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Technology Stocks : Terayon - S CDMA player (TERN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GOPbabe who wrote (1502)6/7/2003 12:56:54 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1658
 
Wonder why nasdaq didn't mention career conman was behind the saf-t-loc stockscam, Shalom Weiss?

National Bank's P.I. serviced scores besides Weiss
2002-06-12 08:09 PT - Street Wire

by Brent Mudry

Most-wanted American financial fugitive Shalom Weiss, a notorious offshore client that Pacific International Securities denies servicing, was a major player in an OTC Bulletin Board promotion which featured numerous accounts at the controversial Vancouver brokerage. Pro Net Link Corp., now bankrupt, was under active investigation by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission in mid-1998, during a period when Pacific International was the brokerage of choice for Mr. Weiss and at least five other major company insiders.

Shalom Weiss, 47, also known as Sholam Weiss, appeared in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida in Orlando on Tuesday, his first public appearance since he vanished on Oct. 18, 1999, the day before jury deliberations after a nine-month federal trial which resulted in a record 845-year sentence. He was a key player in the $450-million mortgage and real estate fraud of National Heritage Life Insurance Co., which was the biggest-ever criminal insurance fraud in U.S. history. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) Mr. Weiss was extradited from Vienna, on Sunday, where he was tracked down and arrested on Oct. 24, 2000, after a year-long global manhunt featuring police in Israel, Brazil, Belgium, Germany, Hungary and Austria.

Mr. Weiss, once a respected member of New York's Hasidic Jewish community, shuffled into court wearing a bright-red jail jumpsuit, regulation thongs and matching leg shackles. While Mr. Weiss might get five years knocked off his massive sentence, as one of his dozens of charges, obstruction of justice, is not recognized under Austria's extradition treaty, he faces a new setback, according to Orlando Sentinel reporter Susan Clary.

The Department of Justice, stepping up to the plate for some hardball, is trying to yank Mr. Weiss's Miami extradition counsel, Sam Burstyn, because he defended another National Heritage convict, Isaak Rosenberg, who is married to one of Mr. Weiss's cousins. According to the Sentinel's Ms. Clary, Mr. Burstyn claims his fine client Mr. Weiss was illegally kidnapped and whisked out of Austria on a government jet Sunday, two weeks after he feigned a heart attack to dodge being shipped home on a scheduled commercial jet. "The only disease he has is prisonitis -- extreme fear of federal prison," retired FBI Special Agent Joe Judge told the newspaper.

Meanwhile, Stockwatch has uncovered more details of Mr. Weiss's dealings at Pacific International, a Vancouver brokerage charged last July by the British Columbia Securities Commission for servicing more than its share of stock crooks, securities violators and other dubious clients. In addition to vigorously defending the serious, but as-yet-unproven BCSC charges, Pacific International has denied Stockwatch's documented evidence, largely obtained through BCSC searches, that it ever serviced big-league racketeer and money launderer Mr. Weiss.

"Mr. Weiss is not and never has been a client of Pacific International," stated Vancouver lawyer Brian Baynham of Harper Grey Easton in a legal warning letter to Stockwatch in January. "This story and earlier stories of a similar vein have the potential of doing irreparable harm to my client's good name and reputation," he stated. Stockwatch has broken dozens of articles, dating back to early 1999, chronicling Pacific International's misfortune at being named as a stock or money laundering conduit in numerous U.S. indictments, criminal complaints and SEC prosecutions, duly noting the brokerage was never named as a target itself until the BCSC launched its prosecution a year ago.

While the public records of the BCSC's probe show Pacific International allegedly serviced Mr. Weiss through several offshore accounts, including Amex Corp., based in Geneva, and Dagon Developments, based in Israel, no details of stock trading have yet been revealed.

To help fill in the blanks for Mr. Baynham, he might be quite interested to look at Pro Net Link. The name of his client, Pacific International, is peppered in the National Association of Securities Dealers' list of Form 144 filings by company insiders who were keen to dump their holdings of Pro Net, or at least lighten their loads. Of the six brokerages noted, Pacific International is not only the sole Canadian house, but the busiest firm, with 26 entries, dwarfing runner-up Brown Brothers Harriman, with just eight.

Even more impressive is the breadth of Pacific International's client list. The Vancouver-based brokerage had accounts for no less than 22 separate clients, dominated by offshore and other European accounts. Oddly enough, none of the names of the Vancouver brokerage's clients are recognizable Vancouver, or even Canadian, penny stock players.

The first entry, dated May 29, 1998, is for a chap called Fode Diop, who filed to sell 110,000 shares. The busy Mr. Diop also filed to sell 20,000 shares on Sept. 3, 1998, 200,000 shares three weeks later, on Sept. 29, and a hefty 500,000 shares on Jan. 12, 1999. All four times Mr. Diop showed Pacific International Securities as his brokerage. While Mr. Diop's home address is not clear, someone using his name used a postbox address in Senegal in an unrelated penny stock promotion a year earlier. While Senegal might not seem like a major hotbed of international finance, Mr. Diop is doing his part to change this, serving as vice-president of the country's junior chamber of economics, which is like the junior chamber of commerce.

Next in line on the 144 list is Amex Corp., the offshore account the BCSC asserts is directly linked to or controlled by Mr. Weiss, despite lawyer Mr. Baynham's vigorous assertions. Amex Corp. filed to sell 200,000 shares of Pro Net Link on Aug. 26, 1998.

This was a particularly busy day, as two other Pacific International clients filed to sell a total of almost 600,000 shares. A company called Firstimpex filed to sell 385,000 shares, while Judith Lerner filed to sell 200,000 shares. Five days later, on Aug. 31, 1998, a fifth Pacific International client, Charles Neisenbaum, filed to sell 80,000 Pro Net shares.

The same day, a new brokerage appeared on the list: Millennium Securities Corp., whose client Nicole Peignier filed to sell 500,000 shares. Millennium showed up once more on the list, on July 15, 1999, when client Muriel Prochasson wanted to dump 500,000 Pro Net shares.

Millennium, based in New York, had the misfortune of being shut down by regulators a year ago. The NASD launched a prosecution on April 13, 2000, claiming the brokerage, its chief executive officer Richard Sitomer and its president Todd Rome made $5-million in illegal profits rigging the initial public offering of another penny promo, Translation Group, in December, 1996. The firm was expelled by the NASD on June 15, 2001, and clients face an Aug. 12 deadline to file claims with SIPC, the Securities Investor Protection Corp.

Besides servicing the most Pro Net insiders, Pacific International also serviced the biggest: a client called Pioneer Info Systems, which filed to sell 1.5 million shares on March 15, 1999. Pioneer Info also filed to sell 50,000 shares on July 7, 1999, again through Pacific International.

In addition to Mr. Diop, Mr. Weiss's Amex Corp., Firstimpex, Ms. Lerner, Mr. Niesenbaum and Pioneer Info, Pacific International also serviced numerous other Pro Net insiders who made 144 filings up to Sept. 30, 1999, including Usines Diffusion, Jean Scarpaci, Jean Emilio Mula, Bernard Zoller, Oliver Texier, Serge Touitou, Claude Delas, Andre Martinez, Gerald Testaniere, Roger Daveaux and Gilles Marret.

All this may seem to be much ado about nothing, but for two details. The first relates to the SEC, while the second relates to Mr. Weiss.

"In June, 1998, the Securities and Exchange Commission commenced an investigation of Pro Net Link relating primarily to the alleged manipulation of the market for securities of Pro Net Link, pursuant to a formal order issued by the SEC under the authority of Sections 20(a) and 21(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended," states the company in a regulatory filing. "Pursuant to that formal order, subpoenas for the production of books, papers, documents and other records were served on Pro Net Link and on companies doing business with us. Testimony was required of Mr. Collardeau and Mr. Zagoren (Pro Net's top executives.)"

"Pro Net Link, Mr. Collardeau and Mr. Zagoren complied with the subpoenas and all related requests of the SEC in June and July 1998, and have received no further inquiries from the SEC regarding this investigation. We have no information as to the results, if any, of such investigation, whom the targets, if any, of such investigation were or may be, or what action, if any, the SEC may take pursuant to the investigation," states the company. Pro Net filed for bankruptcy last June, the same month Millennium was shut down for good.

Even more intriguing is Firstimpex, the Pacific International client which filed to sell 385,000 Pro Net shares on Aug. 26, 1998, the same day Mr. Weiss's Amex filed to sell 200,000 shares through the Vancouver brokerage.

In what can only be described as an amazing coincidence, Firstimpex also showed up as a major shareholder of Saf T Lok Inc. As Stockwatch has reported earlier, Pacific International serviced both mortgage fraudster Mr. Weiss, a key player in the fraudulent 1997 bulletin board promotion of Saf T Lok, and controversial fraudbuster, Anthony Elgindy, who exposed and shorted the promotion. (There is no suggestion Mr. Elgindy and Mr. Weiss were acting in concert or even knew each other.)

One of Mr. Weiss's chief Saf T Lok fronts was a friend, Arthur Braun, the president of United Safety Action Inc., a Saf T Lok distributor, and the owner of A. B. & Associates, a shell consultant related to Mr. Weiss's Regulation S offshore private placement.

In yet another tidbit of penny stock trivia, Mr. Elgindy is credited with exposing legendary Internet stock tout fraudster Tokyo Joe, who frequented Scores, the upscale New York Gambino family strip club which featured National Heritage as a major owner and Mr. Weiss as both a key backer and a regular patron.



To: GOPbabe who wrote (1502)6/7/2003 1:02:34 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1658
 
A little more about the man behind Saf-T-Lok

National Bank's P.I. fugitive client Weiss now in jail
2002-06-10 17:41 PT - Street Wire

America's most-wanted major financial fugitive, a Mafia-linked star offshore client of controversial Vancouver brokerage Pacific International Securities, is finally behind bars in Florida. Shalom Weiss, also known as Sholam Weiss, who fled three years ago, before being sentenced to a record 845 years in jail and fined a total of $248.4-million in the biggest-ever criminal insurance fraud, was whisked back to Orlando by federal agents on a government jet Sunday from Austria. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.)

Mr. Weiss, 47, the subject of an international manhunt for the massive National Heritage Life Insurance Inc. mortgage fraud, was tracked down and arrested on Oct. 24, 2000, in Vienna, where he waged a vigorous extradition defence since. After Mr. Weiss vanished on Oct. 18, 1999, the day before jury deliberations after a nine-month federal trial, the FBI and the Delaware Insurance Commissioner posted bounty rewards of more than $100,000. U.S. authorities credit the assistance and co-operation of law enforcement agencies in Israel, Brazil, Belgium, Germany, Hungary and Austria in tracking him down.

Pacific International's most-wanted client had many sides. Once a respected member of New York's Hasidic Jewish community, Mr. Weiss was also a part-owner and regular at Scores, an upscale strip club in Manhattan which allegedly featured members of the late Don Gotti's Gambino family as secret partners. Although it is unclear what, if any, due diligence P.I. did on Mr. Weiss, his latest string of fraudulent deals stretches back to at least 1990.

"This man was essentially a financial predator, and National Heritage was only the last in a long string of victims," Assistant U.S. Attorney Judy Hunt told the press. "The evidence presented at trial showed that Weiss had been engaged in a series of bank frauds, bankruptcy frauds and securities frauds dating back to the 1980s."

Mr. Weiss was on the top tier of 12 National Heritage figures who pled guilty between 1994 and 1999 in a large criminal conspiracy involving a wide circle of alleged co-conspirators in Arizona, Texas, Illinois, New York and Florida. "According to insurance regulators, the failure of NHLIC is the largest failure due to criminal activity in insurance industry history, involving a loss which exceeded $250-million," states the office of Paul Perez, United States Attorney for the Middle District of Florida in Orlando.

"We are gratified that Shalom Weiss has not evaded the penalties imposed for these very serious criminal offenses. Those who pillage our financial institutions for their own gain, thereby jeopardizing the financial security of our citizenry, must be prosecuted, and face terms of imprisonment which reflect the grave harm done by their criminal acts," stated Mr. Perez on Monday. Mr. Weiss's 845-year sentence is believed to the longest sentence imposed in U.S. history, at least for non-serial killers.

While the initial FBI probe, launched in 1994 with the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, began with a believed fraud of $12-million, the case snowballed over the years into a complex $450-million mortgage and real estate fraud operation. The Orlando office of the FBI earlier called the case "one of the largest white-collar crimes ever."

Mr. Weiss was the star bad-boy client of Pacific International, a scandal-plagued Howe Street brokerage, controlled by National Bank of Canada, which was charged last July by the British Columbia Securities Commission for servicing far more than its share of dubious clients. The securities regulator portrays P.I. as a haven for stock crooks, rolling out the welcome mat for numerous securities violators and felons, especially in the barely-regulated OTC Bulletin Board market.

In addition to vigorously defended the serious, but as-yet-proven BCSC charges, Pacific International has denied Stockwatch's documented evidence, largely obtained through BCSC searches, that it ever serviced big-league racketeer and money launderer Mr. Weiss. "Mr Weiss is not and never has been a client of Pacific International," stated Vancouver lawyer Bryan Baynham of Harper Grey Easton in a strongly worded legal warning letter in January. "This story and earlier stories of a similar vein have the potential of doing irreparable harm to my client's good name and reputation," he stated.

Despite lawyer Mr. Baynham's legal warning to Stockwatch about reporting on Mr. Weiss as a client of Pacific International, the BCSC has never withdrawn or otherwise revised the Weiss allegations in its notice of hearing. "We certainly haven't retracted that," BCSC acting enforcement director Wayne Armistead told Stockwatch on Monday.

Until recently, Mr. Weiss was the standout disreputable P.I. client, topping a BCSC citation list including Mafia-linked player Joe Garofalo, Regulation S abuser Salvatore Mazzeo, convicted stock felons Paul Harary, David Hesterman and ZZZZ Best's Maurice Rind, fellow U.S. securities violators Randy Biemel, Jimmy Ray Carter, Richard Gladstone, Steve Keyser and Amr Ibrahim (Anthony) Elgindy.

California shortseller Mr. Elgindy took the crown three weeks ago, on May 21, when he was arrested and denied bail as the head of a ring which allegedly bought confidential FBI and grand jury records from several corrupt FBI agents, used the information in short attacks, and extorted cease-and-desist payments from targeted stock promotions. While Mr. Elgindy traded heavily through another Vancouver brokerage in the current case, Global Securities, which wired funds offshore to Lebanon, he earlier traded through Pacific International.

In an intriguing coincidence, Pacific International serviced both mortgage fraudster Mr. Weiss, a key player in the fraudulent 1997 bulletin board promotion of Saf T Lok Inc., and controversial fraudbuster Mr. Elgindy, who exposed and shorted the promotion. (There is no suggestion Mr. Elgindy and Mr. Weiss were acting in concert or even knew each other personally.)

The BCSC names Mr. Weiss as the owner, operator or associate of several offshore accounts, including Amex Corp., based in Geneva, and Dagon Developments, based in Israel. The regulator included these Weiss-linked accounts on several red-flag lists of suspicious activity, including receiving in or transferring out of large blocks of OTC-BB shares, in-and-out cash transfers with little or no trading, akin to money laundering, and stock-sales proceeds distributed to third parties.

The National Heritage case dates back to 1990, when Mr. Weiss's New York attorney, Michael Blutrich, Arizona businessman Patrick Smythe and Orlando accountant David Davies bought an equity stake in the insurance company with a rubber $4-million cheque. Although their corporate account had a balance of only a few thousand dollars, the trio stalled the closing until a Friday evening, and by the Monday morning, they were able to siphon funds from National's treasury, a particularly audacious leveraged buyout with no money down. Mr. Davies helped paper over the sham by scooping $540,000 from a trust fund he controlled, buying $4.5-million of U.S. T-bills on margin, then having a brokerage firm state the bonds were owned without debt.

National Heritage was no prize at first. The insurer, mainly operating in Florida, was suffering in the late 1980s and the Delaware insurance industry regulator threatened to step in by May of 1990, unwittingly paving the way for the Smythe group to come in.

To help finance the sham buyout and subsequent dubious transactions, businessman Mr. Smythe and lawyer Mr. Blutrich opened a series of corporate accounts at the New York branch of Swiss-based Bank Leumi. Although Mr. Weiss did not appear on the scene immediately, he was already quite experienced in dealing with, and defrauding, Bank Leumi's New York operation.

In a Sept. 5, 1996, civil judgment after a three-week trial in the Eastern District of New York, Mr. Weiss and his plumbing company, Windsor Plumbing Supply Co. Inc., were found guilty of civil fraud and conspiracy and ordered to pay Cofacredit S.A., a French export finance company, $5.12-million, stemming from a plumbing fixtures importing deal dating back to 1987.

After conning Bank Leumi through false representations, Mr. Weiss gained a $1.3-million letter of credit in mid-1998. In late 1990, the plumbing entrepreneur called Bank Leumi to claim some of the inventory securing the loan had been stolen from a warehouse. "Bank Leumi tried to cover this loss through an insurance policy, but was unsuccessful because Sholam Weiss failed to produce evidence that he owned the inventory allegedly stolen," states an Aug. 3, 1999, appeal court decision, which upheld the $5.12-million Cofacredit judgment.

Mr. Weiss would later used Windsor Plumbing in at least one of a multitude schemes to defraud National Heritage, by using fraudulently inflated property appraisals.

While hard at work ripping off National Heritage and other victims, Mr. Weiss often took time to enjoy life.

In 1996, when he was serving time in a halfway house for mail fraud in New York, Mr. Weiss conned a judge into letting him out to spend the sacred Jewish Passover holiday with his wife and five children. With his strict four-day pass in hand, Mr. Weiss then climbed into Donald Trump's Air Trump helicopter with a 23-year-old tart for a gambling fling at Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, where he was "comped" in a $700-a-night suite and he dropped $100,000. (The FBI's Most Wanted poster notes he "frequents gambling casinos and plays blackjack.")

Even more titillating were the prominent and respected Hasidic Jewish businessman's frequent appearances at Scores, the upscale Manhattan peeler parlour. National Heritage, fronted by lawyer Mr. Blutrich and associate Lyle Pfeffer, bought a major ownership stake in the strip club, and after a subsequent shakedown, they allegedly fronted for secret Gambino family partners. The extortionist was John Gotti Jr., the son of John Gotti Sr., Gambino family head who died of cancer in jail this weekend.

As part of an agreement with their National Heritage guilty pleas, Mr. Blutrich and Mr. Pfeffer were placed in the federal witness protection program as they testified about mob dealings in the stripper industry. U.S. authorities claim some of National Heritage's plundered funds were laundered through Scores.

Meanwhile, Mr. Weiss's irrepressible taste for young skin led to his ultimate downfall. After fleeing the States with his Brazilian girlfriend, now 27, Mr. Weiss's scent was narrowed down in Vienna. Brazilian police, sniffing around in Sao Paulo, retrieved Weiss-related phone records from one hotel, found an odd call to the girlfriend's mother in a poor neighbourhood, and led international investigators to a chase which ended in Vienna.



To: GOPbabe who wrote (1502)6/10/2003 8:53:11 PM
From: Dan B.  Respond to of 1658
 
There ya go. Another Pluvia, IMO. After all, we can PROVE Pluvia wrote deleterious(favorable to him, a short) false information about Terayon here on this thread, a certain crime. What does Sheepseeker(aka Truthseeker)want here? Company for Anthony? LOL, Re: "Elgindy and his firm, Key West Securities, in 1997 inflated the stock price of handgun safety device manufacturer Saf T Lok by entering fraudulent quotations in the Nasdaq system and then sold the stock short at the artificially high prices, the National Association of Securities Dealers' National Adjudicatory Council charged in a statement."

-From your post of Reuters story

Dan B