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Biotech / Medical : HEB, Hemispherx Biopharma (AMEX)NEW -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (789)7/22/2003 9:02:05 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 857
 
World Wireless Communications, Inc. Announces Freeze of Assets of Its Major Stockholder Group

GREENWOOD VILLAGE, Colo., July 16 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- World Wireless Communications, Inc. (Amex: XWC), a developer of wireless and Internet based telemetry systems, announced a development affecting its largest stockholder group and its two senior creditors. The Company learned that a Federal judge in South Florida entered a temporary restraining order on July 10, 2003 against the Connecticut-based advisors of a purported large hedge fund (including Michael Lauer) which (i) restrains them from violating the anti-trust provisions of the Federal securities laws, (ii) freezes the assets of Lancer Offshore, Inc. (and certain other affiliated entities) until a hearing on July 18, 2003 and (iii) appoints Marty Steinberg, Esq., an attorney in the law firm of Hunton & Williams, LLP as receiver for Lancer Offshore, Inc., and several other entities, for marshaling and safeguarding their assets. Such action does not affect the Company directly.

Lancer Offshore, Inc. and Lancer Partners, L.P. (which previously filed a bankruptcy proceeding in the Federal courts in 2003), together with The Orbiter Fund Ltd., comprise our largest stockholder group and currently own 7,295,853 issued and outstanding shares of our common stock out of 31,459,945 shares issued and outstanding at March 31, 2003, plus warrants to purchase 2,500,000 shares of the Company's common stock at $0.20 per share, or 28.8%, exclusive of warrants to purchase an aggregate of 1,010,000 shares as of such date. Mr. Lauer is believed to control the voting and disposition of these shares by virtue of his being the investment manager of these entities, is also the general partner of Lancer Partners, L.P. and is treated as the beneficial owner of these shares. This group has no representation on the Board of Directors of the Company and plays no active vote in the management of the Company.

Lancer Offshore, Inc. and Lancer Partners, L.P. also are the Company's senior secured creditors based on their aggregate secured loans to the Company totaling $7,020,000 in principal amount outstanding as of the date hereof.

In addition, such stockholder and his affiliates potentially could increase their ownership in the Company significantly. For further details concerning the Lancer group's stock ownership and the senior secured financing, see the Company's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002 which was filed with the SEC in May, 2003 (although it was not audited or reviewed by any independent accountants).

The Company attempted to reduce its reliance on its largest stockholder group and secured creditors by entering into a Restructuring Agreement with Lancer Offshore, Inc. and Lancer Partners, L.P. in February, 2003, subject to the condition precedent that the Company receive an equity investment of at least $750,000. The key terms of such agreement are set forth below:

(a) The Company would pay such creditors $1,400,000 for $2,400,000

principal amount of the senior secured notes (the "2001 Notes"),

which would result in the elimination of $1,000,000 of indebtedness

and leave an outstanding principal amount of $4,620,000 (which,

because of the change in conversion rate thereof below, would be

convertible into a maximum of 9,240,000 shares of common stock).

(b) The Company would pay such creditors the sum of $100,000 in full

payment of all interest accrued on the 2001 Notes to date (which is

in excess of $1,600,000).

(c) The maturity date of the 2001 Notes would be extended from

May 29, 2003 until June 30, 2005.

(d) The 2001 Notes would carry no further interest thereon in the

future.

(e) The 2001 Notes held by such creditors would become mandatorily

convertible at the rate of one share for each $0.50 of debt, instead

of the current rate of one share for each $0.05 of debt. Such

mandatory conversion of the 2001 Notes would occur upon (i) the

approval of such mandatory conversion by the Company's shareholders

at a meeting of shareholders (which was given up to the then

applicable ceiling amount of $5,000,000 but not for any excess

thereof), and (ii) the Company's receipt of equity in an amount

equal to the then outstanding principal balance of the 2001 Notes

from persons other than Michael Lauer and his affiliates, including,

without limitation, Lancer Offshore, Inc., Lancer Partners L.P. and

The Orbiter Fund Ltd., on or before June 30, 2005 (instead of the

current date of July 1, 2003).

The Company is seeking financing, although the results of such efforts are not assured, which financing is necessary to consummate the previously reported conditional restructuring agreement with the Company's senior secured creditors.

About World Wireless Communications, Inc.

Greenwood Village-based World Wireless Communications, Inc. was founded in 1995 and is a developer of wireless and Internet systems, technology and products. World Wireless focuses on spectrum radios in the 900MHz band and has developed the X-traWeb(TM) system -- an Internet based product designed for remote monitoring and control devices. X-traWeb's many applications included utility meters, security systems, vending machines, asset management, and quick service restaurants.

Statements made in this press release, other than those concerning historical information, should be considered forward-looking and subject to various risks and uncertainties.

Such forward-looking statements are made based on management's belief as well as the assumptions made by, and information currently available to, management pursuant to the "safe harbor" provision of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

SOURCE World Wireless Communications, Inc.

CO: World Wireless Communications, Inc.; Hunton & Williams, LLP; Lancer Offshore, Inc.; Lancer Partners, L.P.; The Orbiter Fund Ltd.; Orbiter Fund Ltd.

ST: Colorado, Florida

SU: LAW

prnewswire.com

07/16/2003 18:29 EDT



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (789)7/23/2003 5:37:24 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 857
 
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Litigation Release No. 18247 / July 23, 2003
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Michael Lauer, Lancer Management Group, LLC, and Lancer Management Group II, LLC, Defendants, and Lancer Offshore, Inc., Lancer Partners, LP, OmniFund, LTD., LSPV, INC., and LSPV, LLC, Relief Defendants, Case No. 03-80612-CIV-ZLOCH (S.D. Fla., filed July 8, 2003).

Federal Court Issues Preliminary Injunction Order Against Michael Lauer, Lancer Management Group, LLC, and Lancer Management Group II, LLC
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced that on July 17, 2003 a federal judge in South Florida entered a preliminary injunction order, by consent, against the Connecticut-based advisers of a purported billion-dollar hedge fund. The preliminary injunction will continue to restrain the defendants from violating the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. Also by consent, the Honorable William J. Zloch, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, ordered the defendants' assets to remain frozen until further notice. The preliminary injunction order continues the relief originally obtained on July 10, 2003 in response to the SEC's emergency civil injunctive action that sought a temporary restraining order, an order freezing assets, disgorgement and civil penalties and other relief against advisers Lancer Management Group, LLC (Lancer) and Lancer Management Group II, LLC (Lancer II) and their principal, Michael Lauer, based on their alleged violations of the federal securities laws. The SEC continues to seek, among other things, permanent injunctions, disgorgement of ill-gotten profits, civil money penalties and an accounting.

The SEC's Complaint alleges that from at least March 2000 to the present, Lauer, Lancer and Lancer II, engaged in a scheme to over-inflate the performances and net asset values of relief defendants Lancer Offshore, Inc. (Offshore), Lancer Partners, LP (Partners), OmniFund, Ltd. (OmniFund), three hedge funds controlled by Lauer (collectively the Funds) which recently claimed to have assets worth over $1 billion dollars. Specifically, the Complaint alleges that the defendants systematically manipulated the month end closing prices of certain securities held by the Funds to overstate the value of the Funds' holdings in virtually worthless companies. The SEC's Complaint states that the defendants then provided unfounded and unrealistic valuation opinions to auditors to obtain audited financial statements for Offshore. The Complaint also alleges that the defendants made numerous materially false and misleading statements and omissions in the Funds' offering and marketing materials. Finally, the Complaint alleges that the fraudulent manipulative trading practices and pumped-up valuations employed by Lauer, Lancer and Lancer II were designed to attract new investors to invest in the Funds and to induce current investors to forgo redemptions and to continue investing in the Funds which resulted in increased management fees paid to the defendants.

The preliminary injunction enjoins Lauer, Lancer and Lancer II from violations of Sections 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act) and Rule 10b-5 thereunder and Sections 206(1) and (2) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 ("Advisers Act"). The Complaint also alleges that Lauer acted as the "control person" for Lancer and Lancer II under Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act for their violations of Section 17(a) of the Securities Act and Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The defendants consented to the preliminary injunction and continued asset freeze without admitting or denying the SEC's allegations.



sec.gov

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Home | Previous Page Modified: 07/23/2003



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (789)7/31/2003 10:23:57 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 857
 
LANCER BOOKED LOANS THAT HOLLYWOOD FIRMS NEVER GOT

By CHRISTOPHER BYRON

July 31, 2003 -- Lancer's Hollywood connection has spread to Canada.
The Park Avenue-based hedge fund family's Canadian tie, through an independent filmmaker named Knightscove Entertainment, brings to at least $11 million the total of dubiously booked Lancer loans to the movie industry alone.

Lancer, which claims $1.25 billion of assets, was shut down earlier this month by federal regulators for funneling as much as $500 million from wealthy investors around the world into worthless penny stocks and other shaky investments.

Lancer documents show at least $3.8 million of Lancer loans to Knightscove in various Lancer portfolios at the time the hedge fund group collapsed.

The actual borrower was a company called Blizz Productions LLC, which in turn is co-owned by a New York film company headed by a recently resigned top Lancer official named David Newman, The Post has learned.

The misallocation echoes a similar situation, first reported by The Post last week, when a Hollywood film producer named Jeffrey Hoffman said he knew nothing of more than $7 million worth of loans allegedly extended by Lancer to companies he himself has headed.

Knightscove's CEO, Leif Bristow, told The Post Tuesday that Knightscove had likewise never received any loans from the Lancer Group.



"Our dealings were with Holedigger Films," said Bristow, referring to a New York film company that is co-owned by Lancer's Newman.

Newman told The Post that a Lancer loan for approximately $3.8 million went to Blizz Productions to help finance a Knightscove-Holedigger joint production called "Blizzard," starring Whoopie Goldberg and Christopher Plummer. The film is set for release later this year.

Yet the Lancer portfolios show the loan going to Knightscove instead, with no reference to Blizz Productions, in which the Lancer official, Newman held an interest through his co-ownership of Holedigger Films.

Newman said he left Lancer "several months ago," and that the decision as to how to record all private loan transactions at Lancer, including the loan to Blizz Productions, were made by the hedge fund group's founder and general manager, Michael Lauer.

On another front, investigators are zeroing in on a mysterious off-the-books company, privately owned by Lauer, called Alpha Omega Group Inc.

The company appears to have been cut in on Lancer deals valued at more than $244 million.

Business records give Alpha Omega's address as an office in Stamford, Conn.

But phone calls to a telephone number at the premises were taken by a voice recorder and not returned.

In one recent transaction, a failing Seventh Avenue apparel company called JKC Group, Inc. was acquired by Lauer's Alpha Omega Group in April of 2002 for $1.5 million.

Then the American Stock Exchange-listed company was transferred to the Lancer Group, a legally separate entity, without the necessary Securities and Exchange Commission paperwork having been filed.

The under-the-table transfer took place in stages over several months last spring and summer, creating more than $26 million in seemingly bogus gains in Lancer's July 2002 portfolio.



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (789)8/3/2003 5:55:36 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 857
 
LOOKS LIKE HEB WAS ONE OF STRATTON OAKMONTS FAVORITES. HERE IS AN ARTICLE THAT MENTIONS HEMISPHERIX:

Could you fall this hard for a stockbroker's scam? (unscrupulous stockbrokers who prey on doctors and investment fraud)(includes related articles on cold calls from stockbrokers)Author/s: Doreen Mangan
Issue: Sept 7, 1998

findarticles.com

HERE IS A BLURB;

Pulling the plug in disgust

About a month later, Weber was on the phone again, recommending that Gardner invest in Hemispherx Bioapharma. This company would become the premier maker of "explosively wonderful" products for treating HIV and other diseases, Weber said. Gardner agreed to invest $11,510. "I'm going to trust you one more time, but don't ever lead me down a primrose path again," he said. In fact, the company's technology was not new, and its effectiveness had been debated for years among pharmaceutical researchers.

Gardner asked whether people in Weber's office were manipulating the stock price. Weber stoutly denied it and quickly changed the topic.

The following week, Gardner, who'd been unable to reach Weber, complained bitterly to Weber's supervisor. He griped that the broker had refused to sell when he'd asked him to, had never called to let him know a stock was dropping and warn him to sell, and hadn't sent any statements for months.

The man listened sympathetically and said he was unaware of any problems with Weber. "Everyone has their bad times," he said, and he agreed to sell securities Gardner asked him to unload. The Hemispherx shares went for $13,490, a $1,480 profit. The Select Media shares went for a nickel each, or $240 - a loss of $34,950. Czech Industries sold at a loss of $1,707.