And Pugs, you have told us the company is purposely(manipulatively) delaying the trading of their stock,to get all their ducks in a row: To: Jaxax (144 ) From: mawork1 Monday, Oct 6 1997 7:45PM EST Reply # of 317
October 1, 1997
VIA FAX 202-942-9634
Securities & Exchange Commission Attention: Mr. Al Lapins Tel. 202-942-4681 450 Fifth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20549
Re: Olympus Ventures, Inc.
Dear Mr. Lapins:
I would like to draw your attention to a classic example of fraud and market manipulation that will irreparably damage innocent investors.
The public filing made by Olympus Ventures, Inc. show there are 3,071,081 shares outstanding, including 1,656,680 shares issued under a Form S-8 registration statement filed in April 1997, File No. 333-24547. The S-8 purports to register 2,000,000 shares for the issuance of shares upon exercise of options awarded under the 1997 Employee Stock Option Plan. Under this plan, which is filed as an exhibit to the S-8, options may only be awarded to employees. This contradicts the Company's actual actions (according to Note 8 (b) of the March 31, 1997 10Q) of issuing all the S-8 shares to non-employees and not under option agreements. Most of these shares have been issued to investor relations firms. As a result the shares have not been issued under the "plan of distribution" set forth in the S-8 and therefore are unregistered securities issued in violation of Section 5 of the Securities Act.
The Company's Form 10-K for the year ended June 30, 1996 is a critical document for the S-8 since the Form S-8 incorporates by reference the reports filed by the registrant including the 10K. Form S-8 is not available unless the registrant has duly filed, and continues to file, its Exchange Act reports. The Company's 10-Ks for years ending June 30, 1995 and 1994 do not include certified audits by a U.S. auditor. The opinions given in 1995 and 1994 were from a accountant practicing in a foreign jurisdiction. The current Form 10K is also deficient for the following reasons.
a.) The auditor did not certify the audit. His opinion, in part, is as follows "Because of the matters discussed in the preceding paragraphs, the scope of our work was not sufficient to enable us to express, and we do not express, an opinion on the results of operations, changes in stockholders' equity, and cash flows for the year ended June 30, 1996".
b.) In Part III, Item 10, where the Company is required to disclose the names of its officers and directors, the Company answered, "Information sufficient to respond to this item is not within the possession of management and is not available to management". The answer is remarkable in that the Company's Internet home page lists its officers and directors, and they signed the 10K.
c.) In Part III, Item 11, where the Company is required to disclose executive compensation, the Company answered, "Information sufficient to respond to this item is not within the possession of management and is not available to management". Remarkable again in that the people who signed the 10K certainly know what their compensation is.
d.) In Part III, Item 12, where the Company is required to disclose security ownership of certain beneficial owners and management, the Company answered "Information sufficient to respond to this item is not within the possession of management and is not available to management". You are asked to believe that a company that begins with 521,601 shares outstanding, and issues 9,144,863 restricted shares during the year, doesn't know who they issued shares to. Each issuance of shares requires a resolution of the board of directors and a legal opinion to be sent to the transfer agent.
In my opinion the 10K, lacking an auditors reports, and lacking answers to required questions, is not really "filed", and the Company is ineligible to use Form S-8 or Regulation S.
In addition, your rules for an S-8 Registration also require the written consent of the accountants to use their audits for the preceding 3 years. As shown above, there is no audit for 1996. There is no consent from the auditor for the years ended June 30, 1995 and 1994.
The Company's assets are comprised almost entirely two sewing shops, valued at $1,320,902, based on appraisals from unnamed parties, which are located in Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic. These assets were acquired for 73,333 shares, which had they been free trading at the time, would have had a market value of $14,000. For the year ended June 30,1 996 the Company had a loss of $18 million on revenues of $1 million. After adjusting for a reverse stock split, there were 322,215 shares outstanding as of June 30, 1996.
Public filings show that since June 30, 1996 there have been 2,748,866 shares issued, including 1,656,680 shares inappropriately issued on Form S-8, 436,667 free trading shares issued under Regulation S (probably inappropriately since the Company is not current on its filings), 50,000 additional shares issued for services in September 1996, 105,519 shares issued for unknown purposes prior to March 31, 1997 and 500,000 shares issued since March 31, 1997 for purposes not yet disclosed by the Company.
It appears that at least 2,093,347 shares (68% of the total) have been illegally issued under S-8 and Regulation S, and possibly up to 2,929,894 shares have been issued for dubious purposes and are illegally.
Shortly after these shares were issued, and without any positive news from the Company, the stock suddenly jumped from $0.20 per share to well over $2.00.
I hope you can look into this situation.
Very truly yours,
Magellan Litigation Services |