SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : BRE-X, Indonesia, Ashanti Goldfields, Strong Companies. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Walter who wrote (27698)2/1/1998 1:12:00 PM
From: HPC  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28369
 
Does anyone know what the RCMP and their team of "experts" are doing on the criminal investigation? I am alarmed they haven't even talked to Felderhof yet! Have they interviewed any of the de Guzman's warehouse team yet? Also what happened to the security exchanges (US and Canada) investigations? Somehow I don't think no news is good news.

Henry



To: Walter who wrote (27698)2/1/1998 5:26:00 PM
From: Walter  Respond to of 28369
 



Saturday, January 31, 1998

Felderhof says he's a victim, too

By SANDRA RUBIN and RICK CATLIN
The Financial Post
Former Bre-X Minerals Ltd. chief geologist John Felderhof says while he's sorry for investors who
lost money in the spectacular gold fraud, he, too, is a victim.
In the first interview he has given since the scandal broke last spring, Felderhof complained he and
his family have been "hurt" by news coverage of the $6-billion swindle.
"It has been difficult for me to read articles in the media about me containing baseless facts and
innuendo," he said by telephone from his 1.18-acre Cayman Islands luxury retreat.
"But I am following my lawyers' advice not to have this case tried by the media but in a court of law,
with witnesses that will testify under oath. I believe only then will the true facts come out.
"It's been very hard on my wife and children, to read these stories about me in the press."
Cayman residents say the Dutch-born geologist is not seen often around
town, preferring to stay close to his 8,000-square-foot home in the gated
community of Vista Del Mar. It boasts five bedrooms and seven bathrooms
-- all with 17 foot ceilings -- a pool, patio, cabana, wet bar, wine racks, Jacuzzi, exercise room and
granite waterfall, as well as 175 feet of ocean frontage.
Felderhof, who took a two-week Caribbean cruise over the Christmas holidays, says he has
otherwise been putting a lot of time into preparing his legal defence.
"Contrary to baseless innuendo, I have been working very hard with my lawyers on preparing for
my day in court in Canada and Texas, and now Cayman Islands.
"I know one day I will be vindicated, as I am innocent of any wrongdoing or negligence."
Bre-X's bankruptcy trustee, Deloitte & Touche Inc., filed a $3-billion civil suit in the Cayman
Islands on Dec. 19, freezing all Felderhof's assets as well as those of his wife Ingrid and the Cayman
company they control.
Felderhof said he is "surprised and disappointed" at this move, but pointed out, "the [Cayman] claim
against me is one of negligence and breach of fiduciary duty -- not fraud."
He refused to disclose his net worth, on the advice of his Texas lawyer, Andrius Kontrimas, but
said "most" of his assets are in the Cayman Islands.
Among other holdings, the Felderhofs have about US$6 million in real estate there -- their
US$3-million home, two US$1.25-million condos and a US$435,000 house used by domestic
employees.
Felderhof repeated he knew nothing about the salting operation going on at Bre-X's Indonesian
camp, although he refused to discuss further details.
"As I have maintained from the very outset, I was not involved with, and had no knowledge of,
fraudulent conduct at Busang," he said.
But a new court filing in Texas Friday raked him over the coals for his role in the fraud and heaped
scorn on his attempts to get the case dismissed on the grounds he was just "a general manager in
Jakarta" forced to "delegate responsibility."
"Like Santa Ana in defeat, Felder-hof hopes to avoid punishment by disguising himself," said the
opposition to motions to dismiss, filed by Houston lawyer Paul Yetter.
"He comes to court as a lowly 'general manager,' he says, a mere hired hand with 'no power to
direct the actions of senior management in Calgary.'
"This is laughable. One need look no further than his positions -- senior vice-president and
vice-chairman of the board -- to reject the argument. In addition, his direct activities in connection
with both company operations and its securities marketing indicate the extent of his control, including
conference calls with analysts and statements to the media concerning the 'monster' Busang deposit."

Felderhof said in a conference call with analysts in February 1997 he personally felt "very
comfortable" with a reserve estimate of 200 million ounces.
In his motion to have the U.S. class action suit thrown out, he characterized those types of
statements as "vague" optimism that "no reasonable investor" would rely on.
Yetter fired back in Friday's filing that those statements were more serious and more specific than
that, and that Felderhof had "publicly dismissed doubts about Busang after they were raised.
"He later reaffirmed that he was '100% confident the gold is there.' These are not the sort of
statements that would be overlooked by investors, particularly in the context in which Felderhod
made them -- in his role as chief geologist."
The filing says Felderhof "quietly sold buckets of stock along the way" and he is now "in hiding in his
palatial estate in the Cayman Islands. Under the circumstances, Felderhof's challenge to plaintiffs'
allegations of scientar [state of mind] against him shows a gall unique even in the seamy world of
stock swindles."


BREAKING NEWS

MARKET WATCH

BIZ TICKERS

MUTUAL FUNDS

MONEY RATES

BIZ SEARCH

Thiessen to the rescue
Philip shortfall raises questions
Felderhof says he's a victim, too
Dow rally stops short




CANOE home | We welcome your feedback.
Copyright c 1998, Canoe Limited Partnership.
All rights reserved. Please click here for full copyright terms and restrictions.



To: Walter who wrote (27698)2/4/1998 5:25:00 AM
From: Aurum  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 28369
 
The plaintiff's lawyers in this case should note that Felderhof was told that the "whole core" assay methods were not appropriate, but Felderhof continued to strongly defend the methods. The scam only lasted because the cores were not split, as is the industry standard practice.