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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill from Wisconsin who wrote (99659)7/13/2007 2:44:31 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Remember those scenes in Indian Jones movies where Indy finds himself in a pit of snakes, bugs and vermin?
----------------------------------------------

From Geoffrey Eiten's web site:

Case Study 3: EAGLE Wireless International, Inc.

The Company:
EAGLE Wireless International, Inc. (AMEX: EAG)

The Challenge:
It was a referral that brought EAGLE to NFC. It was 1998, and the Company was a $1 stock trading on the OTC Bulletin Board. Its business was telecommunications equipment, mostly for the paging, specialized mobile radio (SMR), wireless messaging, and remote data acquisition markets.

The Company had a vision, however, of achieving two goals. One would be to increase their shareholder base while increasing shareholder value. The other involved making the leap into the wireless world, and beyond that, the specialty niche market of convergent set-top boxes. To achieve these goals, the Company would need a broader distribution of news, substantial financing, and a way to underwrite an aggressive, on-going investor relations program.

The Strategy:
For EAGLE, NFC adopted a more traditional financial communications strategy. We knew that the best recipe for success for a company like EAGLE would be exposure, exposure, exposure PLUS a disciplined financial program.

Implementation:
The Company generated news on a weekly basis, and that became the foundation of a steady and effective release / fax blast / email blast / post on the web routine that kept EAGLE in front of the financial community on an extremely regular basis. In addition, we generated a four-page research report that was posted immediately to the web and mailed to about 50,000 members of our data base. Response was immediate.

NFC also sent EAGLE's CEO, Dr. H. Dean Cubley on an extensive road show, ensuring that our broker network remained completely up-to-date with Company developments. All this began reaping rewards in terms of exposure. The Company was inundated with press requests, and Dr. Cubley became NFC's most interviewed CEO.

On the financial side of things, we worked with EAGLE to implement an options plan that would, besides raising capital for the Company, provide well into the future for an aggressive investor relations program.

The Results:
In April, EAGLE moved to the Amex where, under the symbol EAG, it opened at $14.00 and closed at $19.00. In addition, the Company completed a successful call on its outstanding warrants that netted over $40 million - more than enough to sustain its convergent set-top box technology, launch forays into the FFTH and HDTV industries, and fund a well-developed shareholder relations and financial communications program.

IR Services | Case Study 1 | Case Study 2 | Case Study 3 | Case Study 4



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To: Arizona997 who wrote (117601)



8/4/2003 9:45:15 PM
From: TheTruthseeker Read Replies (2) of 149516

.(Amex: EAG)The EAGLE has landed. When we last left Mario Iacoviello, he was busy pumping EAGLE BROADBAND

On May 6 of 2003, EAG issued a breathless press release trumpting their
agreement with a private company, Media Fusion.
biz.yahoo.com

This PR describes a deal where EAG and Media Fusion will "combine their
two technologies" and will "set in place the foundation for an entirely
new class of BROADBAND offering for homes and businesses." Um, sure it
will, read on.....

So who and what is this Media Fusion, and what is their revolutionary
technology. Well, in the November 2001 issue of Wired Magazine, there
was a fantastic expose on Media Fusion and its slippery CEO Luke
Stewart. Read all about it here:

wired.com

In this article, you will see that Media Fusion previous had a deal with
notorious fraud Las Vegas Entertainment Network (LVEN).

sec.gov
sec.gov

Nice company EAG is keeping.

Of course, the EAG pumpers like Mario "Ike" Iacoviello clearly arent
smart enough to release the Wired article was published before EAG and
Media Fusion inked their deal. The EAG people have no excuses that they
"didnt know" that their new partners are no more than snake oil salesmen.

To: StocksDATsoar who wrote (117559) 8/1/2003 7:37:07 PM
From: TheTruthseeker Read Replies (1) of 149516

.Pt.1: EAGLE BROADBAND (Amex EAG), Remember those scenes in Indian Jones movies where Indy finds himself in a pit of snakes, bugs and vermin?

Its the same feeling investors will have when they look around and realize
what they are getting into bed with in EAGLE BROADBAND (Amex EAG).

EAG has suddenly become a big volume name, trading millions of shares a day.
Is it a coincidence that EAG has been using a new IR person, who goes by the
friendly name of Ike?

Turns out "Ike" is none other than notorious penny stock con artist Mario
Iacoviello.

Mario doesnt like to call himself a penny stock con man, he prefers to
describe himself as "a descendate of atlantis a warrior of peace in the
scorpio in neptune sense. i am a student of the late great Edgar Cayce. I am
also mostly of matter and seek the achievement of the higher energy, the
light the great white light in the name of love, grace, and god."

books.dreambook.com

The SEC, on the other hand, has some other things it thinks you should know
about Mario:

sec.gov

If only EAG's troubles stopped with Mario. More to come!