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Gold/Mining/Energy : Crystallex (KRY) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: marcos who wrote (7269)3/20/1998 6:33:00 PM
From: Natedog  Respond to of 10836
 
The Northern Miner Volume 84 Number 4
March 23-29, 1998

Venezuelan congressman challenges Crystallex --
Congressional committee offers papers to OSC By James
Whyte and Vivian Danielson

Miami Beach, Fla.

Calling the court actions launched by Crystallex International
(KRY-T) "judicial privateering," a Venezuelan congressman told an
investment conference here that the company's claims to legal title to
the Las Cristinas gold property are unfounded.

At a press conference, Rafael Rodriguez Acosta, president of the
Sub-Commission on Mining of the Venezuelan Congress, said the question
facing the Venezuelan Supreme Court was whether it should overrule a
decision by a Supreme Court justice that said Crystallex had no standing to
sue over gold exploitation rights on the Las Cristinas property.

Placer Dome (PDG-T) is currently developing the property, which has a
resource of 232 million tonnes grading 1.2 grams gold per tonne. Production
is expected to average 450,000 oz. gold annually for more than 14 years at
an average cash production cost of US$200 per oz. The operating company,
Minca, is owned 70% by Placer and 30% by state-owned development
company Venezolana de Guyana.

Acosta's remarks were immediately challenged by Crystallex: in a prepared
statement, President Marc Oppenheimer said the congressman "does not
speak for the government of Venezuela," and that he had "become a fixture
at North American mining conferences, with varied allegations regarding
Crystallex."

Oppenheimer said the matter was before the Venezuelan courts, and that
"Acosta's personal views are irrelevant" to the decision the court will make.
He did not, however, deny Acosta's central charge that the motion before
the Supreme Court, if allowed, would only signal the court's willingness to
hear Crystallex's case, and would not decide the title to the mining property.

Acosta said that despite published claims in the Canadian press made by
Crystallex and its promoters that a pending court challenge in Venezuela
could give it the rights to the Las Cristinas 4 and 6 concessions, "these
claims
are not true."

He continued, "Even if it prevailed in this court challenge, Crystallex has no
right to the exploitation of gold on these parcels."

In recent statements, Crystallex describes the legal motions to have the court
hear the title challenge as motions to have a right of ownership
recognized. In
a Mar. 4 press release, Crystallex Chairman Robert Fung said, "Our motions
to enforce ownership rights over the Las Cristinas 4 & 6 gold mining
concessions in Venezuela are before the Political Administrative Chamber of
the Venezuelan Supreme Court."

Acosta took issue with Crystallex's stand, saying the junior was only applying
to the court to reverse an earlier decision. "There is no basis in fact or
law to
believe that this decision will be reversed, but if it is reversed, Crystallex
would merely have the ability to file a lawsuit. It would not receive any
rights."

Acosta's congressional commission has also written to the Ontario Securities
Commission, offering to send copies of its findings in the event of an
investigation.

Crystallex is still under attack by New York-based Asensio & Company, an
investment firm noted for short selling. In its Mar. 4 statement, Crystallex
said it had instructed legal counsel to seek remedies against Asensio in civil
court, and would "pursue the matter" with exchanges and securities
regulators in Canada and the United States.