SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Diversinet ( DVNTF / DVNT ) aka -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jjs64 who wrote (1228)12/18/2002 2:53:54 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1242
 
or Dian Griesel Ph.D. lol->Eagle To Present At International Aid & Trade Conference Exhibition 2001

BOCA RATON, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 22, 2001--Eagle Building Technologies (OTC BB: EGBT - news) an internationally focused manufacturer of cost effective construction systems, products and services will showcase its innovative products at the UN's International Aid & Trade Conference and Exhibition 2001 to be held June 20-21, 2001 at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in New York City.

Eagle Building Technologies will be one of several companies and organizations showcasing goods, services and equipment offered to the international community, to an audience of heads of UN agencies, development banks, CEOs, government representatives, procurement officials, and humanitarian aid agencies.

``This event is multi-faceted with opportunities for Eagle to showcase our products. It will not only allow us to effectively reach a worldwide audience to market our products, but also provides us the opportunity to view and analyze other competitive products,'' commented Paul-Emile Desrosiers VP, of Eagle. ``This one of a kind event will allow us direct access to various top-level decision making governmental and private sector personnel, upcoming contracts and future directions of aid and reconstruction projects.''

The International Aid and Trade Conference and Exhibition is an annual event sponsored in part by the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS), to foster partnership and cooperation between the private sector and the UN system. During this year's event, several top government officials, banks and business leaders will examine and discuss Public Procurement Reform, and how governments and suppliers can strategically use procurement programs to achieve environmental goals, respond to humanitarian aid crises, and promote growth of communities via reconstruction. There will also be seminars highlighting how businesses can market their goods and services in the international aid community.

About Eagle Building Technologies, Inc

Eagle Building Technologies, Inc. manufactures and distributes technologically advanced building products and systems to emerging markets outside the US where the existing infrastructure cannot meet the current demands for low-cost, structurally sound housing. The Company is positioned for immediate and ongoing success through its ability to provide its patent protected system quickly and cost effectively to meet the booming international demand for energy efficient, inexpensive-yet-sturdy, construction materials and building methods. Eagle also provides related capital equipment and components for lease and /or purchase to joint venture partners.

Statements about the Company's future expectations, including future revenues, earnings and transactions, as well as all other statements in the press release other than historical facts are ``forward-looking statements'' within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends that such forward-looking statements be subject to the safe harbors created thereby. Since these statements involve risks and uncertainties and are subject to change at any time, the Company's actual results and other corporate developments could differ materially from that which has been anticipated in such statements.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contact:

The Investor Relations Group
Shayne Payne or Dian Griesel Ph.D.
212/825-3210



To: jjs64 who wrote (1228)1/8/2003 9:21:59 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1242
 
OSC fines Weltman at start of Banks hearing
[2003-01-08 17:33 PT ]
OSC target Larry Weltman has been fined $30,000 in the Bensberg certificate-leasing case, leaving fellow LaserFriendly executive convict Jack Banks to defend himself on the first day of a regulatory hearing. Mr. Weltman can never trade again. more...

Ontario Securities Commission - Street Wire
OSC fines Weltman at start of Banks hearing
Ontario Securities Commission *OSC
Wednesday January 8 2003 Street Wire
Also Securities and Exchange Commission (*SEC) Street Wire

by Brent Mudry
In one of the lightest monetary penalties in the Guido Bensberg certificate-leasing scheme, Toronto-area penny stock promoter Larry Weltman, the partner of Jack Banks, has been fined $30,000 (Canadian) and banned for life from securities trading, in a consent settlement with the Ontario Securities Commission approved Wednesday. In a settlement agreement, Mr. Weltman agreed he permitted the issuance of a $60-million block of shares of Laser Friendly Inc. when he knew, or ought to have known, the unpaid certificates could be used to deceive third parties. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.)
Mr. Weltman's settlement came on the first day of a three-day OSC hearing, with Mr. Banks, also known as Jacques Benquesus, now the sole defendant. Mr. Weltman is not expected to testify against his long-time close associate Mr. Banks. Mr. Weltman was the chief financial officer of Laser Friendly, while Mr. Banks was chairman and president. (LaserFriendly changed names to Gaming Lottery Corp. in 1995, then GLC Corp. in 1998 and GalaxiWorld.com in 1999. GalaxiWorld was acquired by Ostel Management in a tender offer on Dec. 21, 1999, and was delisted from Nasdaq.)
In a related but separate case, Mr. Banks and Mr. Weltman pled guilty in New York in September, 2000, to defrauding National Westminster Bank PLC's Coutts & Co. subsidiary of $32-million. The pair agreed to pay fines of $100,000 and restitution of $400,000 each, and consented to a worldwide bar from serving in a controlling management position in any public company. While the OSC agreement imposed a lifetime ban on Mr. Weltman serving as director or officer of a public company, he was already covered by the New York ban.
Gaming Lottery was one of a number of companies involved in a $200-million-plus share-leasing scheme masterminded by Mr. Bensberg, a Swiss-German financier who has maintained residences in Vancouver, Florida, Switzerland and Luxembourg. In one of the largest trial wins in its history, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission won a $27-million penalties-and-disgorgement judgment against Mr. Bensberg in May, 2001. Despite the court setback, Mr. Bensberg maintains his innocence, claims he was the innocent fall guy, and hopes to one day clear his name.
If the SEC, numerous trial witnesses and a California judge are to be believed, Mr. Bensberg defrauded Bank Leu and Lehman Brothers of $10-million in the overall scheme. The SEC claims Mr. Bensberg was the key player in a fraudulent stock leasing scheme in which he and his associates acquired hundreds of millions of shares of restricted stock in at least 18 public companies between 1992 and 1996. While the scheme involved dealings in at least six offshore secrecy havens, including Switzerland, Aruba, the Isle of Man, the Turks and Caicos Islands, Bermuda, and the British Virgin Islands, Vancouver was a major centre of operations.
Besides Mr. Bensberg's landmark fine, the SEC won $2.92-million in fines against five other figures in the broad scheme, including businessman James Ericksteen and lawyer Gary L. Moore, both based in Kamloops, B.C. The biggest penalty was levied against Mr. Ericksteen, ordered to pay disgorgement of $2.8-million in illicit proceeds, although all but $100,000 was waived based on his "demonstrated inability to pay."
The OSC case focuses on a small part of the overall certificate-leasing scheme, involving shares of LaserFriendly. The OSC claims that Bank Leu was defrauded after loaning funds against Gaming Lottery certificates which had been issued to Helix Capital Corp. and Delta West Management Trust. (In its statement of allegations and settlement agreement, the OSC makes no mention of Mr. Bensberg, Mr. Ericksteen, Mr. Moore, other key figures in the case, or any of the offshore jurisdictions used.)
The LaserFriendly case was one of the biggest in the overall scheme, with the company agreeing in November and December of 1994 to subscription agreements for 45 million shares, triple its issued and outstanding shares. Mr. Weltman agreed that while LaserFriendly intended to issue the share certificates, it did not intend to actually issue any shares.
In the first of three dubious tranches of 15 million shares in its "roll program," LaserFriendly issued a $60-million debenture to Helix Capital Corp., a Turks and Caicos company ostensibly controlled by Mr. Ericksteen. The other tranches involved Delta West Management Trust, a Utah trust served by James Farrell of Alpha Tech Stock Transfer of Salt Lake City, who was shut down and banned from the industry by the SEC last April in the U.S. prosecution.
Delta West rented out 30 million shares of restricted LaserFriendly stock for $650,000 per month, while Helix rented 15 million shares at $150,000 per month, for a total monthly outlay of $800,000.
Court documents show the scheme was also aided by Stephen Dadson, a Vancouver securities lawyer, and Sandy Anderson, a North Vancouver banker, both of whom have since left the practice of their professions.
"Moore received the GLC certificate on or about November 17th. Moore immediately delivered it to Dadson at his firm. The certificate was immediately obtained from Dadson's firm by Ericksteen. Ericksteen immediately took the certificate to the Lynn Valley branch of the North Shore Credit Union. Bensberg was a credit union customer. The officer acting on behalf of the credit union on all of the transactions involving Bensberg was the Lynn Valley branch manager, Anderson," states Gaming Lottery in a court filing.
The SEC claims that Mr. Ericksteen and Mr. Moore then subleased millions of shares of the target companies, including LaserFriendly, to Mr. Bensberg's Isle of Man-based alter ego, Red Oak Ltd., for $4.5-million a year. If the SEC is to be believed, after acquiring the share certificates from Helix, Mr. Bensberg pledged them as collateral to obtain a $5-million line of credit from Bank Leu.
The U.S. regulator claims Mr. Bensberg forgot to tell the Swiss bankers that he had to return the share certificates at the end of a year. "To effect the fraud, Bensberg portrayed himself as a man of considerable wealth and made misrepresentations as to the value of the stock and his ownership interest in the stock," states an SEC attorney in a sworn affidavit.
The OSC settlement agreement notes that in March, 1995, Bank Leu tried to realize upon one of the Helix certificates, purportedly representing 2.5 million shares of LaserFriendly, which had been pledged as security, but LaserFriendly informed the unhappy Swiss bankers that the shares had not beeen validly issued because they had not been paid for.
In the Canadian settlement, Mr. Weltman agreed he acted contrary to the public interest.
First, "Weltman knowingly permitted share certificates of the Company to be delivered in circumstances where he knew or ought to have known that the certificates could be used to deceive third parties," states the agreement. "Weltman knew that the share certificates purported to represent fully paid shares, when the Company did not receive payment for the shares. Weltman failed to ensure that sufficient controls existed to prevent the share certificates from being used for an improper purpose."
Second, "Weltman failed to take immediate steps to cancel and to attempt to retrieve share certificates and agreed to permit such certificates to remain in the possession of others, even after he had received notice that one or more of the share certificates may have been used for an improper purpose."
Left unmentioned in the OSC settlement are several other questionable loans of the dubious LaserFriendly shares, besides those in the Bank Leu case.
In December, 1994, Mr. Farrell deposited restricted shares from LaserFriendly, Essential Technologies, Metro Wireless and Tera West, with a purported collective market value of more than $200-million, into an account at Dean Witter Reynolds. When Dean Witter rebuffed attempts to get these shares designated as "free and clear for disposition according to the instructions of Delta Management Trust," the group tried, and failed, to use the shares as collateral for loans from Omni Bank in Detroit.
In a separate daisy-chain transaction, Mr. Ericksteen agreed in November and December of 1994 to sublease millions of shares of LaserFriendly and Dynatec to FirstVest Capital Corp., which intended to use the shares to obtain credit.
bmudry@stockwatch.com

(c) Copyright 2003 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com



To: jjs64 who wrote (1228)3/8/2003 11:35:18 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1242
 
"Purdy: Pay for it, as I told you. I paid Rick Genovese [a Vancouver investor relations specialist] a million dollars and we started right here in Miami, and we're going Barron's, and we're going Investor Daily, we going the New York Times ... Then what you do is you get in an aircraft, and you go and you visit London, Zurich, Geneva and you go sit down with 50 fund managers at a table, you buy them all lunch ... Those guys are all sitting on 50 to 500 million bucks. I only got to make a couple of them believe my story."

Videotaped discussion of money laundering used at Vancouver promoter's Miami trial

David Baines

Vancouver Sun

Saturday, March 08, 2003

Vancouver stock promoter Jack Purdy (far left) is taped by a hidden camera on a boat in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., on Feb. 21, 2002, when he was talking to an undercover FBI agent and RCMP officer about laundering drug money.

Vancouver stock promoter Jack Purdy (far left) is taped by a hidden camera on a boat in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., on Feb. 21, 2002, when he was talking to an undercover FBI agent and RCMP officer about laundering drug money.

Vancouver stock promoter Jack Purdy (far left) is taped by a hidden camera on a boat in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., on Feb. 21, 2002, when he was talking to an undercover FBI agent and RCMP officer about laundering drug money.

ADVERTISEMENT

On Feb. 21, 2002, Vancouver stock promoter Jack Purdy met with two undercover cops posing as Miami businessmen with a big problem.

They were generating millions of dollars a day from a business that they revealed to be cocaine trafficking and wanted the 52-year-old promoter to help launder it.

The six-hour meeting was held on a boat docked in a marina in Ft. Lauderdale. One of the undercover officers, an FBI agent who said he was from Colombia, was code-named Ricardo. The other was an RCMP officer who used the name Bill.

Unknown to Purdy, the entire meeting was secretly videotaped and became a key piece of evidence in his trial in U.S. Federal District Court in Miami last month on money-laundering charges.

Purdy's two underlings, Kevan Garner and Harold Jolliffe, were also charged, but pleaded guilty and became witnesses for the prosecution. Despite their testimony and the videotaped evidence, the jury acquitted Purdy on Feb. 28. One juror told reporters that they felt he had been entrapped.

The Vancouver Sun obtained a 341-page transcript of the boat meeting, which shows the two undercover operatives were indeed pressing Purdy hard to launder their money. By the same token, the transcript shows that Purdy was receptive to helping them funnel money through secret offshore accounts into his businesses, including several Vancouver public companies. Here are some excerpts:

Ricardo: I'm looking for another vehicle, 'cause I'm getting a backlog ... As you well know, we're in the cash money. F---ing cash money can give you some big headaches. Family tells me, "Hey, you know, look for some outlets." We can get some money flowing through you.

Purdy: As long as that money has a source, it's got to come from somewhere like a bank ...

Bill: ... It's money that we've got in the system up that we want to basically layer it and get it to the point where we can use it, so we can pay taxes on it, and have that totally legitimate ...

Purdy: Right.

[Layering is the process of transferring money from business to business, or account to account, making it difficult or impossible to trace the money back to its source. This is often accomplished through offshore tax and secrecy havens, where it is a statutory offence to reveal private business dealings.]

- - -

Purdy talks about introducing the undercover operatives to Keith King, a principal of First Nevisian Stockbrokers Ltd., a tax haven in the Caribbean. At the time, King was wanted in South Africa on fraud and forgery charges and had been blackballed by authorities in the Isle of Man, another offshore tax haven:

Purdy: If you're doing money stuff, then, I'll introduce you to Keith ... They're banking in the Caribbean ... They've been there for years, they've got an established office.

Ricardo: How much do you think they can handle?

Purdy: ... I'll find out.

Ricardo: Here's what I'm after. How much cash versus wire can you handle?

["Cash" is actual currency that is physically transferred from place to place, "wire" is money that is electronically transferred.]

Purdy: I can only handle wire ...

Ricardo: Strictly wire?

Purdy: Yeah, I mean I can take money, play money, but I can't handle serious money. If you're making money, untold amounts of money, then where you want to be going is you want to be going to a good banker in a jurisdiction where you can deal with it. Keith's good. Keith is awesome.

Ricardo: So the Dominican Republic.

Purdy: Yeah and his partner is Cliff Wilkins in London.

Ricardo: How much can he handle?

Purdy: Lots.

- - -

Later in the conversation, Bill asks whether the First Nevisian people can fly the cash out of Miami:

Purdy: The guy has a plane ... He flies in and out of Miami all the time, I don't know what he does.

Bill: What is it going to cost us?

Purdy: That's, he's gonna tell ya, I don't do their business.

Bill: ... Once the money's in the bank, what you're saying is wire to you.

Purdy: ... You can do whatever you want with your money. I'm gonna suggest investments to you. And I, I want to use your money, I can use ... 25 million bucks effectively and efficiently ...

Bill: And you can disguise it so we don't have to worry about ...

Purdy: Don't need to disguise nothing. Your companies are gonna invest in my company ... They're gonna be legitimate f---ing corporations. I'm gonna set 'em up ...

- - -

The transcript makes it clear that by "legitimate" Purdy is not referring to the source of the funds, but how those funds are invested:

Bill: Jack, we're looking to move about 50 million a year.

Purdy: Well ...

Bill: Whether it be cash or wire transfers ...

Purdy: In terms of doing deals with you to use money, I could use 50 million bucks a year. I can use it wisely.

Ricardo: And you can make it look legitimate?

Purdy: Oh, it is legitimate. Absolutely legitimate ... I've got great homes for money ... let me give you a little idea. Castle raised 18 million doing nickel exploration in Voisey Bay. Pure Gold, which is our diamond deal, raised 30.

[Castle Rock Exploration and Pure Gold Minerals are two Vancouver exploration companies that were run by Purdy and his partner, Vancouver promoter Don Sheldon.]

- - -

Purdy, in the fashion of the three monkeys, tells the undercover operatives that he doesn't want to know the source of their funds:

Purdy: The only question, the only way you will kill yourself is ever telling me where you make your money. I don't want to know. I do not want to know. I honest to f--- could care less ... If I know then it hurts.

[Purdy sticks a finger in his ear to emphasize the point. Then he explains how, once the offshore companies are set up, they will be able to invest in his stock deals.]

Purdy: I'll say, "Here's the project, here's the [proposed] use of proceeds. Are you in?" And we got to make sure that you're only in for a percentage so that we don't hit you where you've got other reporting [requirements]. You want to stay under 10 per cent in a stock [at which point an investor becomes an insider and has to report his holdings] ...

Bill: Unless we do multiple companies [where each company buys less than 10 per cent, thereby circumventing the reporting rules].

Purdy: Unless you do multiple companies. We're gonna do three companies, cause there's three jurisdictions I'm familiar with ... We have three people we can trust. We're gonna set up three private trusts that are being administered by your group ... I'm gonna set up three minibanks for you and then I'll make an announcement, for example, I would say, "Pure Gold just announces that it is, it has a financing of $500,000 at 30 cents with Maria Paria Limited."

Bill: That'll work.

Purdy: A Bahamas corporation ... it's just that simple ... we're gonna spend 50 grand on structure, you're gonna be invisible, wherever it comes from. Your money's gonna flow from there down into the company.

- - -

Purdy describes how he'll deal with the authorities if they ask who's behind the offshore companies:

Purdy: They're going to say, "Okay, what is your knowledge?" Well, my knowledge is that these people invested money ... "Was there any Canadians outside of you that were involved in this?" No. "Who are the people involved behind these companies?" I say, "That's not my business and if I knew I wouldn't tell you."

Bill: And we wouldn't tell you either.

Purdy: Well, no, you don't tell me. What we do is you set up the structure and however you do your business, all I deal with is a person who's the president of XYZ [the offshore company].

- - -

Purdy tells the undercover agents that he will parlay their investments into big returns. He describes how he buys stock in his public companies at 25 to 50 cents a share, then gets out a dollar. He says he likes "big rambling markets" where there is a lot of trading volume, allowing him to sell his stock without being noticed.

Bill: How do you get that distribution though, Jack?

Purdy: Pay for it, as I told you. I paid Rick Genovese [a Vancouver investor relations specialist] a million dollars and we started right here in Miami, and we're going Barron's, and we're going Investor Daily, we going the New York Times ... Then what you do is you get in an aircraft, and you go and you visit London, Zurich, Geneva and you go sit down with 50 fund managers at a table, you buy them all lunch ... Those guys are all sitting on 50 to 500 million bucks. I only got to make a couple of them believe my story.

- - -

Purdy is obviously a successful promoter, judging by his problems with Canadian tax authorities:

Purdy: I had three or four different resource stocks ripping where I could take, you know, 10 or 20 grand a day and, like, just pay the bills and keep going. When that all dried up, I'm sitting with these three-quarter built resorts [in Bamfield, B.C., where he owns numerous development properties] ... So what, in essence, happened is they they [tax auditors] took a look and saw 26 million bucks worth of income coming through Vancouver brokerage houses in a four-year period.

[Purdy speculates on what prompted the investigation:]

Purdy: Probably some little shithead on the west coast of Vancouver Island said, "You should take a look at Purdy, where does he get all this money?" So when they came in, they looked at, they were looking at two things, either I was in the money-laundering business or I was in the drug business ... They put about 20 guys on my life, well, they find out that there's not a God damn missing nickel. It all came from the sale of stocks, and/or developing and selling real estate ... so the other day it settled, four and a half million bucks, not bad.

[Purdy describes how he negotiated the $4.5 million settlement:]

Purdy: "I was gonna flick them the keys (to his properties in Bamfield) and [tell them to] stick a f---ing lawyer up your ass and spend 200 or 300 grand. If I'm going to give you guys four million dollars, I don't mind, but if it goes much f---ing higher, I'm gonna hire three ravaging dog lawyers and we're gonna challenge you on that four million bucks and we're gonna f--- you guys around for three or four years like you f---ed us and we'll see who wins.

- - -

In addition to investing in his public companies, Purdy also talks to Ricardo and Bill about investing in his two boats, the Quadra and Vancouver, which have been seized in San Francisco, and his Caribbean resort called Mariners, which needs substantial improvements. He tries to impress what great investments they will be, but Ricardo and Bill don't care:

Bill: Listen here, we don't care if you've got, if you've got the idea to sell a f---ing rocket ship to Venus and all we even get is our money out.

[Purdy laughs].

Ricardo: You laugh, but he's talking seriously, that's the truth.

- - -

The discussion turns to Harold Jolliffe, who is associated with Purdy in a B.C.-registered company called Bolivian Hardwood which, as the name suggests, imports hardwood from Bolivia. Months earlier, the undercover operatives had tried to give Jolliffe $50,000 cash to launder:

Ricardo: What did we give Harold the first time? Only $50,000. Harold's f---ing mouth dropped. I just gave him this little backpack with 50,000. He says, well I wasn't expecting 50,000 dollars cash ... I looked at Bill, like, what the f--k did you bring? ...

[Ricardo explains how, at first, Jolliffe didn't want the money, then changed his mind and a another associate, Ron Horvat, who is also awaiting trial on money-laundering charges, picked it up.]

Ricardo: I guess he ran it through Harold's account, right? Is that what he did?

Bill: Yeah, Bolivian ...

Ricardo: Yeah, he ran it through Bolivian ...

- - -

There is more discussion about Jolliffe and whether he has the stomach to launder cash. At this point, Ricardo reveals the source of their funds:

Ricardo: It's a cocaine business. I don't care, my bottom line is, "Harold, if people start asking questions, are you gonna fold like a deck of cards?"

Purdy: Yeah.

Ricardo: Harold, he never answered that f---ing question come to think of it.

Purdy: Well, you said to him, if it's a cocaine business, 'cause of course if it's a cocaine business then it's illegal. If you said it's a gambling business ...

Ricardo: Right.

Purdy: I mean he's just worried about cash. You should have said, Harold, it's not a cocaine business, it's a gambling business.

Ricardo: Okay, I told Harold it is a cocaine business.

Purdy: Well, okay, you've given him the worst-case scenario.

- - -

The undercover operatives express concern that the offshore bankers will learn the true source of the money:

Bill: Now listen Jack, I don't want them knowing what all our business is.

Purdy: You're not gonna.

Bill: You know what our business is. Fine.

Purdy: Look. I don't know, I have no idea except for ... gambling, you have a gambling business.

Bill: Yeah.

Purdy: Gambling with limited risks.

Bill: Yep.

Purdy: No risks [laughs].

- - -

Toward the end of the meeting, the undercover agents produce a bag of cash and have a guessing game as to how much money it contains. Ricardo reveals there is $100,000 US in 100- and 20-dollar bills.

Ricardo: If you're willing to take that ...

Purdy: ... I'd love to, I just can't do it. You know what you can do, if you can get me five grand ...

Ricardo: Take five grand.

Purdy: Five grand ... we're allowed to have 10 grand, right ... [referring to the law restricting the amount of cash travellers can carry across the border to $10,000].

Ricardo: Do you want 10?

Purdy: No, I can only, because I got a couple, three, four grand on me.

[He ultimately takes about $6,000 for "expenses."]

- - -

Although acquitted on these money-laundering charges, Purdy is not yet out of the woods. He is scheduled to appear in court on July 7 to answer to nine more charges that he, Jolliffe and Horvat agreed to launder thousands more dollars represented to be proceeds of cocaine trafficking.

Meanwhile he has been denied bail and remains in a Miami jail.

dbaines@png.canwest.com

© Copyright 2003 Vancouver Sun



To: jjs64 who wrote (1228)6/7/2006 5:18:59 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1242
 
Dian Griesel, Ph.D PROMOTES YET ANOTHER STOCK FRAUD
Investor Relations Group (IRG) was issued options to acquire 150000 shares OF STOCKFRAUD

WAY TO GO DIAN!! Founder/Pres Dian Griesel, Ph.D. Listen: Windows Media | Real Media
macreport.net

==========================================

UniDyn Corp. Retains New York City Based Corporate Relations Firm

Business Editors

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 27, 2000

UniDyn Corp. (OTCBB: UNDY) today announced that it has hired The Investor Relations Group, Inc., ("IRG") based in New York City, NY as its new financial and public relations company. Investor and media inquiries regarding UniDyn can be directed to IRG at Tel: 212.736.2650, Fax: 212.736.2610.

The Investor Relations Group provides a full complement of investor relations and public relations services to assist clients in defining and meeting their investor relations objectives. IRG will develop investor awareness for UniDyn Corp., a fully reporting company.

UniDyn is a leader in the quality assurance testing market with emphasis on fully automated testing of printed circuit boards. UniDyn has recently completed a corporate reorganization in preparation for substantial growth. The Company will have three production divisions: the Phoenix, Arizona Avalon plant to produce the Sterling products, the Orem, Utah plant to produce the NorthStar and MorningStar products and during the first quarter of 2000, the Los Angeles plant to produce Derritron products. In addition, the Company has a separate research and development division located in Orem, Utah.

Ira Gentry, President and Chairman of the board of UniDyn Corp., described The Investor Relations Group's role in UniDyn Corp.'s growth and visibility. "We want to work with a firm which has strong relationships with the investment community, particularly in New York. The Investor Relations Group is that type of company and we look forward to working with them in increasing investor awareness in the company."

Safe Harbor statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995: Except for historical information contained herein, the matters discussed in this press release are forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties, including but not limited to economic, competitive, governmental and technological factors affecting the Company's operations, markets, products

and prices and other factors discussed in the Company's various filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

================================================

TSX-V's Union, T-K appear in Arizona pump-and-dump

2006-06-07 16:07 ET - Street Wire

by Mike Caswell

Controversial Vancouver brokerage Union Securities Ltd., fined $1.77-million in April for serving shady U.S. clients, has turned up in a recently unsealed Arizona fraud indictment. Prosecutors describe Union as a brokerage firm used in the alleged $8.6-million UniDyn Corp. pump-and-dump. Also used was the Vancouver branch of Thomson Kernaghan, the now-defunct Toronto brokerage headed by Mark Valentine. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) While Union and T-K are named several times in the Arizona indictment, they are not accused of any wrongdoing or of soliciting the bad business.

The indictment

According to the indictment, Union and T-K served UniDyn's chief executive officer, Ira W. Gentry, and a disbarred lawyer from Arizona, Randy W. Jenkins, as they secretly dumped over 3.9 million shares of UniDyn, a purported developer of circuit board technology. The indictment charges Mr. Gentry and Mr. Jenkins with 59 counts of fraud, money laundering and tax evasion.

It seems Mr. Gentry and Mr. Jenkins, with eight aliases between them, secretly acquired 20 million shares of UniDyn in the year leading up to the promotion. Prosecutors say they hid their shares in offshore companies, opening accounts at Union and T-K under the names Universal Dynamics, Marriott Investment Fund Ltd. and Prime Security Funding Ltd.

While Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Gentry pumped the stock to a $4.40 high in March, 2000, touting bogus deals worth over $1-billion, prosecutors say they instructed Union and T-K to dump their shares and wire the money to Arizona, Utah and elsewhere.

At the height of the promotion, Union apparently sold 847,500 UniDyn shares worth $1.89-million for the nominee accounts, while T-K sold 2.13 million shares worth $6.2-million.

(Although the stock had a few subsequent smaller runs, it fell to 40 cents inside a year, and last traded for one-1,000th of a penny on May 25, 2006.)

Prosecutors say Mr. Gentry and Mr. Jenkins spent the money on a $1.2-million Arizona home, a $139,000 Mercedes, and a $300,000 collection of gold and silver coins.

Union's other woes

Although the events in the Arizona indictment date back to 2000, they become public at an embarrassing time for Union, the brokerage having just settled a three-pronged regulatory action punishing it for a litany of misbehaviour and non-compliance. High on the list of attention-getters was the firm's status as a skunk-magnet for shady U.S. promoters.

The indictment comes just four months after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission subpoenaed former Union broker Trevor Koenig to testify in an unrelated civil suit against Florida financier Jonathan Curshen and just three months after the SEC banned former Union client James Franklin.

In both those cases the SEC says U.S. promoters used Union, but makes no suggestion that the participation was anything but unwitting.

Last year the Investment Dealers Association secured a court-appointed monitor at Union to correct a "culture of indifference toward compliance issues." As part of Union's settlement with the IDA in April, Union agreed to have the monitor come back from time to time to check up on its compliance.

The other brokerage, T-K, went bankrupt in 2002 not long after its former head, Mr. Valentine, was arrested in Germany as part of Operation Bermuda Short, the massive Canada-U.S. penny
stock sting.

=================================================

Web Results 1 - 4 of about 15 for UniDyn "INVESTOR RELATIONS GROUP. (0.40 seconds)

Did you mean: Indyne "INVESTOR RELATIONS GROUP

UNDY - News ReleasesInvestor and media inquiries regarding UniDyn can be directed to IRG at Tel: 212.736.2650, Fax: 212.736.2610. The Investor Relations Group provides a full ...
www.integratir.com/newsrelease. asp?news=944&ticker=UNDY - 14k - Supplemental Result - Cached - Similar pages

UNDY - News ReleasesFor more information on UniDyn, please visit the company's Website at Website://www.unidyn.com or call The Investor Relations Group, Inc., in New York City ...
www.integratir.com/newsrelease. asp?news=959&ticker=UNDY - 14k - Supplemental Result - Cached - Similar pages
[ More results from www.integratir.com ]

SEC Info - Unidyn Corp - 10QSB - For 6/30/0... Investor Relations Group (IRG) was issued options to acquire 150000 shares. ... NOTE 7: CONTINGENCIES On June 7, 2000, Unidyn Corp. signed a letter of ...
www.secinfo.com/dvzf8.53p.htm - 82k - Cached - Similar pages

SEC Info - Unidyn Corp - 10QSB - For 3/31/0For more information on UniDyn, please visit the company's Website at unidyn.com or call The Investor Relations Group, Inc., in New York City at ...
www.secinfo.com/dvzf8.524.htm - 87k - Cached - Similar pages