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Technology Stocks : COMS & the Ghost of USRX w/ other STUFF -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jeffery E. Forrest who wrote (8883)11/9/1997 6:43:00 PM
From: jhild  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
Jumpin' Jimminee Jeff, how long do we train our troops to use a gun like that? Certainly that would garner respect in NYC. But whatever happened to a simple weapon? Who's going to maintain a thing like that in adverse conditions? That thing looks like it needs an on-site service contract.



To: Jeffery E. Forrest who wrote (8883)11/9/1997 11:19:00 PM
From: Scrapps  Respond to of 22053
 
Bre-X CEO calls it quits

Chief resigns after fraud scandal leaves gold explorer bankrupt

November 7, 1997: 8:34 p.m. ET





Another Bre-X -- or not? - May 23, 1997

No gold at Bre-X site - May 5, 1997



Bre-X Minerals

More related sites... CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - A dark chapter in Canada's mining industry closed on Friday when David Walsh and his lieutenant, Steve McAnulty, resigned as officers and directors of now-bankrupt gold explorer Bre-X Minerals Ltd.
Walsh was chairman and chief executive and McAnulty vice-president of Calgary-based Bre-X, whose Indonesian gold property, once touted as the world's richest, was revealed to be an unprecedented fraud last spring.
Accounting firm Deloitte & Touche Inc. was appointed trustee of Bre-X's assets in a Calgary court hearing on Wednesday.
Lawyers representing some of the thousands of investors suing Bre-X had also tried to drive its parent company, Bresea Resources Ltd., into bankruptcy as well.
An Alberta judge granted the motion, but it was quickly stayed pending an appeal by the company's lawyers. Bresea, which owned 23.5 percent of Bre-X, still has about C$26 million ($19 million) in cash, but the money is controlled by the court.
It also owns various other assets including the squat, brown Calgary office building where Walsh controlled his stable of once-high-flying companies.
Deloitte & Touche said on Friday it was actively pursuing the recovery of Bre-X's assets "for the maximum benefit to creditors."
The accounting firm, which estimated the disgraced company could have more than 50,000 creditors around the globe, said it planned to place ads in newspapers and set up a website and toll-free telephone number to aid creditors in registering claims and getting information.
An independent investigator funded by Bre-X reported in October that the company's chief geologist, Michael de Guzman, was a key figure in the salting operation, in which foreign sources of gold were added to drill samples to give the impression of stunningly rich reserves.
De Guzman died in March after plunging from a helicopter into the Indonesian jungle in an apparent suicide while en route to Bre-X's Busang site.
Canadian Mounties have also been conducting a major investigation into the crime but have yet to announce conclusions or lay charges.
Walsh has repeatedly denied any involvement in the salting operation.



To: Jeffery E. Forrest who wrote (8883)11/10/1997 3:57:00 PM
From: DMaA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
Now I remember where I last saw that gun...The Man From U.N.C.L.E.