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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Naked Shorting-Hedge Fund & Market Maker manipulation? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rrufff who wrote (4721)2/5/2010 5:21:27 PM
From: rrufff1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5034
 
Ill. Employee Used State Computer in Stock Attacks
Ill. comptroller employee disciplined for using state computer in attacks on companies' stocks

By CHRISTOPHER WILLS
The Associated Press
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.

Using a state computer on state time, an Illinois comptroller's office employee posted hundreds of messages attacking the stock offerings and financial prospects of small companies, the office said Tuesday.

Comptroller Dan Hynes' office said David W. Pippy was disciplined for improper use of a state computer and his Internet access was revoked. The office also referred the matter to state and federal securities regulators.

Pippy's targets want more.

The companies are players in the murky world of "penny" stocks, where government oversight is limited and Internet rumors can quickly affect a company's bottom line. They claim Pippy was trying to drive down stock prices.

"That's illegal. It's stock manipulation," said Stephen Macklem, chief financial officer of Chicago-based Veltex Corp. "I'm shocked the comptroller's office has done nothing else."

Pippy declined to answer questions Tuesday, but issued a statement flatly denying he was trying to profit by driving down stock prices.

In posts on financial message boards, Pippy pointed out executives' past legal problems, questioned their sales claims and argued they were cheating investors.

Pippy posted often — approximately 135 times in November and December for just one company on InvestorsHub.com, where he used the name "Sky-King." The angry executives say he also went after other companies on other sites.

Shannon Zimmerman, an analyst for the financial Web site The Motley Fool, said that in the world of penny stocks, a single person has "the potential to wreak havoc." Legitimate information about the companies can be so scarce that Internet comments, true or false, produce significant swings in stock price.


Pippy, of Springfield, makes $49,692 a year as a public service administrator in the comptroller's office. He once served as president of an Illinois Federation of Teachers local that represents some comptroller employees.

The IFT has endorsed Hynes in the Democratic race for governor and has contributed to his campaign.

Hynes spokeswoman Carol Knowles said she could not disclose details about the Pippy case. But she said the office's Internet policy allows punishments that include suspension and even firing, and that Pippy's penalty was comparable to those for other employees with similar violations.

Knowles said there could be additional punishment if regulators determine Pippy did something illegal.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Copyright © 2010 ABC News Internet Ventures

abcnews.go.com



To: rrufff who wrote (4721)2/5/2010 6:15:15 PM
From: gregor2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5034
 
Heard on Financial News today, Barnes and Noble, has a 40% short interest. Looked up the results on the short tables and they had it listed as 41.4%.
This is impossible w/o a ton of naked short sales. Where is the SEC.....? The uptick worked for 70 years, take it away and we have a depression era crash. And the worst may not have come yet.



To: rrufff who wrote (4721)2/16/2010 7:06:38 AM
From: makeuwonder  Respond to of 5034
 
That guy was stupid. They make you sign a form letting you know they monitor your stuff and you are responsible for what you use your computer for. Geez, I don't know about some people. Oh well. He was warned.