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Non-Tech : Auric Goldfinger's Short List -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patchie who wrote (17503)4/11/2006 7:22:44 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
OH YOUR CREW STILL SPREADING THE GLOBAL LINKS LIE. HERE IS GAYLE ESSARY SPREADING THE LIE ON October 31, 2005

"It is pertinent to look at the growing US controversy over illegal naked short-sales and its consequences. FinancialWire … posted an article in March 2005 about a Michigan man, Robert C SIMPSON, who acquired 100% of the issued and outstanding stock of Global Links Corp. Two days later, he found over 50 million shares of the company shares were traded on the bourses. This case came up for discussion by the Senate Banking Committee and was probably the earliest official acknowledgement of naked short-sales (without first borrowing shares, as is legally required).”"

StockGate: India Backs Away From US Financial Systems Due to Naked Short Selling /
FinancialWire®
October 31, 2005 (FinancialWire) Citing FinancialWire coverage of the widening financial scandals associated with naked short sales, Financial Express has said the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) must rethink any automated trading systems such as those used and proposed by the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp., which it said American investors no longer trust.

October 31, 2005 (FinancialWire) Citing FinancialWire coverage of the widening financial scandals associated with naked short sales, Financial Express has said the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) must rethink any automated trading systems such as those used and proposed by the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp., which it said American investors no longer trust.

Columnist Sucheta Dalal cited manipulative scandals involving Refco (NYSE: RFX) and Overstock.com (NASDAQ: OSTK) as reasons M. Damodaran, Sebi chief, should go slow on permitting short-selling by institutional investors. Short sales abuses have vexed and embarrassed American regulators as well as institutions such as Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) and Credit Suisse First Boston (NYSE: CSR).

Financial Express said that automation has its downsides. “Unless the regulatory system is constantly alert, ingenious crooks are always working to identify weak links.”

The article is at financialexpress.com

Dulal said that a “lending and borrowing mechanism is expected to prevent rampant price manipulation and keep out naked short-sales, that led to the demise of the old badla-based system of forward trading. Will it achieve this aim?

“It is pertinent to look at the growing US controversy over illegal naked short-sales and its consequences. FinancialWire … posted an article in March 2005 about a Michigan man, Robert C SIMPSON, who acquired 100% of the issued and outstanding stock of Global Links Corp. Two days later, he found over 50 million shares of the company shares were traded on the bourses. This case came up for discussion by the Senate Banking Committee and was probably the earliest official acknowledgement of naked short-sales (without first borrowing shares, as is legally required).”

“Since then, Patrick Byrne, CEO of a company called Overstock has gone public with the fact that his company’s float changed hands four or five times in a day. How, in a perfectly functioning lending and borrowing mechanism? And where are all the extra shares coming from to give delivery, unless there is a large incidence of illegal naked short-sales? Byrne has publicly alleged his father failed to get delivery of 200,000 shares purchased by him through a blue-chip brokerage firm. He is quoted as saying anywhere between 5-20 million counterfeit shares are currently in the marketplace, presumably on the major exchanges alone.

“The US debate is important, as their trading system has become the global standard for capital markets. It is, hence, pertinent to note that extraordinary trading volumes (yet unexplained phenomena in highly manipulated Indian stocks as well) and short delivery during settlements are increasingly being flagged as manifestations of a possible scam.

“More startling, many investors have accused The Depository Trust & Clearing Corpo-ration (DTCC), a holding company that clears and guarantees almost all trades in the US, of engineering naked short-selling schemes. The DTCC has faced 12 lawsuits in this connection. Most of these were dismissed, but the corporation itself has admitted, in a Q&A posted on its website, that naked short-selling occurs, but the extent to which it occurs is unclear.

“The DTCC’s stock lending and borrowing programme also continues to be under regulatory scrutiny by the NASD and other government agencies. The US debate attributes naked short-selling to counterfeiting and collusion between brokers, dealers and, of course, shadowy hedge funds. In most cases, the sales, accompanied by large, unexplained trading volumes, aimed to destroy the value of small companies.

“An October 13 report by FinancialWire also suggests research analysts, especially Net-based ones, also have a role to play in setting the stage for shorting. It quotes specific examples of alleged collusion between broker-dealers and independent research firms to publish negative information, to beat down the prices of target companies.

“This raging American debate over rampant price manipulation and misuse of automated trading systems is extremely relevant for us, since Sebi plans to permit short-selling by institutional investors. Indian investors, too, have noticed that a large and unexplained spurt in trading volumes always signals the start of a big price ramping operation. Our stock exchanges and regulators simply sleep over this phenomenon, even when these are pointed out to them.

“Second, Indian regulators are clueless about the true beneficial ownership of the most powerful market segment, namely, foreign institutional investors. Add Sebi’s record of poor prosecution of important cases and our slow judicial system and we have a recipe for serious trouble. Sebi may end by attempting to regulate institutional short-sales, while remaining partially blindfolded.”

Meanwhile, according to Financial Times, the $10.590,379,000 “securities sold, not yet purchased” line item in the Refco (NYSE: RFX) bankruptcy balance sheet is not only naked short selling, it is under intense investigation by authorities. The article is at efinancialnews.com.

FT says that the firm’s IPO underwriters Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) and Credit Suisse First Boston (NYSE: CSR) both have investigators looking into the illegal but allegedly widely practiced manipulative practice among essentially unregulated hedge funds and other financial institutions that now appears to be a naked short sales bubble that could imperil the U.S. and worldwide financial markets.

Overstock’s CEO Patrick Byrne appeared on News Corp.’s (NYSE: NWS) Fox with Neil Cavuto to state that there are at least twelve Refco’s “buried in the system,” and Cavuto said some say it could be as many as 60 institutions ready to implode. He said a “systemic” problem could cost the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. as much as $100 billion to clean up.

The video for this is at vmsdigital.com.

The line item was so unbelievably monumental that two of the major critics of naked short selling, Dave Patch, of InvestigatetheSEC.com, and Bob O’Brien, director of the National Coalition Against Naked Short Short Selling, were reluctant to positively identify the $10.5 billion as Refco’s naked short position. The Financial Times says investigators are not so reticent, and “have been unable to find which shares, if any, were involved.”

The document is at bankrupt.com

Critics have said that if you lift the covers off similar financial institutions and hedge funds, and even many of Wall Street’s top investment banks and brokerages, the $10 billion exposure at Refco could be multiplied 100 times over, and may inhabit every nook and cranny on the Street. Few companies initiate buy-ins, and such exposure is just bounced around, or “borrowed” from a DTCC. that may also be at significant risk should it be forced to call in its “loans.” The DTCC has also said that there are $6 billion in “fails to deliver” every single trading day. That could add up to some $1.5 trillion every year, not counting attrition from late deliveries.

Already the SEC and the U.S. attorney is probing a $1.4 billion hedge fund, Alexandra Investment Management LLC, and it is not yet known what that investigation will uncover. The fund has revealed that regulators are investigating “numerous participants” in PIPEs, an anacronym for private investments in public equities. Often such investigations end, however, with only a knuckle knock, with no restitution to shareholders of targeted small public companies.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is under heavy scrutiny as well over Refco since many claim it is just the tip of the iceberg in the illegal naked short selling scandal known as StockGate. Some 89% of those voting in The Investrend Poll at investrendinformation.com say the SEC should be “hugely” blamed for the Refco implosion.

Said the New York Post:

“It is believed the monies at the heart of the Refco scandal are in fact unsettled funds related to the illegal naked short selling, and many have theorized that there may be untold billions of dollars in other financial institutions and hedge funds in the same leaking lifeboat.”

The Post said no new laws are needed. Enforcement is needed.

When SEC Commissioner Annette Nazareth, the former head of SEC market regulation, was asked about the SEC’s lax attitude towards the Refco’s and its peers, she told the New York Times (NYSE: NT) that it was much ado about nothing, and that the uproar was only from people who “want their stock to go up.”

One can only theorize that it is this attitude that has resulted in the complete collapse of public confidence in the enforcement division of the SEC, as was the collapse of public confidence in FEMA. In his Fox appearance, Byrne said he does not expect the SEC to be able to clean up this situation, and hinted that it will require either judicial or Congressional intervention.Gadfly David Patch’s CNBC interview questioning the SEC’s involvement is at vmsdigital.com

His site, investigatethesec.com , has long held that the SEC has scrambled to protect illegal manipulators for fear that the lawbreaking had gone on so long and that it is so huge that it threatens the nation’s financial underpinnings. On CNBC, Patch again asked why the SEC can sit by and watch scores of companies listed on the Regulation SHO threshold list for almost a year, signifying that they are in continuous default of settlements required by the law.

He also asked why the SEC would try to “grandfather” the millions of settlement failures that preceded Regulation SHO, which went into effect in January. The “grandfathering” still hasn’t been court-tested as to whether it may be a kind of “pardon” that only a President may issue.

The SEC and the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. continue to stonewall any attempt to require transparency in the marketplace as to the extent of fails to deliver, which some see as just a euphanism for “counterfeit shares.”

This scandal comes hard on the heels of allegations of misdeeds by Gradient Analytics and employees of TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM), in conspiracy with David Rocker and Rocker Partners in manipulating the stock of Overstock.com (NASDAQ: OSTK) and others comes another explosive case, this time against Refco Inc. (NYSE: RFX), one of the primary alleged miscreants in destroying Sedona Corp. (OTCBB: SDNA), once a Nasdaq-listed company.

Not since the Enron and Worldcom scandals has the financial markets been under such growing suspicion, except this time the cancer is not just in a treatable part of the body. This time it has spread through the lymph nodes and appears to be present in every vital organ as scores of companies seem permanently entrenched in the threshold lists maintained by Nasdaq and the NYSE, signifying over three-quarters of a year of the existence of counterfeit shares and unsettled trades.

Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne, for instance, has released transcripts of discussions between himself and Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MWD) over shares that he could not get delivery on, and says his father has still not gotten delivery on 200,000 shares that he bought.

Byrne said that he believes between 5 million and 20 million counterfeit shares are currently in the marketplace, presumably on the major exchanges alone.

He has also added libel to the list of legal charges against Rocker and Gradient and others.

Former Refco CEO Phillip Bennett has been arrested on charges of deliberately misleading shareholders when they purchased shares in the company’s recent public offering. He had been placed on leave by his company as it launched an investigation into $430 million the company said was owed by an entity he controlled in a transaction that was hidden from the public.

The company had already lost $1.65 billion in market value, leaving investors in the public offering extremely angry.

Also fired was Santo Maggio, president of Refco Securities, whom the company said was believed to have known about Bennett’s activities.

According to the New York Post, Maggio was already “in the middle of an SEC probe that would have probably gotten him suspended one year from his supervisory duties” related to Refco’s relationship with Rhino Advisors, a hedge fund that illegally shorted the stock of Sedona Corp.

The new case winds its way right back to the growing StockGate scandal as the Post quotes a “source familiar with the investigation” that the receivables in the latest probe “probably came from short sale positions made from a shuttered hedge fund.”

The levees protecting the underworld of naked short selling, despite efforts of many regulators to try to prop up a system on weakened stilts appear to be crumbling, forecasting a potential Wall Street disaster that would not be unlike what happened in New Orleans and in other low-lying real estate.

An undermining of confidence in the “independence” of subscription-based institutional research, in the financial media that could even involve General Electric’s (NYSE: GE) CNBC and of course, the undeniable clout of already besieged hedge funds and the “King of Shorts,” David Rocker, whose targets are said to include Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia (NYSE: MSO), would be disastrous in the event of any one of them, but altogether, it could result in a total collapse as investors look for safer investment and savings venues than “crooked” markets.

In a commentary, Motley Fool said any “mirth” regarding “sith lords” and other irrelevant allegations are “obscuring a case with fairly broad implications for security analysis, First Amendment rights, and the credibility of our public markets.”

It said that in an affidavit recently acquired by The Motley Fool, and also apparently acquired by DealFlow and others, Demetrios Anifantis, who identifies himself as a former employee of the research firm Gradient Analytics, alleges that the company conspired with David Rocker of the hedge fund Rocker Partners to publish damaging information "for the purpose of negatively influencing the price of Overstock shares so that Rocker could profit from its existing or intended short positions in Overstock shares.

“Two additional sworn statements in our possession, ostensibly by former Gradient employees Robert Ballash and Daryl Smith, also allege that Gradient provided biased research on behalf of its clients. Both Anifantis and Ballash additionally accuse Gradient of running a hedge fund advisory called Pinnacle Investment Advisors, contrary to the company's public statements at that time.”

Motley Fool notes “the most detailed and apparently most damaging affidavit, if it is true, was delivered by Anifantis. He worked as a customer service representative for Gradient from November 2003 until November 2004. New York Post reported that he was fired from the research firm for forwarding his employer's client list to his personal email.

“According to his statement, Anifantis recalled being on phone discussions, during which "David Rocker, Marc Cohodes, or other representatives of a hedge fund called Rocker Partners, LP, requested that the special report contain more negative information, or that the report emphasize a specific negative fact and that the report downplay any positive facts.

“Anifantis also states that customers like Rocker would ask that Gradient not disseminate a negative report ‘to the public for a specific period of time, so the customer could get their own position in the stock before the public got the information.’ This conspiracy went beyond just Vickrey and Rocker, according to Anifantis, who also says that it "appeared" to him that Herb Greenberg, who then wrote for TheStreet.com, joined in coordinating the attacks on Overstock.

“At first glance, the affidavits raise troubling questions about the nature of ‘independent research.’ If the three former employees of Gradient are telling the truth, the alleged conspiracy between the research firm and Rocker Partners would represent an egregious example of market manipulation, which most likely would have seriously harmed individual investors, as well as Overstock itself.”

The Fool points out that “the veracity of these individuals has not been established, and Rocker Partners and Gradient vigorously deny the charges.

“As New York Post has reported, at least two of the affiants may have credibility issues or reasons to hold grudges against Gradient. If this case makes it to trial, Anifantis, Ballash, and Smith will have to testify in court and withstand cross-examination by top defense attorneys. It will be interesting to see whether their charges are supported by documentary evidence, such as emails, revised reports, notes of phone calls, and the like. Within the affidavits are charges that would prove quite persuasive if supported with concrete documents.

“For example, in support of the charge that Rocker had considerable input on the creation of reports, Anifantis's affidavit refers to an "exhibit 5" (which we did not receive) allegedly containing revised reports on Overstock with Rocker's revisions in brackets.

“Ultimately, we believe that these affidavits raise important questions for investors about the integrity of our financial system. Unlike a lot of the silliness in the media relating to Overstock, this complaint is not frivolous on its face, and although Overstock will need to prove its allegations, the case must be taken seriously. The question to us is why the atmosphere around this lawsuit has, from the beginning, been comical. If the behavior set forth in these allegations is true, then the implications of the ease at which the financial professionals can manipulate the public markets are stark.”

Overstock has been on the Regulation SHO list, the government’s official list of illegal fails to deliver, for “only” 114 days, far less than 32 other companies. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia (NYSE: MSO) and Krispy Kreme Doughnuts (NYSE: KKD), among others, have been on the list for 186 days. Legally, trades are supposed to settle within a few days time.

The affidavits, from former employees of Gradient, according to DealFlow state that the research firm provided “hatchet jobs” on companies chosen by clients “coordinated to deliver maximum trading benefits to them.” The affidavits state that reporters for TheStreet.com “leaked” Gradient’s negative reports to the market ahead of their release. It notes that Rocker Partners is the largest shareholder in TheStreet.com and that Rocker is a contributing columnist. The affiants also say that former TheStreet.com columnist Herb Greenberg had an office at Gradient where he ghost-wrote research reports for Gradient clients such as Rocker.

The former employees, one of whom had been fired after raising questions about Gradient’s practices, said the firm stated its team of 18 to 20 analysts were comprised of CPAs and CFAs when none of them had advanced credentials, and were instead recent college graduates with business-related degrees.

They also note that the research firm’s executives, Donn Vickery and James Carr Bettis, also managed hedge funds and a mutual fund that traded in the securities of companies covered by the research side.

If so, this, among the other allegations, is a violation of the “Standards For Independent Research Providers” at firstresearchconsortium.com.

Gradient is a member of InvestorSide, which told FinancialWire that a violation of its code of ethics, if proven, would disqualify any member from further participation in that organization.

Former employee Demetrios Anifantis, in a sworn statement, said that Gradient would regularly generate “custom reports” for clients, after receiving specific instructions from the clients on whether it should be a “negative” or “positive” report.

Many of the reports were redistributed to PIPES traders and hedge funds by Sagient Research, which distributes the Placement Tracker database of PIPES transactions. Sagient reportedly said it has not distributed Gradient reports since August, 2004. Release dates on the reports were said to have been often delayed for three to five days while Rocker and other Gradient partners secured short positions. These allegations were contained in several affidavits.

The affidavits said that an associate editor working with Greenberg, now at Marketwatch.com, Brian Harris, worked for Gradient to draft research, and had an office in a Gradient office in Seattle. It was noted that TheStreet.com removed Harris’ name as an associate editor shortly after Overstock’s lawsuit was filed.

The affidavits contain numerous other explosive allegations.

In other naked short selling developments, the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp., reportedly itself under NASD scrutiny for its controversial stock lending program that some, including an 11 state state North American Securities Adminitrators Association task force headed by Connecticut’s chief securities officer, and former NASAA president, apparently believe facilitates the illegal naked shorting industry, has been very secretive about the status of shares for individual companies, stonewalling even companies’ efforts to determine their true ownerships and short positions.

Brokerage and clearing firms are apparently under intense NASD pressure to settle failed short trades in Regulation SHO threshold securities or have their clearance firms do it for them at possible substantive losses.

The NASD is in turn acting under political and regulatory pressure from the 11-state task force.

Lambiase had publicly asked the SEC to “fix” the DTCC “problem” as it was considering the adoption of Regulation SHO last year, but taking a page from numerous U.S. Senators, he and other state regulators have grown tired of waiting for Regulation SHO to do more than simply shine a magnification light on the massive fails-to-deliver problem.

DealFlow said NASD officials are concerned that stock loan programs are being used to settle failed short trades in Reg SHO threshold stocks, which must be closed out voluntarily or through forced buy-ins within 13 days. “The regulators are concerned that the stock loan are being used instead of market purchases to provide the shares needed for settlement, creating new transactions that will ultimately fail to settle as well.”

The state regulators, DealFlow said, have been “highly critical of the SEC's decision to ‘grandfather’ settlement failures resulting from naked short sales up to levels that trigger threshold status under Reg SHO.”

NAASA was particularly concerned about Regulation SHO, because it excluded the small cap market from any meaningful regulation. “NASAA said the proposal included replacing the so-called ‘tick test’ with a rule that would provide a uniform price test using the "consolidated best bid" as the reference point for permissible short sales. This, however, would not address problems relating to the naked short selling of smaller, less liquid securities, because , NASAA argued, the requirement of the consolidated best bids meant it could not be applied to securities that were not subject to real-time consolidated quotes. That included Nasdaq Small Cap, OTCBB, and Pink Sheet securities.

NASAA also questioned the wisdom of grandfathering settlement failures under the threshold level, asking why the SEC was willing to permit significant settlement failures at all.”

“While there are instances when settlement may be legitimately delayed, existing regulations provide for extensions for settlement. If the Commission continues to allow settlement failures, it may well facilitate the harm that the proposal is designed to remedy,” Lambiase warned the SEC.

According to DealFlow, Lambiase urged the SEC to reconsider its stance regarding the role of the stock borrow program operated by the Depository Trust Corp. (DTC). NASAA wrote that as a threshold matter, NASAA believes that the Commission should explicitly prohibit the DTC from lending more shares of a security than it actually holds. The utility of the overall proposed rule would be severely impaired unless the Commission undertakes to implement such a prohibition."

Brent Baker, an attorney with Woodbury Kesler in Salt Lake City and counsel to naked shorting target and eight-month old threshold list company Overstock.com, previously spent 14 years at the SEC, including time in the Division of Enforcement, was quoted as saying he believes that the SEC tried, with Regulation SHO, to put "their finger in the dike" but failed.

“Three or four years ago naked short selling was being perpetrated by promoters in the micro cap world," he says. "they would publish 'exposes' on the Internet... and they would bring pressure on these little companies."

“However, short selling has changed,” noted DealFlow. He believes the SEC does not realize that abusive short selling practices have been adopted by others and are now built into business models of large, mainstream hedge funds.

Meanwhile, the NY Post has reported that traders in Nasdaq stocks are racing to beat a rumored regulatory deadline to close out their positions — or take huge losses as clearing firms do it for them.

“Naked short sales are trades executed without borrowing stock beforehand. Naked short sellers can overwhelm an orderly trading market, since unlike traditional short sellers, there is technically no limit to how much stock can be sold short illegally, noted the Post.

The Post also reported recently that the NASD and numerous state securities regulators, led by Ralph Lambiase of Connecticut's Division of Securities and Business Investments, have vowed to increase scrutiny of naked short sales.

“A buy-in is the worst possible development for a short-seller, since he has to accept any price given,” it stated.

It seems that everytime the DTCC, which is also the target of numerous lawsuits brought by failed companies and a scorching expose in Investment Dealers Digest, gets under pressure, it begins striking out blindly in all directions. FinancialWire can often determine when the heat has been turned up because it is among the media, also thought to have included Dateline NBC, that begins to receive threats from the organization.

In February, the DTCC interfered with FinancialWire’s distribution to Investors Business Daily, and in the past week it sought once more to interfere with another distribution, saying that FinancialWire receives monies for its editorial coverage of the naked short selling issue.

Marshal Shichtman, Esq., attorney for FinancialWire, has been in touch with Proskauer Rose, the outside counsel for the DTCC, warning it of slander, tortuous interference with FinancialWire’s business and because the DTCC is owned by two SROs, the NASD and the NYSE, of First Amendment violations.

Shichtman will be similarly warning the SROs and the directors of the DTCC of what he terms their risks associated with the ruthless, reckless and irresponsible actions of their clearance entity.

In a letter to constituent investor advocate Dave Patch, whose persistence in criticizing Federal regulators over the past several years for shareholder losses at the hands of illegal manipulators was at times a lone quest, often covered only by FinancialWire, Connecticut Division of Securities Director Ralph A. Lambiase, the immediate past president of the North American Securities Administrators Association outlined for the first time the efforts a “working group” of state regulators have been undertaking to assail abusive market practices that Lambiase said has been directly responsible for “an unmistakable loss of investor confidence by the arguably millions of investors who have lost their monies.”

It was an unusual move by Lambiase to outline the states’ enforcement plans in a letter to Patch, who has been vilified and scorned by many top regulators and institutions for his efforts, which includes the maintenance of a website, investigatethesec.com .

Lambiase said that his efforts, and efforts of others, such as Tanya Solov, Director of the Illinois Securities Department, Tanya Durkee, Deputy Commissioner, Vermont Department of Securities, and Rex A. Staples, General Counsel for NASAA, was stimulated by Patch, and an ever-growing group of concerned citizens who have “continued to champion the issue of reform in the naked short selling area for so long,” and added that it has been those grassroots efforts that constitute the “primary reason we are beginning to see reform of any sort.” Lambiase was clear in stating that it is “your determination and persistence in seeing that this wrong is righted is in part responsible for my interest, as well as that of other state regulators.”

Lambiase, whose initial letter to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission stated that the SEC needs to look at the role of the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. in allowing these abuse practices to continue, said that it seems “clear that had the SRO’s and the SEC exercised greater diligence in enforcing pre-existing rules, Reg SHO would likely have been unnecESSARY.”

He said his working group has begun meeting with SRO’s and issuers alike, and that it will “continue to exert substantial effort to remedy the remaining abusive practices in naked short selling until we are confident at the state level that the companines in our communities and citizens that invest in them will no longer be the possible targets of abusive naked short sellers.”

It had been previously rumored that the reason the NASD has been issuing subpoenas to a dozen or more brokerages over their “fails to deliver” and their failures to enforce buy-ins is due to those regulating at the Federal level not wanting to be trumped again by a state investigation such as occurred in several Spitzer reform efforts.

Lambiase so far appears to be taking the posture that the state group is ready to step in if the Federal regulators do not, thus “inspiring” the current efforts rumored to be occurring at the Federal level.

To make the point, he told Patch in the letter obtained by FinancialWire that “there remains a substantial distance between REG SHO and the ultimate goal of including substantive protections for small business issuers.”

It is these small businesses in our communities, Lambiase pointed out, “who take entrepreneurial risks to grow their companies through listings on the OTCBB and Pink Sheets. These small businesses not only provide employment for the residents of their communities, but also offer the general public the opportunity to invest in local businesses with promising products or services.

“While it may be true that a number of small companies lack the financial depth to succeed, they are nonetheless entitled to succeed or fail by their own honest business decisions and not as a result of the corrupt acts of abusive short sellers.

In what some believe is another swipe at the secretive DTCC, he said that “without transparency, we cannot, as yet, precisely identify each small business that failed as a direct result of abusinve naked short selling nor quantify the exact number of jobs lost to our local economies when these companies are forced to close their doors.”

In what is an unmistakable prod to the SEC, Lambiase said that institution is “moving slowly forward as Reg SHO in its current state is studied and debated seemingly ad infinitum. While slight modifications to the existing Rule may result from such an approach, a far more threatening pattern of abuse is certain to continue unless wholesale reforms are made to remedy the concerns of the small business community.”

He said that even Congress, whose members have also called the SEC on the carpet for the slow progress associated with Reg SHO may in fact be missing the point that “abusive short selling poses a direct threat to the economic well being of small business and the entire community.”

The 11-state task force reportedly was in serious strategy sessions a few weeks ago.

New York Post quoted one regulator as saying there is “an epidemic” of naked shorting. Regulation SHO has made that evident for the world to see. Numerous U.S. Senators have called the Regulation fully ineffective, and have repeatedly called upon the SEC Commissioners to get the practice under control.

The Post said that an SEC official confirmed to it “that no complaints have been brought in the nine months since Regulation SHO went into effect.”

It quoted one state securities regulator, Bill Reilly of Florida, as saying he expects the increased effort will result in more voluntary compliance from dealers, as well as enforcement activity.

That may or may not resolve the DTCC “problem.” Recently a stock transfer agent, Transfer Online Inc., had asked then-SEC Chair William Donaldson to put a stop to the control the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. and Automatic Data Processing (NYSE: ADP) are fast gaining over the transfer business, and to demand DTCC transparency.

Excerpts from the letter, posted at faulkingtruth.com , states: “Over the years as the amount of shares held at DTC has increased it has become more and more difficult to determine who owns the shares, who is trading them and if the trading is proper. This trend, and the resulting problems I will detail below, continues to increase because a minority of the total number of shareholders are reflected on the books and records of the corporation, most activity takes place behind the wall of ownership that is designated as Cede & Co. and neither the company nor the transfer agent has any access to the underlying information.

“Furthermore, DTC recently managed to put through a rule change (Release No. 34-50758A; File No.S7-24-04) that prohibits a transfer agent from representing any company who seeks to withdraw from the DTC system. This change effectively leaves companies with no voice or choice in the management of their stock and their ability to have any transparency as to what is actually taking place in the market in regard to their stock.

“I receive calls from companies seeking information as they watch millions of shares trade in a single day, who watch their share price decrease in value and who have no access to information regarding who is behind the trading of these shares, or if in fact the trades are at all legitimate. As the system now operates, most companies have a large percentage of shares on their books registered to Cede & Co.

“Given the importance of shareholder voting and communication one would assume that the same requirements placed on transfer agents as to accuracy and reporting would be placed on ADP and Cede & Co. as they usually hold or service the majority of the shares owned in any given company.

“I have found; however, that when presented with the tabulation reports from ADP the share totals they report sometimes exceed the total number of shares outstanding for the company. Let me restate this because it is a very important part of my concern about a system that is more and more headed in the direction of increased control by DTC. The shares presented by ADP, that are the shares voted by the brokers on behalf of the shareholders for whom they hold accounts, EXCEED when added to the shareholders of record the total number of shares outstanding.

“Where are these extra shares coming from? Why are there no controls on the number of shares held in the nominee name Cede & Co. vs. the ownership on the books and records of the brokers and why is the company not privy to any information unless it pays whatever fees it is told it must pay by the organizations that control the data?

“In fact, as the system is evolving, DTC is de facto becoming the largest transfer agent in the industry even though it is an organization formed by and working for the interests of the brokerage community. If, ultimately, the S.E.C. is in place to protect investors then this issue can not be ignored because in the end when the market is completely under the control of the brokers and the organizations that represent them then the market can neither be transparent nor fair.”

The DTCC actions in the StockGate mire are the most serious, if not notorious since the agent of two SROs, New York Stock Exchange and NASD is also peopled by some 21 directors whose companies, such as Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE: MER), State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), are unlikely to support the DTCC in its media censorship.

DTCC board members include Michael C. Bodson, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MWD); Gary Bullock, Global Head of Logistics, Infrastructure, UBS Investment Bank (NYSE: UBS); Stephen P. Casper, Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer, Fischer Francis Trees & Watts, Inc.; Jill M. Considine,Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC);

Also, Paul F. Costello, President, Business Services Group, Wachovia Securities (NYSE: WB); John W. Cummings, Senior Vice President & Head of Global Technology & Services, Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE: MER); Donald F. Donahue, Chief Operating Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC); Norman Eaker, General Partner, Edward Jones; George Hrabovsky, President, Alliance Global Investors Service; Catherine R. Kinney, President and Co-Chief Operating Officer, New York Stock Exchange; Thomas J. McCrossan, Executive Vice President, State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT); Bradley Abelow, Managing Director, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS); Jonathan E. Beyman, Chief Information Officer, Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH); and Frank J. Bisignano, Chief Administrative Officer and Senior Executive Vice President, Citigroup / Solomon Smith Barney's Corporate Investment Bank (NYSE: C), Eileen K. Murray, Managing Director, Credit Suisse First Boston (NYSE: CSR); James P. Palermo, Vice Chairman, Mellon Financial Corporation (NYSE: MEL); Thomas J. Perna, Senior Executive Vice President, Financial Companies Services Sector of The Bank of New York (NYSE: BNY); Ronald Purpora, Chief Executive Officer, Garban LLC; Douglas Shulman, President, Regulatory Services and Operations, NASD; and Thompson M. Swayne, Executive Vice President, JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM).

For up-to-the-minute news, features and links click on financialwire.net

FinancialWire is an independent, proprietary news service of Investrend Information, a division of Investrend Communications, Inc. It is not a press release service and receives no compensation for its news or opinions. Other divisions of Investrend, however, provide shareholder empowerment platforms such as forums, independent research and webcasting. For more information or to receive the FirstAlert daily summary of news, commentary, research reports, webcasts, events and conference calls, click on investrend.com

For a free annual report on a company mentioned in the news, please click on investrend.ar.wilink.com

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To: Patchie who wrote (17503)4/11/2006 7:30:18 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
By Patchie: Re: A Lesson for all the Financial Media Experts By Patchie on 4/1/2006 6:19 AM
missed...

You are free to spout off your lunacy but please try to think logically before doing so.

1. Global links, teh trade was fully executed and the shaeholder did own 100% of teh represented shares outstanding. Notice how the SEC has not taken any actions against Mr. Simpson for making a false SEC filing.

2. Carol Remond? Why is it her stories are always one-sided and her "sources" come from known bad guys? Didn't she receive a subpoena for her work? How come that is not listed next to her award winning GLOEB Award at the bottom of her articles. Question is, will she be in the mens prison or the ladies?



To: Patchie who wrote (17503)4/11/2006 7:35:16 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
ESSARY TRYS TO PATCH THINGS UP WITH JAMES CRAMER AND THESTREET.COM. YUK. YUK YUK...

---------------------------------------------------
"FinancialWire, which had republished the Stockgate Today articles under PATCH?s byline, removed them from its website after PATCH, the author, withdrew them."

===================================================
CRAMER Hasn?t Shorted Anything Since 2000; Has Never Sold A Share Of TheStreet.com / FinancialWire®

January 6, 2006 (FinancialWire) James CRAMER, the ?Mad Money? guy at General Electric?s (NYSE: GE) CNBC and co-founder of TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) has not shorted a stock since retiring from his hedge fund at the end of 2000, and he is prohibited from shorting stocks since 2001 under CNBC?s editorial policy, according to TheStreet.com General Counsel Jordan Goldstein. CRAMER has also not sold a single share of TheStreet.com, said Goldstein.

January 6, 2006 (FinancialWire) James CRAMER, the ?Mad Money? guy at General Electric?s (NYSE: GE) CNBC and co-founder of TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) has not shorted a stock since retiring from his hedge fund at the end of 2000, and he is prohibited from shorting stocks since 2001 under CNBC?s editorial policy, according to TheStreet.com General Counsel Jordan Goldstein. CRAMER has also not sold a single share of TheStreet.com, said Goldstein.

These revelations came in a letter from Goldstein to David PATCH, whose Stockgate Today articles of December 29 and January 1, at investigatethesec.com, became involved in a controversy after CRAMER claimed PATCH, in his articles, defamed him. Intertwined in all this is notorious short-seller David A. Rocker, whose most recent 13F filings show significant positions in Overstock.com (NASDAQ: OSTK) and Taser International (NASDAQ: TASR), among many others, along with ownership of 2,220,810 shares of TheStreet.com, just slightly less that CRAMER?s own holdings of 2,412,246.

Rocker holds 8.77% of the company?s shares, valued at roughly $9,280,000. Only CRAMER?s and Clark Estates holdings exceed his ownership level.

Some claim that Rocker is a significant reason many companies are on the Regulation SHO list, which the government has mandated to demonstrate the pervasiveness of fails-to-deliver.

Rumors have been circulating that TheStreet.com might have a buyer in the wings. CRAMER, a co-founder, no longer serves as its CEO. It went public in May 1999 at $19 a share, traded up to $70 a share and after the rumors surfaced, recently has been trading in the $7 range after having slid to around $6.50 a few days ago.

FinancialWire, which had republished the Stockgate Today articles under PATCH?s byline, removed them from its website after PATCH, the author, withdrew them.

PATCH is a well-known critic of the manipulative trading practices known as naked short selling, and CRAMER has suggested the practice either doesn?t exist or is not as widespread as PATCH and others, including Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne, believe it to be. The argument has grown more heated recently, and feathers ruffle more easily.

Byrne and CRAMER have recently exchanged unpleasantries, and CRAMER has ridiculed Byrne at TheStreet.com, especially in light of Overstock?s recent tumbles.

Byrne, on behalf of Overstock has sued Rocker Partners along with Gradient Analytics for conspiring together, basically writing reports that were negative but holding them back until Rocker, an acknowledged short-seller, could position ahead of their release.

In its most recent court filings of January 3, found at shareholder.com, Overstock states that David Rocker and Marc Cohodes via Rocker Partners, Rocker Offshore Management and Rocker Management, ?profit by selling the stock of a publicly-traded company that they do not own and then having the price of that company?s stock decline.?

The suit notes that Rocker subscribed to Gradient, at a cost of $40,000 per year to include Gradient in their campaign to drive down Overstock?s stock price, and claims that reports were false, and that ?the content and timing of those reports were actually dictated? by Rocker. This allowed Rocker, the suit alleges, ?time to position their portfolios to benefit from negative analyses the Rocker Defendents and Gradient published, under the guise of an independent report, regarding Overstock.?

This is where the ?thick plottens,? as the saying goes.

Gradient was previously named Camelback Research. An August, 2005 declaration by Camelback research subscription salesman Robert Ballash that is associated with the lawsuit states that Camelback/Gradient?s marketing material specify that ?the customer has the opportunity to influence the reports? prepared by the provider, and that ?it was very apparent to me that Rocker Partners either had a short position in the shares of Overstock or that he intended to be short prior to the Camelback reports? publication.?

TheStreet.com is not named in the Overstock lawsuit, but Ballash said in his affidavit that Herb Greenberg, then an editor at TheStreet.com, was a regular who ?logged in to review recent research reports.? At one point, he stated, ?Brian Harris, an editor of TheStreet.com, was retained by Camelback to draft research reports on particular companies.? He said he was listed as associate editor of Street Insight, a major hedge fund information component of TheStreet.com, and that there was no disclosure as to Harris? moonlighting at Camelback/Gradient.

Other reports stated that Harris? name disappeared from TheStreet.com website very quickly after the affidavits were first published by TheDeal, Motley Fool and FinancialWire. FinancialWire has no independent corroboration for this alleged event, but Goldstein did not respond to an inquiry about it, although he responded to virtually every other communication.

Ballash also said that Camelback/Gradient opened a ?special office in Seattle, Washington? for Harris and another individual.

Another affiant, former employee Demetrious Anifantis, had a similar recollection, and stated that ?it appeared to me that Rocker, Vickery (Gradient principal) and Greenberg were coordinating their attacks on Overstock,? and that Vickery and Greenberg ?coordinated the content and timing of their various reports on Overstock to please Rocker.?

Many of these allegations have been denied by those named.

A spokesperson said FinancialWire was not involved in the research, or writing of the PATCH articles, however; and with no independent corroboratons of any statements that may have been made, is unable to comment on them or Goldstein?s letter. Thus it was decided to publish the Goldstein letter in its entirety, in the perspective of the intertwining of relationships and allegations described in the filings above.

Goldstein?s letter to PATCH follows:

David PATCH

Author

Stockgate Today

I am the General Counsel of TheStreet.com, Inc. (?TheStreet.com?), which publishes, among other things, articles by James J. CRAMER, a columnist and our co-founder, Michael Comeau and William Gabrielski, both research associates. I write to you regarding two articles you have written in your online newsletter Stockgate Today, the first entitled ?Regulation SHO; Results Leave Questions More than Answers,? which is dated December 29, 2005, and the second ?If Short Sellers are so smart, why do they need to cheat to succeed?? which is dated January 1, 2006. Your newsletter appears to be published on a web site that you control, <investigatethesec.com>, and distributed by Investrend Communications, Inc,, a company controlled by Gayle Essary. These articles contain numerous factual inaccuracies and misleading characterizations and insinuations, which should be promptly and fully retracted.

The December 29th article begins as a discussion of the Regulation SHO threshold lists and rapidly descends into a conclusory attack on short sellers, in particular Rocker Partners, the hedge fund managed by David Rocker, and then into a hatchet job against Mr. CRAMER and TheStreet.com. After noting that Mr. CRAMER criticized Patrick Byrne, CEO of Overstock.com, Inc., for focusing too much on his campaign against short sellers rather than his business, you go on to describe Mr. CRAMER as ?a self-proclaimed short seller extraordinaire,? as a way of linking him rhetorically to the short sellers you have just vilified. In fact, Mr. CRAMER never so proclaimed himself. CRAMER Berkowitz, the hedge fund he managed from 1987 to 2000, was primarily a long fund. But far more important, he has not shorted a stock since retiring from his hedge fund at the end of 2000 and in fact has been prohibited from shorting stocks since 2001 under CNBC?s editorial policy. You use these and other false statements in the January article to create a false and misleading picture of the activities of Messrs. CRAMER, Comeau, Peltier and Gabrielski, painting them as short sellers who ?gang up to achieve success.? Since none of them is permitted to sell short, and only Mr. CRAMER is permitted to trade individual securities at all (and even then, under strict trading restrictions), this characterization is misleading, particularly given the false light in which you cast short sellers in the two articles. Your statement that Mr. Comeau ?admit[ed] to ganging up on Overstock? is false as well. You should review the record of public commentary in TheStreet.com?s publications concerning Overstock. Mr. Comeau made a grand total of one public comment on the company, a post on December 28, 2005 in which he pointed to a study showing that firms taking anti-shorting action have tended to perform poorly in the subsequent year.

You also assert in the December article that Mr. CRAMER ?brought his own company public in 1999 at an offering price of $70.00/share? and that ?Mr. CRAMER?s profits in the IPO far exceed the return he has provided to his shareholders.? You make similar statements in the January article, asserting that the Company ?went IPO in May 1999 at $70.00/share and hasn?t seen an upside since? and that we?ve suffered a ?90% market loss? since going public.? These statements are completely false. In fact, TheStreet.com?s public offering price was $19.00, not $70.00, and while there can be no doubt that some fortunate few may have been able to reap profits by selling their stock at or near the high of $70.12 on the day of the IPO, or at some lower price since that time, Mr. CRAMER could not be among them, since he has never sold a single share.

But facts do not deter you from using guilt by association, rhetorical questions and other devices to create the misleading impression that you?ve got the goods on ?Jim and the boys,? as you cavalierly call them. After your false recitation of TheStreet.com?s alleged IPO misdeeds, you point out that ?For the record Peltier never responded to any of the exchanges and Gabreilski [sic] responded by asking to be removed from the communication thread,? as if their responses were the result of a successful argument on your part instead of frustration over your insistence on making baseless accusations. Similarly, after a cursory description of the late trading/market timing scandals, particularly the malfeasance of hedge fund manager Israel Englander, you ask your readers (as you did in the article?s title) why a billionaire hedge fund manager would need to ?cheat to succeed,? and again attributed the lack of response to this rhetorical question to your having made a successful argument, that you ?had them there.? These insinuations are deeply misleading. TheStreet.com?s employees, even one who is a former hedge fund manager, could not possibly know why Israel Englander engaged in illegal late trading abuses. Furthermore, as you well know from your email exchanges with them, they made a good faith effort to engage in a dialogue with you until your offensive insinuations and accusations caused that dialogue to deteriorate and they simply stopped responding.

It is clear from reviewing the email exchanges and the two articles, as well as the rest of your website <investigatethesec.com> and Investrend?s publishing of your newsletter, that you and Mr. Essary have an agenda, which is to rally the investing world?s attention to the evils you believe are caused by so-called naked short selling, particularly as allegedly practiced by short-selling hedge funds such as Rocker Partners. The California courts have yet to rule on the claims brought by Overstock against Rocker Partners and others. But regardless of their merits (and I think it is curious that the lawsuit does not include any allegations that defendant Rocker Partners engaged in naked shorting of Overstock), these claims do not involve TheStreet.com, as even Mr. Byrne has publicly admitted. And while you are of course free to use the presses to persuade others to your viewpoint, you may not, without consequence, defame others in so doing.

In an email to me this afternoon, you agreed to remove the December article from your website pending your review of our comments, and claim that your goal is not to defame anyone with ?purposeful intent.? Unfortunately, your actions belie that claim. Although you were advised more than once in your email exchanges with Mr. CRAMER and the others that much of your information was wrong and your accusations baseless, you nevertheless went ahead and published anyway. Such reckless disregard for the truth of the statements you published is the very definition of ?actual malice? under New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964), and its progeny.

On behalf of Mr. CRAMER and TheStreet.com, I hereby demand that you immediately cease and desist from publishing further false or misleading statements about Messrs. CRAMER, Comeau, Peltier and Gabrielski, and issue a prompt and full correction of the false statements, characterizations and insinuations I have detailed above. Your retraction must be full and unqualified, and given the same prominence as the initial publication. Furthermore, if you persist in stating, directly or by implication, that any of the above individuals are shorting stocks or are part of a ring of short sellers, we will bring legal action against you to set the record straight.

Your continued publication of false and misleading statements following your receipt of this letter may expose you to punitive and/or exemplary damages under libel and other related laws, in addition to payment of attorneys? fees and costs for TheStreet.com and Messrs. CRAMER, Comeau, Peltier and Gabrielski.

Please confirm to me, within five (5) days of your receipt of this letter, that you will fully and promptly retract your false and misleading statements, characterizations and insinuations. This letter is without prejudice to any of TheStreet.com?s or Messrs. CRAMER, Comeau, Peltier and Gabrielski?s rights or remedies at law or in equity, all of which are specifically reserved. [END OF LETTER.]

Despite FInancialWire?s disclaimer in each article that PATCH?s views are his own, and are not necessarily shared by FinancialWire or its publishers, Goldstein persisted in identifying the FinancialWire publisher as personally allied with PATCH in a common ?agenda,? which he said is ?to rally the investing world?s attention to the evils you believe are caused by so-called naked short selling.?

When told these statements, unproven, bring discredit to the journalistic integrity of FinancialWire and defame its publisher at a personal level, Goldstein softened his allegation to ?you share Mr. PATCH's agenda of seeking to rally attention to what you see as the problem of naked short selling,? but never explained how he was able to determine the ?personal views? of the publisher through the publication of a columnist?s views, in which even the accompanying disclaimer stated it was not.

The sole purpose of FinancialWire is to distribute news and views, and items are not censored to fit the views of the editors or publishers. Goldstein was told if he wishes to publish conflicting views, FinancialWire?s distribution is available for him to do that.

He did not respond to the invitation.

For up-to-the-minute news, features and links click on financialwire.net

FinancialWire is an independent, proprietary news service of Investrend Information, a division of Investrend Communications, Inc. It is not a press release service and receives no compensation for its news or opinions. Other divisions of Investrend, however, provide shareholder empowerment platforms such as forums, independent research and webcasting. For more information or to receive the FirstAlert daily summary of news, commentary, research reports, webcasts, events and conference calls, click on investrend.com

The FinancialWire NewsFeed is now available in multiple formats to your site or desktop, free. Click on: investrend.com



To: Patchie who wrote (17503)4/11/2006 7:38:12 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 19428
 
"I see that you are living in the past the same way your buddy Elgindy is living in a cell. I'll bet you can't find a single post linking me to Global Links in over a one year period and yet in typical scam artist fashion you make it sound like it was a daily occurrence."

By Patchie: Re: A Lesson for all the Financial Media Experts By Patchie on 4/1/2006 6:19 AM
missed...

You are free to spout off your lunacy but please try to think logically before doing so.

1. Global links, teh trade was fully executed and the shaeholder did own 100% of teh represented shares outstanding. Notice how the SEC has not taken any actions against Mr. Simpson for making a false SEC filing.

2. Carol Remond? Why is it her stories are always one-sided and her "sources" come from known bad guys? Didn't she receive a subpoena for her work? How come that is not listed next to her award winning GLOEB Award at the bottom of her articles. Question is, will she be in the mens prison or the ladies?



To: Patchie who wrote (17503)4/11/2006 7:40:43 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
btw PATCHIE. DID YOU READ GARY WEISS'S NEW BOOK. THE CHAPTER ON "THE BALONEY BRIGADE" WAS SO TRUE.



To: Patchie who wrote (17503)6/22/2006 5:51:31 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 19428
 
investigatethesec.com

Sponsored by
RGM Communications Inc.
SanityCheck Bloggers
=================================

WWA Group, Inc. HOME ABOUT US NEWS STOCK QUOTE WWAUCTIONS.COM WWA ... WWA holds fully unreserved auctions at five facilities in the UAE, Holland, ... please contact Russell Godwin at RGM Communications Inc., 800-774-5133, ...
www.wwauctions.com/wwagroup/ index.cfm?fa=news.readMore&thisArtNum=61 - 13k - Supplemental Result - Cached - Similar pages

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

crimes-of-persuasion.com

Simon Cheyne of Franklin Asset Management offered unrestricted shares in World Wide Auctioneers WWA ( currently trading under the symbol NOMD, with the website www.wwauctions.com ) for $1.35, and kept pointing me to the latest dealings on the OTC market - $1.80, $1.90, $2.10 … said I was lucky to have reserved them while they were still at a low price.

He rang me on the day my ‘reservation’ was due to expire. I told him that I needed another 24 hours. He said that would be OK!

I could almost believe that a legitimate company would grit its teeth and stick to the agreed price after the share value had soared. I could even see how they would ring up to remind me that I was risking losing this superb offer if I didn’t move fast.

But to keep to the agreement – to sell $2.10 shares for $1.35 – after it had expired … well, I gave up believing in Santa Claus 40+ years ago.

He's telling me that there are a lot of people out there who would be willing to buy my shares at $2.10 or more, yet he's eager to sell them to me at $1.35. Come on!

Franklin Asset Management have also contacted me selling WWA. I have been speaking with a Anthony Francis.

If you are looking for further proof that all is not legit, then take a look at: www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr17654.htm below which details a criminal complaint about James R Harrold who is the big cheese at Franklin Asset Management.

09/01 - The SEC got an Order of Permanent Injunction against James R. Harrold, a resident of Indiana and the Entity Defendants alleging that they raised approximately $2 million in a fraudulent prime bank scheme. The defendants consented to the order without admitting or denying the allegations.

Even after the FBI warned Harrold in October 1999 that prime trading programs do not exist, since October 1999 through at least February 2001, they raised at least $2 million by selling investments in the Rubix Program, a purported "prime bank trading program" and are currently soliciting investors to invest in at least two other fraudulent investment programs.

In the Rubix Program, they made false claims that the money raised would be used to purchase prime bank debentures issued by top world banks; that their principal was never at risk and promised a 20% monthly rate of return; when actually the majority of funds raised were misappropriated and used for business and personal expenses.

UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.

Litigation Release No. 17654 / August 2, 2002

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. James R. Harrold, Franklin Management and Consulting, LLC, Accipter, LLC, Franklin Asset Management and Consulting, LLC, Franklin Management and Consulting, Inc., and Concord Development Group, LLC., U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Cause No. IP 01-1318-C T/K (S.D. Indiana 2001)

Criminal Complaint and Arrest Warrant for James R. Harrold are Unsealed

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Indiana announced that on July 26, 2002, an order was issued, unsealing a criminal complaint and arrest warrant for James R. Harrold.

On September 7, 2001 the Commission filed a civil complaint alleging that James R. Harrold ("Harrold") and the Entity Defendants violated the registration and antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws by operating a prime-bank scheme. On the same day, the Honorable Judge David F. Hamilton of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana entered a Temporary Restraining Order freezing three accounts controlled by Harrold.

On September 10, 2001, Judge Hamilton entered a Temporary Restraining Order freezing all of Harrold and the Entity Defendants' assets. On September 14, 2001, Harrold and the Entity Defendants consented to the entry of an Order of Permanent Injunction, which continued the asset freeze and enjoined them from engaging in violations of Sections 5(a), 5(c) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder.

The Order also requires Harrold and the Entity Defendants to disgorge their ill-gotten gains and pay civil penalties in an amount to be determined in a separate hearing by the Court. Harrold and the Entity Defendants consented to the entry of the permanent injunction, without admitting or denying the allegations of the complaint.

The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Indiana originally filed a criminal complaint, under seal, on November 29, 2001, and alleged that Harrold committed offenses of mail fraud, wire fraud and money laundering in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1341, 1343 and 1956(a)(1)A)(i). On the same day, Magistrate Judge Kennard P. Foster issued an arrest warrant that was also under seal.

The Commission wishes to acknowledge and thank the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation for the Southern District of Indiana and the Indiana Division of Securities for their assistance in this matter.

sec.gov

James R. Harrold, et al. Victim claims info

Plus also the link to this story from the Independent: news.independent.co.uk

From Simon Cheyne at Franklin Asset Management,

Further to our earlier telephone conversation, please find herewith the details of World Wide Auctioneers offering. It is also recommended that you go to the investor relations website at: www.wwauctions.com

From there you can access the full corporate profile, financial summary and management profiles.

Also for further information relating to our company, please visit our website at: www.franklinassetmanagement.com
I look forward to speaking to you again soon.

Best regards,
Simon Cheyne
Contacts:
43 1 99 460-6436 Tel
43 1 99 460-5000 Fax
Info@Franklinassetmanagement.com

Please find herewith the attached confirmation of your purchase of shares in World Wide Auctioneers, along with the payment instructions. Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions.
Best regards,
Simon Cheyne
-------------------------
Here are the details of the transfer forms:

Franklin Asset Management
18th Floor, One International Finance Centre,
1 Harbour View Street, Hong Kong

This is to confirm your purchase of shares in World Wide Auctioneers.
At: US$1.35
Shares Ordered: 10000 Amount Due: US$13,500.00

We have forwarded to World Wide Auctioneers all the details of your purchase.

In order to secure your shares please make your Telex Transfer as promptly as possible as outlined on the following page. Upon doing so would you kindly fax a copy of the transfer form to Franklin Asset Management's administration office so they can assist in the processing of your payment.
Franklin Asset Management Fax No. 632 400 0281
Contacts:
+43 1 99 460-6436 Tel
+43 1 99 460-5000 Fax
Info@franklinassetmanagement.com

Payment Instructions
For Franklin Asset Management Custodial Trust Account
Funds will be held with the escrow agent below until share certificates are prepared and available for release to subscriber(s).

The most secure and preferred form of payment is to send the amount due in U.S. Dollars by telex transfer to:

ACCOUNT NAME: Legacy Investments Ltd.
BANK: Standard Chartered Bank
1st Floor, Edinburgh Tower
Landmark, Hong Kong
ACCOUNT NUMBER: 447-1-066639-2
SWIFT CODE: SCBLUS33

* In order for our bank to verify your deposit, it is essential that YOUR NAME appear in the comments section of the transfer form.
* Please fax a copy of your telex transfer to: 00 632 400 0281.
All client funds will be acknowledged immediately with a receipt and the share certificates will be processed accordingly.
NOTE: Some online banks may require the Hong Kong swift code. This is SCBL HK HH

Interesting address for them as it has come up before..
See also EMC/ Bassettrent/ Prentace Gates etc.,

Basset Trent Ltd.,
18th Floor,
One International Finance Centre,
1, Harbour View Street,
Hong Kong.
Tel No. 852 2166 8038.

Since WWA is a traded company, as the target sucker I can actually see a share price. So, I'm offered 10,000 shares at $1.35, and I can see the price closing at $1.80, $1.90, $2.10 ... how can I lose?

A little more research shows that the volumes traded are very light - just a few hundred at a time, presumably to keep massaging the price up. 'Mr Cheyne' assured me that the shares had no restrictions and could be traded as soon as I had the certificate.

Maybe that's true, though a lot of people seem to have been assured that they were getting unrestricted shares, only to find out different later. And maybe my share certificate would arrive promptly, or maybe not. But to sell, I'd have to find a buyer. And that, I think, is where the real problems would start!

Simon Cheyne of FAM has been in touch again. This time, selling shares in Otis-Winston Ltd. They’re $4.25 per share. There’s a 2-for-1 share split about to happen, and after the split EACH SHARE will be worth $4.25! So, within days, I will have doubled my money! No restrictions on the shares, and I don’t even have to wait for my certificates. Franklin Asset Management won’t be charging commission on the deal, as it’s an introduction to their services.

I’m used to people ringing me up and offering me returns of 20-30% within three months. Too high, but almost believable. But 100% in a couple of days? Does anybody fall for a script like this?

I asked him about the WWA shares he had been pushing before. The ones he’d been selling for $1.35, with the quoted price about to go through the $2 barrier.

He didn’t really want to talk about them, but they are now apparently a ‘long-term hold’, whereas Otis-Winston is easy, fast money. I looked up WWA, and they’ve dropped back today from $1.50 to $1.40. No doubt they’ll start massaging the price back up again soon ready to call a new set of victims.

A lot of activity this week regarding Otis-Winston. Apparently, all I have to do is send them $4,250, and immediately (that is, 5 days later when the funds have cleared) I will be able to sell the shares for $8,500. I had two calls on Monday, SIX on Tuesday, three on Wednesday, one yesterday and one more today.

I said that I'm nervous about boiler room scams, and that a Google for "Franklin Asset Management" turns up a lot of criminal activity. They reply that it's not them - it's "Franklin Asset Management SA", based in Barcelona, whereas they are in Austria.

Their reply to 'The FSA tell me that it's against the law to cold-call people for share sales': they agreed, but pointed out that the law only applies to the UK. It's perfectly legitimate to cold-call from overseas.

I pointed out that the FSA (and many other people) say 'if something sounds too good to be true, it probably is'. They replied with a lot of guff about Microsoft and Harley-Davidson shares leaping in price. That isn't what I was talking about, I said. Those were possible gains in the future, whereas you're telling me that I can double my money virtually overnight, guaranteed. They said that yes, this is a very rare opportunity. Talked a lot about escrow accounts and security.

They were bloody convincing, and I've had to be strong-willed to resist the pressure. I'm sure they are having a lot more luck elsewhere. A tiny voice in the back of my head is saying 'you're a mug. If they're real, as they sound, you're missing out on a good thing.' A louder voice is saying 'Why on earth are they trying so hard to give you money. You've told them twice you're not interested; if there was nothing in it for them they'd have given up long ago.'

August 5, 2003, NovaMed, Inc., ("Company") entered into a Stock Exchange Agreement ("Agreement") with World Wide Auctioneers, Inc. ("WWA") wherein the Company agreed to issue to the shareholders of WWA 13,887,447 shares of its common stock in exchange for the 50,000 shares that constitute all the issued and outstanding shares of WWA's wholly owned subsidiary World Wide Auctioneers, Ltd. ("WWA Dubai"). The parties closed the Agreement on August 8, 2003 with the Company's acquisition of WWA Dubai.

NovaMed, Inc. 1403 East 900 South Salt Lake City, Utah 84105 Attention: Ruairidh Campbell, President Phone Number: (801) 582-9609 Fax Number: (801) 582-9629

biz.yahoo.com

Oct. 2, 2003--WWA Group Inc., ("WWA Group")(today announced that effective as of the commencement of trading Oct. 3, 2003, the OTC Bulletin Board will reflect the change in the company's name from "NovaMed Inc." to "WWA Group Inc.," which will trade under the new symbol of "WWAG
biz.yahoo.com

Nevada
WWA GROUP, INC
File Number: C24259-1996
Incorporated On: November 26, 1996
President: RUAIRIDH CAMPBELL

===
NOVAMED MEDICAL SUPPLIES CORPORATION
NEVADA
Status: Revoked
President: RUAIRIDH CAMPBELL

====
ALEXANDRIA HOLDINGS, INC.
1403 East 900 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84105
(801) 582-9609

/s/ Ruairidh Campbell
Ruairidh Campbell
Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer
July 15, 2003
sec.gov

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Stock Purchase
Agreement as of the day and year first appearing herein.

Alexandria Holdings, Inc. Kelly's Coffee Group, Inc.

/s/ Ruairidh Campbell /s/ David Wolfson
---------------------------- ------------------------------
Ruairidh Campbell, President David Wolfson, Vice-President
sec.gov
MONTANA MINING CORP.
(Formerly known as "Aswan Investments, Inc..")

403 East 900 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84105
-----------------------------------------------
(Address of principal executive office) (Zip Code)
(801) 582-9609

/s/ Ruairidh Campbell
Ruairidh Campbell
Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer
July 15, 2003

sec.gov

Aswan Investments, Inc.
The Company's officers and directors have used the services of Hudson Consulting
Group, Inc. and/or Canton Financial Services Corporation, both of which are
subsidiary companies of CyberAmerica Corporation. CyberAmerica Corporation, and
its subsidiaries have used the services of A-Z Professional Consultants, Inc., a
beneficial shareholder of the CyberAmerica Corporation. A-Z Professional
Consultants, Inc. is a Utah corporation, which is owned 100% by Allen Z. Wolfson. Allen Z. Wolfson is also the uncle of Richard D. Surber. All of the
above mentioned entities and their personnel have been used by Richard Surber as
either advisors or consultants because of Richard Surber's position with
CyberAmerica Corporation as its president and a director and his relationship
with Allen Z. Wolfson. Irrespective of Mr. Surber's relationship or use of the
abovementioned entities, it is the Company's intention to rely solely on the
expertise of its officers as advisors. The Company may rely on the clerical and
accounting services of Hudson Consulting Group, Inc., but will not rely upon
Allen Wolfson, A-Z Professional Consultants, Inc., Hudson Consulting Group, Inc.
or Canton Financial Services Corporation to find a potential acquisition or
merger candidate for the Company. The probability that a fee will be paid to
Ruairidh Campbell or Richard Surber is greater than for any other person who may
solicit the Company for a merger, acquisition or business combination.

The following individuals constitute all of the Company's Executive Officers and
Directors as of April 3, 2000.

Name Age Position
---- --- --------
Ruairidh Campbell 37 President and Director
Richard D. Surber 27 Secretary, Treasurer and Director
Aswan Investments, Inc.

/s/ Ruairidh Campbell
---------------------------------
Name: Ruairidh Campbell
Title: President/CEO and Director

sec.gov

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Stock Purchase
Agreement as of the day and year first appearing herein.

Aswan Investments, Inc. Kelly's Coffee Group, Inc.
/s/ Ruairidh Campbell /s/ David Wolfson
--------------------------------- ---------------------------------
Ruairidh Campbell, President David Wolfson, Vice-President

sec.gov

STAR ENERGY CORPORATION
(Formerly known as "Cairo Acquisitions, Inc.")
403 East 900 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84105
-----------------------------------------------
(Address of principal executive office) (Zip Code)
(801) 582-9609
/s/ Ruairidh Campbell

Ruairidh Campbell

Chief Financial Officer

July 15, 2003
sec.gov

Cairo Acquisitions, Inc.
The Company's officers and directors have used the services of Hudson Consulting
Group, Inc. and/or Canton Financial Services Corporation, both of which are
subsidiary companies of CyberAmerica Corporation. CyberAmerica Corporation, and
its subsidiaries have used the services of A-Z Professional Consultants, Inc., a
beneficial shareholder of the CyberAmerica Corporation. A-Z Professional
Consultants, Inc. is a Utah corporation, which is owned 100% by Allen Z.
Wolfson. Allen Z. Wolfson is also the uncle of Richard D. Surber. All of the
above mentioned entities and their personnel have been used by Richard Surber as
either advisors or consultants because of Richard Surber's position with
CyberAmerica Corporation as its president and a director and his relationship
with Allen Z. Wolfson. Irrespective of Mr. Surber's relationship or use of the
abovementioned entities, it is the Company's intention to rely solely on the
expertise of its officers as advisors. The Company may rely on the clerical and
accounting services of Hudson Consulting Group, Inc., but will not rely upon
Allen Wolfson, A-Z Professional Consultants, Inc., Hudson Consulting Group, Inc.
or Canton Financial Services Corporation to find a potential acquisition or
merger candidate for the Company. The probability that a fee will be paid to
Ruairidh Campbell or Richard Surber is greater than for any other person who may
solicit the Company for a merger, acquisition or business combination.
sec.gov

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Stock Purchase
Agreement as of the day and year first appearing herein.

Cairo Acquisitions, Inc. Kelly's Coffee Group, Inc.

/s/ Ruairidh Campbell /s/ David Wolfson
--------------------------------- ---------------------------------
Ruairidh Campbell, President David Wolfson, Vice-President

sec.gov
ALLIED RESOURCES, INC.
1403 East 900 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84105
(801) 582-9609

Date: June 4, 2003

/s/ Ruairidh Campbell
Ruairidh Campbell, President and Chief Financial Officer
sec.gov

INVESTNET, INC.
1403 East 900 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84105
(801) 582-9609

INVESTNET, INC.

/s/ Ruairidh Campbell

Ruairidh Campbell
President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director

sec.gov

EnterNet Inc ( formerly Secured Data)

EnterNet, Inc.
403 East 900 South Salt Lake City, Utah 84105 (801) 582-9609

Ruairidh Campbell, President With Copy to: Richard Surber, Esq.
1403 East 900 South 268 West 400 South, Suite 300
Salt Lake City, Utah 84105 Salt Lake City, Utah 84101
(801) 582-9609 (801) 575-8073

So, there are links between WWA (the share that Franklin keeps pushing) and Surber and both the Wolfsons.

Who was it said that you can tell a man by the company he keeps? Clearly Ruairidh Campbell (President of WWA) isn't on the side of the angels!

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