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To: StocksDATsoar who wrote (115246)5/27/2003 2:34:48 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
RE:Financial web->Market place: Corporate wrongdoers often are repeat offenders
Wednesday, March 13, 2002

By FLOYD NORRIS, New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — As securities fraud cases go, the crime that Lionel Reifler admitted to on Tuesday was not particularly extraordinary. He pleaded guilty to conspiring to rig the price of a stock traded on the over-the-counter bulletin board.

The stock in question was one few have ever heard of, FinancialWeb.com Inc. Back in the happy days of early 2000, when it was possible to sell almost anything with a connection to the Internet, shares in that company, which operated a financial web site, sold for as much as $10.44 a share. On Tuesday, the price was one-tenth of a cent, and the Web site was nowhere to be found.

Had federal investigators not managed to record a couple of telephone conversations in which several people discussed a plan to drive the stock up so that one shareholder could dump his stock, that rise and fall would probably have gone unnoticed by everyone save those who made and lost money in the case.

As it was, Reifler on Tuesday became the fifth person to plead guilty to charges relating to that pump-and-dump scheme. A sixth defendant is expected to enter a plea soon.

His plea was entered before Judge Sidney H. Stein of U.S. District Court in a 23rd floor courtroom in the new federal courthouse in Manhattan. Had this reporter not attended the plea, there would have been no witnesses aside from those required to be present.

It may be no surprise that his family did not turn out. In addition to a charge of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, he pleaded guilty to two counts of credit card fraud. In those cases, he was charged with obtaining credit cards in the name of two of his daughters and running up bills he had no intention of paying.

What is remarkable about Reifler, who will turn 63 later this month, is his long history. He has been in and out of trouble for various financial crimes for most of his adult life. This was his seventh conviction, but only two of his previous convictions caused him to be sent to prison. In each case, he served a little more than a year, said his lawyer, Martin Rafkin of Miami.

Over the years, Reifler, a resident of Boca Raton, Fla., has been involved with savings and loan frauds, a phony mutual fund and even a brokerage firm that prosecutors said was tied to the Mafia. He has testified that he was once dangled out a seventh story window by mobsters upset about an unpaid debt.

In most of those cases, he does not appear to have been the organizer of the fraud. He was, rather, a guy you could call to get help if you needed to rig a stock or find a way to cash in some dubious or worthless securities.

"Every time I have been arrested resulted in a conviction," he told a lawyer for the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1993.

But while a bank robber caught that many times would probably have faced long sentences, Reifler managed to have different convictions punished with concurrent sentences and had sentences reduced by his willing cooperation with the authorities.

That pattern began early in his career. In 1971, he willingly testified before a .Senate committee after he was convicted of conspiring to defraud an insurance company. It was there that he told his tale of being dangled outside a seventh-floor window of his Manhattan office. Reading the testimony now, he sounds like an earnest but naive man who may not have been especially honest but did not completely understand what he was getting into.

"We have heard a lot about suckers in these hearings," Sen. John L. McClellan of Arkansas said to him. "Are you pleading guilty to being a good sucker?"

"Yes I am, Senator" Reifler replied. "One of the biggest."

Asked whether he had sought a ruling from the SEC that one dubious transaction was legal, he replied, "At that time I didn't even know what the SEC was."

These days, he knows what the SEC is, but it is not clear that he has paid much attention to it. The SEC has obtained three injunctions barring him from violating securities laws, but his career does not seem to have been affected by that.

Such white-collar recidivists are receiving attention these days. "I have only been back at the commission three months," Harvey L. Pitt, the SEC chairman, said in a speech last November, "but I am appalled by the number of repeat offenders we seem to confront at virtually every commission meeting." He said the commission hoped to see more criminal prosecutions.

On Tuesday, Reifler declined to be interviewed after he entered his plea and was released on bail, with his sentencing set for June 28.

The Justice Department wants Reifler to serve some real prison time after this conviction. Chris Clark, the assistant U.S. attorney who prosecuted Reifler, said on Tuesday that he believed sentencing guidelines would call for him to be sentenced to 63 to 78 months in prison, but that in light of his long record the government would ask the judge to raise that to 90 to 105 months — that is, up to eight years and nine months.

Rafkin, who has represented Reifler over the years in many of his brushes with the law, said he would dispute the prosecutor's assertion that investors lost more than $7 million and would seek a much lower penalty.



To: StocksDATsoar who wrote (115246)5/27/2003 2:37:43 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
Lorenzo Formato was a plant in one of Lionel Reiflers past swindles. Here is a good article which all should read. Lorenzo went into the witness protection program. Lionel Rieflers troubles continue as he was involved in the Mob Stock FinancialWeb.com sting through his company Fortune Investment

'PENNY' STOCKS NO CHEAP DEAL FRAUD REPORTEDLY COSTING BILLIONS

Published on FRIDAY, September 8, 1989
© 1989 The Arizona Republic
Byline: Republic Wire Services, Compiled from Knight-Ridder and The Associated Press.

Consumers lose about $2 billion a year investing in so-called penny stocks, according to a 50-state survey of security regulators issued Thursday that concludes the industry is in the grip of con artists and organized crime.

A convicted stock swindler corroborated the report as he told a House subcommittee Thursday that penny-stock brokerages routinely manipulate stock prices, and that organized crime controls the industry.

''I needed the protection and I needed the strength of organized crime,'' said Lorenzo Formato, a former New Jersey stockbroker and promoter who is serving a six-year prison term for tax evasion, wire fraud and illegal conversion of funds.

''They needed me to be a money machine. And that's just what I was.''

The North American Securities Administrators Association report was released at a hearing of the same subcommittee, the House subcommittee on telecommunications and finance. The association is a Washington-based organization of state securities regulators responsible for investor protection.

''The penny-stock industry increasingly is dominated by utterly worthless or highly dubious securities offerings that are systematically manipulated by repeat offenders of state and federal securities laws and other felons, some of whom have been identified as having ties to organized crime,'' the report concluded.

Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., the subcommittee chairman, called Formato's testimony ''a blistering, scalding indictment of the entire penny- stock market.'' He said he would press for tougher regulation of the industry.

Formato, a participant in the federal Witness Protection Program, wore a gray hood to hide his face when he entered the subcommittee meeting room and removed it only after he was seated behind orange wall dividers that shielded him from spectators, but not lawmakers. His voice was altered electronically to prevent identification.

He testified that penny-stock brokers prey on unsophisticated investors contacted by telephone and subjected to hard-sell sales pitches. Firms routinely manipulate the price of a company's stock, he said, and even sell stock in non-existent companies.

Formato said he helped sell stock in a Laser Arms Corp., which he said was the invention of stock swindler Marshall Zolp.

''This company was completely fictitious,'' he said. ''There were no directors of the company. The people that he (Zolp) used as directors were simply pictures of actors that he had taken.''

The pictures were printed in reports to shareholders, which also included made-up sales and earnings figures. Stockholders lost $2.4 million before the scheme collapsed; Zolp and Formato were sentenced to prison for their parts in the scam.

Although their price -- a few cents up to a few dollars a share -- makes penny stocks attractive to small investors with limited funds, many are prone to abuse because information about the issuing company often is hard to obtain and fraudulent claims are difficult to dispute.

Small or young companies, or those that trade infrequently or in a limited area, are often listed only on ''pink sheets'' published by the National Quotation Bureau rather than with larger and more stable companies. Roughly 13,000 stocks are traded this way.

Brokers and investors must call a broker that deals in a specific company's shares to get a price quote.

Penny stocks are considered highly risky. Investors lose all or part of their money 70 percent of the time, according to the security regulators' report. When penny-stock prices are being manipulated by a brokerage house, investors lose money 90 percent of the time, according to the report.

''Comparing this to a night at the casino seems an unfair slap at casino operators,'' Markey said.

According to a survey by state securities regulators, American investors have been cheated out of at least $2 billion a year by crooked schemes involving penny stocks.

The National Association of Securities Dealers, a self-regulating organization that oversees over-the-counter stockbrokers, said any investigation of organized crime links to the industry was in government hands.

''We're cracking down hard on unscrupulous penny-stock brokers, but we're not Elliott Ness,'' said Robert Ferri, a spokesman for the security dealers' group.

''If an investigation has to go farther than our purview, the law enforcement agency we're dealing with will take it from there. And that's quite often the FBI or the Justice Department.''



To: StocksDATsoar who wrote (115246)5/27/2003 9:32:08 PM
From: Buckey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
mind if I ask how you found that cus I couldnt yesterday on my bookmark but I rooted around and found it - Why would two of us post it within a day? That wensite chaged the directory it was in I am sure

Seems oddd you found a 4 year old article one day after I was looking for it.

ragingbull.lycos.com