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Gold/Mining/Energy : Caussa Capital (formerly Antares) T.CAU -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Donald F. DeKold who wrote (3056)4/9/1998 12:10:00 PM
From: Luc Beaugrand  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4718
 
Fix !!!

Hope you are buying till 1.50

Institutions will no more unload there shares....

***********************************

Thursday, April 9, 1998

Judge hands big victory to Bre-X investors

By SANDRA RUBIN
The Financial Post
An Ontario Court handed investors in Bre-X Minerals Ltd. an early victory yesterday,
refusing to throw out huge parts of a class action lawsuit against insiders, brokerages
and analysts for their role in the multibillion-dollar stock fraud.
Defendants including Nesbitt Burns Inc., Bre-X exploration chief John Felderhof and
chief executive David Walsh had been trying to have the suit whittled down in advance of any trial.
Their lawyers argued in pre-trial hearings late in March the case against them was not properly pleaded.
But in a decision last night, Judge Warren Winkler refused to grant their motions to dismiss key chunks of the
suit, saying allegations of misrepresentation and conspiracy will stand. But he added some portions passed
the test by a "mere whisper."
"This is a superb result for us," lawyer Harvey Strosberg, who is leading the suit on behalf of investors, said
from Scottsdale, Ariz. "All the defendants attacked everything and tried to get rid of everything. What the judge
did is say, generally, the actions stand. The only element he struck out is breach of fiduciary duty."
In his 39-page ruling, Winkler said Bay Street brokerages will have to answer to claims of negligent
misrepresentation made by investors who say they relied on the brokerages' advice in buying Bre-X shares.
TD Securities Inc., ScotiaMcLeod Inc., L‚vesque Beaubien Geoffrion Inc., Midland Walwyn Capital Inc., CIBC
Wood Gundy Securities Inc., First Marathon Securities Ltd. and Nesbitt -- and their gold mining analysts --
have all been named in the suit.
But Winkler made it clear the case against all of them is not equal.
"The main action does contain a sufficient pleading to sustain the allegation of fraudulent misrepresentation as
against Nesbitt Burns and [analyst Egizio] Bianchini, and against First Marathon and [analyst Kerry] Smith,"
he wrote.
"In respect to the claim against ScotiaMcLeod, I have serious reservations. Taking into account the minimal
threshold ... this claim is so scant as to only pass that test by a mere whisper."
In a move sure to be welcomed by the brokerage community, Winkler threw out allegations investment
advisers were in breach of fiduciary duty in recommending the stock.
"None of the plaintiffs has pleaded any specific facts ... which could serve to elevate the brokers relationships
above the status of information provider or order taker.
"Nor are there any material facts which, if true, could support a finding of vulnerability on the part of the
plaintiffs, or discretion in decision making on the part of the brokers."
He also refused to uphold arguments by Walsh, Felderhof and Bre-X vice-president Stephen McAnulty that
they cannot be sued in their personal capacity because they were acting as officers and directors of the
corporation in issuing press releases suggesting the Indonesian strike was among the biggest finds ever.
Winkler said the allegations, if proved, "are sufficient to attach personal liability to these defendants."
But he did stay portions of the suit against Ingrid Felderhof and Nancy McAnulty, until the case against their
husbands is resolved.
Montreal-based SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. had part of the case against it dismissed last month, but will stand
trial for breach of the federal Competition Act.
SNC's Kilborn engineering subsidiary provided an independent resource estimate that supported claims of a
massive find.
Such calculations, which were widely disseminated by Bre-X, were materially false and misleading and
therefore in breach of the act, the plaintiffs say.



To: Donald F. DeKold who wrote (3056)4/9/1998 12:27:00 PM
From: CIMA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4718
 
I have a question. How do you short a stock that trades at 30 cents?



To: Donald F. DeKold who wrote (3056)4/9/1998 11:18:00 PM
From: The Fix  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 4718
 
Sorry Donald.......Like I said it's dangerous to Short this stock at these levels. Once again for the record I'm not short on ANZ. You and I know the float can be played with as long as the stock is under 7/10ths (.70). Come on now lets not play dumb and dumber here. You and I are adults and we both know how this poker game is played. Nice little action today from "Your People"!

Gee.....Wonder why the volume picked up first thing before news came out? You figure anyone knew about the N.R. ahead of time?

fIXER