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


To: joseffy who wrote (18182)8/25/2006 9:00:12 AM
From: scion  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
Scammers strike on-line brokers
Portfolios sold off in favour of penny stocks

SINCLAIR STEWART
From Friday's Globe and Mail
theglobeandmail.com

TORONTO — A number of Canadian investors cleaned out their on-line brokerage accounts this week and then dumped the proceeds into a group of obscure penny stocks, including one based in Vancouver. There was only one problem: They had no clue they were actually trading.

Regulators and police are now scrambling to untangle a complex financial scam that has put a high-tech twist on the boiler rooms of yesteryear.

This week, a pair of Canadian brokerages, including BMO InvestorLine, discovered that someone had gained unauthorized access to a handful of client accounts, and then liquidated the portfolios. The money was used to place orders for securities listed on the OTC Bulletin Board and the Nasdaq pink sheets, apparently with the intention of manipulating these stock prices, according to the Investment Dealers Association of Canada.

Alex Popovic, vice-president of enforcement at the self-regulatory body, suggested this could be part of an elaborate "pump-and-dump" swindle, in which someone artificially inflates the price of a stock and then "dumps" it for a profit, leaving other investors with next-to-worthless paper.
Related to this article

"That's the supposition at this point -- that it is the 'pump' side of a pump-and-dump scheme," Mr. Popovic said. "Or, in the alternative, it could be a money-laundering scheme and it's a way of getting the cash out of the client's account."

So far, tens of thousands of dollars have been improperly traded, sources said. BMO reported two cases of improper account access to the IDA, while TD Waterhouse confirmed it is investigating suspicious activity in less than a half-dozen accounts, although it is not clear whether this is part of the same scam.

Mr. Popovic said he has notified the RCMP about the problem, as well as provincial securities regulators in Ontario and British Columbia. Authorities are still uncertain as to how the accounts were breached, but said there is no indication that fraudsters had penetrated the security systems at these on-line brokerages.

One theory is that investors unwittingly gave up their passwords through what is known as a "phishing" e-mail, a scheme that has become increasingly pervasive in the investment industry.

Essentially, fraud artists pose as a representative from a bank or brokerage firm and trick customers into divulging private account information.

Other possibilities cited by the IDA were "pirate" websites, which mimic the appearance of a bank's website, or even computer viruses that spy on users by recording their keystrokes.

Some experts have estimated there are as many as 150 million phishing e-mails sent over the Internet each day. A study by Visa two years ago, when phishing was still a relatively new phenomenon, suggested as many as 200,000 Canadians may have been victimized by these attacks.

The IDA was notified by U.S. authorities last week that a similar operation was afoot south of the border, and that the perpetrators were breaking into on-line trading accounts to buy the same stocks on the over-the-counter market. One of these unnamed securities is based in Vancouver, according to sources.

The IDA declined to comment on the specific stocks.

theglobeandmail.com



To: joseffy who wrote (18182)8/25/2006 11:01:36 AM
From: scion  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
Senior Judge Joseph F. Bamberger was publicly reprimanded yesterday by the state's Judicial Conduct Commission, which said his actions "shock the conscience." The panel said Bamberger would have been removed if the multiple counts of misconduct had been proved against him.

A public reprimand is all the Judicial Conduct Commission could do about it?

Being a judge seems to pay well, in more ways than one.



To: joseffy who wrote (18182)8/25/2006 11:11:59 AM
From: Kevin Podsiadlik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
"astonishingly, more than one-half of the total settlement funds" ended up in the lawyers' hands."

"Astonishingly"?

I thought that by now everyone knew that's how these things work.