Investments linked to controversial accountant                                                                                                          Odessa Petroleum Corp                                                   OPC Shares issued 15,013,254                                 Nov 17 close $0.05 Tue 17 Nov 98                                                   Street Wire Also Breckenridge Resources Ltd (BKD) Also World Organics Inc (WOI) Also Desert Sun Mining Corp (DSM) Also Mongolia Gold Resources Ltd (MGR) POST BOX 99 A POPULAR ADDRESS by Brent Mudry Two  employee  fronts  and  associated  holding  companies  of  a  Canadian chartered  accountant accused of potential fraud by police in the Turks and Caicos Islands invested in a number of Vancouver companies in the past  two and  half  years.  The  list  includes Pacific Vangold Mines, Mongolia Gold Resources, Lucky Janda's Desert Sun Mining and World Organics. In addition, an  offshore holding company partly owned by a key employee of Steven Scott Brown is the major shareholder of Odessa Petroleum,  according  to  filings with  the  British Columbia Securities Commission. A preliminary Stockwatch investigation  reveals  a  series  of  previously   unpublicized   offshore companies in Providenciales, an island in the Turks & Caicos bought private placements in Vancouver Stock Exchange companies. The offshore accounts are all linked to Mr. Brown and his associates. Vancouver Sun reporter Rick Ouston first revealed the Steven Brown story in Canada  in  front  page stories Monday and Tuesday, six weeks after a small newspaper in the Turks & Caicos broke the story. Secrecy is a much-honoured custom  in such offshore enclaves, but local Providenciales reporter Sheron Forde told Stockwatch she became aware of the fraud investigation  from  an internal  police  "wanted"  poster  seeking  Mr. Brown. Ms. Forde broke the story in early October, about a week after Turks and Caicos police opened a full-fledged   investigation   after   a   mid-September  referral  to  the Attorney-General's office. No charges have yet been  laid,  and  Mr.  Brown retains  the  presumption of innocence as police in several countries probe his handling of clients' accountants. Agencies involved so far include  the Turks  and  Caicos police, the White Collar Investigation Team, a Caribbean unit linking Scotland Yard and the FBI, and the RCMP in Ontario.  The  RCMP in B.C. are not yet involved. Court records and media accounts have identified Mr. Brown's  main  holding company  in  Turks  and  Caicos  was  Private Capital Management, with Apex Financial, Director Nominees, Secretarial Services and  Enigma  Enterprises as  secondary  companies. A review of B.C. securities filings by Stockwatch reveals several other related companies: Mercur  Capital,  Tintex  Holdings and  FCB  Capital. All use Private Capital's address of post office box 99, Caribbean Place, Leeward Highway in Providenciales, with the involvement of Barbara  Virgil or Vonice Parker, two employees Mr. Brown used to front his affairs. The exact status of Mercur Capital, a prime investment vehicle, is unclear. In  a  form  20  disclosure  for June 1997 private placement, Mongolia Gold claims Mercur is 100 per cent owned by  Mauricio  Kuperman,  a  Whitehorse, Yukon-based investor active in numerous VSE deals. Mercur invested $150,700 in this financing, buying 137,000 units at $1.10. Mercur was a key Mongolia backer,  investing  $200,000 in a pair of private placements in March 1996. The offshore company bought 200,000 shares at 50 cents in one financing and the  same  amount  in another a week earlier. Private Capital, using Vonice Parker as beneficial owner, was paid a 20,000-share finder's fee. In a form 20 for a March 1996 private placement, Pacific Vangold  president Dal  Brynelsen  claimed  Vonice  Parker was the beneficial owner of Mercur. Mercur invested $100,000 in this financing,  buying  250,000  units  at  40 cents.  Although this financing was the same week as Mongolia Gold's, it is unclear how Ms. Parker could have found herself as both  a  finder  and  an investor.  A  few  months later, in June 1996, Pacific Vangold sold 164,000 units at 61 cents in a private placement. This  time,  the  buyer  was  FCB Capital, using the same post-box-99 address. Vangold paid a finder's fee to a "Nicholas Barwise," who conveniently shared the same post box. The biggest Vancouver holding related to accountant  Mr.  Brown  may  be  a three-million-share   stake  in  Odessa  Petroleum.  Odessa's  predecessor, International Glendale Resources, paid the shares  to  Tintex  Holdings  in late 1996 in a vend-in of oil and gas exploration interests in the Ukraine. Glendale paid $130,000 and the shares to Tintex for an 80 per cent interest in  an oil production licence. Regulatory filings indicate Tintex is 50 per cent beneficially owned each by a Viktor Dmitriyev and Ms.  Parker.  Tintex also  uses  Mr.  Brown's  Providenciales  address. While VSE stock promoter Peter Tsaparas appears to be  the  brains  behind  Odessa,  its  best-known director  is  the  Right  Honourable Harvie Andre, a former senior Canadian cabinet minister and  close  business  partner  of  former  Canadian  prime minister Joe Clark. Worried clients of Mr. Brown have retained lawyers  to  pursue  claims  and assets.  In a court-filed affidavit, Toronto businessman William Kelly, who may have lost $1.2-million, notes that Mr. Brown told him he has an  office in  B.C.  and  "he  does  a  lot  of investment business there." "Given the extensive international travel that Brown does, the international nature of his  affairs, and the mounting criminal investigation in the Turks & Caicos Islands,  the  involvement  of   the   FBI   White   Collar   International Investigation  Team,  I fear there is a serious risk that Brown will either destroy evidence that might help trace the whereabouts of  Brown's  assets, or  Brown  may  flee  to  some  other jurisdiction where he may have hidden assets," states Mr. Kelly in the affidavit.  The  investor's  lawyer,  Greg Harris of Etobicoke, won a global asset freeze on Oct. 20. The total amount of missing money is unknown. Media  accounts  claim  the  tally  may  reach $20-million,  but  Turks  and Caicos lawyer Gordon Kerr, representing other Brown clients, believes the firm amount to date may be $3-million. "I  have heard  rumours as high as $6-million," Mr. Kerr told Stockwatch. The lawyer stresses that each transaction must be carefully  reviewed  before  amounts are lumped in. (c) Copyright 1998 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com |