item, which ran for several hours Monday on the online news wire, Internet wire, and briefly on Yahoo! Inc's (NasdaqNM:YHOO - News) Finance Web site.

Still, the incident raised fresh concerns over whether tighter safeguards had been put in place to prevent fictitious and potentially damaging news about publicly traded companies from being widely disseminated.

Two years ago Internet Wire -- which carries corporate news releases as a source for other news outlets -- published a false release that about the earnings of data networking equipment maker Emulex Corp. (NasdaqNM:EMLX - News). That news was picked up by more mainstream news outlets including Bloomberg and Dow Jones and caused Emulex stock to fall by more than 50 percent.

Aside from Yahoo Finance, no other news outlets picked up the Cel-Sci release from Internet Wire on Monday.

Cel-Sci and Internet Wire both said Tuesday they had no information on the source of the phony press release, and were cooperating with the Securities and Exchange Commission in investigating the matter.

The phony release, which was issued before the market opened on Monday, said that Cel-Sci had partnered with Takeda Chemical Industries Ltd. (Tokyo:4502.T - News) to commercialize a "potential cancer cure."

"It would be nice if it were true, but there is no such deal," a Cel-Sci spokesman said.

The spokesman said Cel-Sci, which is working on developing cancer treatments, has no relationship with Takeda and said it was never contacted by Internet Wire to verify the contents of the release before it was published.

Internet Wire's Chief Executive Jim McGovern said it has safeguards in place to prevent false news from being published, but that those steps were not followed over the weekend, when the false news about Cel-Sci was received.

Cel-Sci shares fell two cents on Tuesday to close at 30 cents per share, not far from their 52-week low of 27 cents. Its high point in the past year was $1.94.