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To: Don Pueblo who wrote (93)5/24/1998 1:51:00 PM
From: Don Pueblo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 480
 
THE MOB ON WALL STREET--PART 1

businessweek.com
(c) Business Week. Written by Gary Weiss.

A three-month investigation reveals that organized crime
has made shocking inroads into the small-cap stock market

In the world of multimedia components, Phoenix-based SC&T
International Inc. has carved out a small but significant niche. SC&T's
products have won raves in the trade press, but working capital has not
always been easy to come by. So in December, 1995, the company
brought in Sovereign Equity Management Corp., a Boca Raton (Fla.)
brokerage, to manage an initial public offering. ''We thought they were
a solid second- or third-tier investment bank,'' says SC&T Chief
Executive James L. Copeland.

But there was much about Sovereign that was known to only a very few.
There were, for example, the early investors, introduced by Sovereign,
who had provided inventory financing for SC&T. Most shared the same
post office box in the Bahamas. ''I had absolutely no idea of who those
people were,'' says Copeland. He asked Sovereign. ''I was told, 'Who
gives a s---. It's clean money.''' The early investors cashed out, at the
offering price of $5, some 1.575 million shares that they acquired at
about $1.33 a share--a gain of some $5.8 million.

By mid-June, SC&T was trading at $8 or better. But for SC&T
shareholders who did not sell by then, the stock was an unmitigated
disaster. Sovereign, which had handled over 60% of SC&T's trades
early in the year, sharply reduced its support of the stock. Without the
backing of Sovereign and its 75-odd brokers, SC&T's shares
plummeted--to $2 in July, $1 in September, and lately, pennies. The
company's capital-raising ability is in tatters. Laments Copeland:
''We're in the crapper.''

A routine case of a hot stock that went frigid. Or was it? Copeland
didn't know it, but there was a man who kept a very close eye on SC&T
and is alleged by Wall Street sources to have profited handsomely in
the IPO--allegedly by being one of the lucky few who sold shares
through a Bahamian shell company. His name is Philip Abramo, and he
has been identified in court documents as a ranking member, or capo,
in the New Jersey-based DeCavalcante organized crime family.

James Copeland didn't know it. Nobody at SC&T could have dreamed
it. But the almost unimaginable had come true: Copeland had put his
company in the hands of the Mob.

Today, the stock market is confronting a vexing problem that, so far, the
industry and regulators have seemed reluctant to face--or even
acknowledge. Call it what you will: organized crime, the Mafia,
wiseguys. They are the stuff of tabloids and gangster movies. To most
investors, they would seem to have as much to do with Wall Street as
the other side of the moon.

But in the canyons of lower Manhattan, one can find members of
organized crime, their friends and associates. How large a presence?
No one--least of all regulators and law enforcement--seems to know.
The Street's ranking reputed underworld chieftain, Abramo, is
described by sources familiar with his activities as controlling at least
four brokerages through front men and exerting influence upon still
more firms. Until recently, Abramo had an office in the heart of the
financial district, around the corner from the regional office of an
organization that might just as well be on Venus as far as the Mob is
concerned--the National Association of Securities

Dealers, the self-regulatory organization that oversees the small-stock
business.

A three-month investigation by BUSINESS WEEK reveals that
substantial elements of the small-cap market have been turned into a
veritable Mob franchise, under the very noses of regulators and law
enforcement. And that is a daunting prospect for every investor who
buys small-cap stocks and every small company whose stock trades on
the NASDAQ market and over the counter. For the Mob makes money
in various ways, ranging from exploiting IPOs to extortion to getting a
''piece of the action'' from traders and brokerage firms. But its chief
means of livelihood is ripping off investors by the time-tested method of
driving share prices upward--and dumping them on the public through
aggressive cold-calling.

In its inquiry, BUSINESS WEEK reviewed a mountain of documentation
and interviewed traders, brokerage executives, investors, regulators,
law-enforcement officials, and prosecutors. It also interviewed present
and former associates of the Wall Street Mob contingent. Virtually all
spoke on condition of anonymity, with several Street sources fearing
severe physical harm--even death--if their identities became known.
One, a former broker at a Mob-run brokerage, says he discussed
entering the federal Witness Protection Program after hearing that his
life might be in danger. A short-seller in the Southwest, alarmed by
threats, carries a gun.

Among BUSINESS WEEK's findings:
-- The Mob has established a network of stock promoters, securities
dealers, and the all-important ''boiler rooms''--a crucial part of Mob
manipulation schemes--that sell stocks nationwide through hard-sell
cold-calling. The brokerages are located mainly in the New York area
and in Florida, with the heart of their operations in the vicinity of lower
Broad Street in downtown Manhattan.

-- Four organized crime families as well as elements of the Russian
Mob directly own or control, through front men, perhaps two dozen
brokerage firms that make markets in hundreds of stocks. Other
securities dealers and traders are believed to pay extortion money or
''tribute'' to the Mob as just another cost of doing business on the
Street.

-- Traders and brokers have been subjected in recent months to
increasing levels of violent ''persuasion'' and punishment--threats and
beatings. Among the firms that have been subject to Mob intimidation,
sources say, is the premier market maker in NASDAQ stocks--Herzog,
Heine, Geduld Inc.

-- Using offshore accounts in the Bahamas and elsewhere, the Mob has
engineered lucrative schemes involving low-priced stock under
Regulation S of the securities laws. Organized crime members profit
from the runup in such stocks and also from short-selling the stocks on
the way down. They also take advantage of the very wide spreads
between the bid and ask prices of the stock issues controlled by their
confederates.

-- The Mob's activities seem confined almost exclusively to stocks
traded in the over-the-counter ''bulletin board'' and NASDAQ small-cap
markets. By contrast, New York Stock Exchange and American Stock
Exchange issues and firms apparently have been free of Mob
exploitation.

-- Wall Street has become so lucrative for the Mob that it is allegedly a
major source of income for high-level members of organized crime--few
of whom have ever been publicly identified as having ties to the Street.
Abramo, who may well be the most active reputed mobster on the
Street, has remained completely out of the public eye--even staying
active on the Street after his recent conviction for tax evasion.

-- Mob-related activities on the Street are the subject of inquiries by the
FBI and the office of Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau,
which is described by one source as having received numerous
complaints concerning mobsters on the Street. (Officials at both
agencies and the New York Police Dept. did not respond to repeated
requests for comment.)

-- Overall, the response of regulators and law enforcement to Mob
penetration of Wall Street has been mixed at best. Market sources say
complaints of Mob coercion have often been ignored by law
enforcement. Although an NASD spokesman says the agency would
vigorously pursue reports of Mob infiltration, two top NASD officials told
BUSINESS WEEK that they have no knowledge of Mob penetration of
member firms. Asked to discuss such allegations, another high NASD
official declined, saying: ''I'd rather you not tell me about it.''

-- The Hanover, Sterling & Co. penny-stock firm, which left 12,000
investors in the lurch when it went out of business in early 1995, is
alleged by people close to the firm to have been under the control of
members of the Genovese organized crime family. Sources say other
Mob factions engaged in aggressive short-selling of stocks brought
public by Hanover.

-- Federal investigators are said to be probing extortion attempts by
Mob-linked short-sellers who had been associated with the now-defunct
Stratton Oakmont penny-stock firm.

Mob manipulation has affected the markets in a wide range of stocks.
Among those identified by BUSINESS WEEK are Affinity
Entertainment, Celebrity Entertainment, Beachport Entertainment,
Crystal Broadcasting, First Colonial Ventures, Global Spill
Management, Hollywood Productions, Innovative Medical Services,
International Nursing Services, Novatek International, Osicom
Technologies, ReClaim, SC&T, Solv-Ex, and TJT. Officials of the
companies deny any knowledge of Mob involvement in the trading of
their stocks, and there is no evidence that company managements
have been in league with stock manipulators. These stocks were
allegedly run up by Mob-linked brokers, who sometimes used force or
threats to curtail short-selling in the stocks. When support by allegedly
Mob-linked brokerages ended, the stocks often suffered precipitous
declines--sometimes abetted, traders say, by Mob-linked short-sellers.
The stocks have generally fared poorly (table, page 99).

Not all of the stocks were recent IPOs, and they were often taken public
by perfectly legitimate underwriters. International Nursing, for example,
went public at $23 in 1994 and was trading at $8 in early 1996 before
falling back to pennies. Short-sellers who attempted to sell the shares
earlier this year were warned off--in one instance by a Mob
member--market sources assert. International Nursing Chairman John
Yeros denies knowledge of manipulation of the stock.

What this all adds up to is a shocking tale of criminal infiltration abetted
by widespread fear and silence--and official inaction. While firms and
brokerage executives who strive to keep far afield of the Mob often
complain of NASD inaction, rarely do such people feel strongly enough
to share their views with regulators or law enforcement. Instead, they
engage in self-defense. One major brokerage, which often executes
trades for small-cap market makers, keeps mammoth intelligence
files--to steer clear of Mob-run brokers. A major accounting firm keeps
an organized-crime expert on the payroll. His duties include preventing
his firm from doing business with brokerages linked to organized crime
and the Russian Mob.

In the pages that follow are the results of BUSINESS WEEK's
investigation.

THE BOX
At about 3 o'clock in the afternoon of Sept. 25, 1996, three men
appeared on the 28th floor of 120 Broadway, Manhattan. They walked
into the offices of Sharpe Capital Inc., a dealer in over-the-counter
stocks. They were burly. ''Like lumberjacks,'' said an eyewitness soon
after. A gun was in the belt of one of the men.

The confidential police report of the incident (Complaint No. 10530,
First Precinct) reads as follows:

''At that point they asked the victim what he was trading in. Then they
slapped him in the head and stated again, 'What the f-- are you trading
in.' Then he slapped the victim in the head again.''

A witness recalls one of the men saying: ''Don't f-- with our stock.'' The
stock: Crystal Broadcasting Inc. After the men left, Sharpe stopped
trading in Crystal Broadcasting.

To the New York Police Dept., the incident at Sharpe was about as
serious as a scuffle over a parking space. A police source says that the
assault, categorized as a low-grade misdemeanor at best, is
considered closed and is not being investigated because the victim
was not seriously hurt, no gun was displayed--even though one was
observed--and the perpetrators were unknown. (However, one witness
ruefully notes, police did nothing to ascertain their identity--such as
examine a security-camera surveillance tape.) Sharpe's CEO,
Lawrence Hoes, declined to discuss the matter.

But BUSINESS WEEK learned that the assault at Sharpe was not an
isolated incident. Rather, it was part of a systematic pattern of
intimidation. By eliminating competing market makers and allowing
only cooperating brokers to bid on stocks, the result is a kind of rigged
auction--with the prices where desired, and the spreads between bid
and ask prices kept as wide as possible. In Street parlance, this
process of rigging the market in a stock is known as ''boxing'' a stock. It
is part of the lexicon of the Mob's dominion on Wall Street (page 99).

The box is the heart of most stock-manipulation schemes. In the case of
Crystal, the trader at Sharpe was suspected of ''cracking the spread.''
According to market sources who were familiar with the trading in
Crystal that day, Sharpe was blamed, in effect, for doing what a market
maker is supposed to do--get the best possible price for its customers
and keeping the spreads as narrow as possible. During the day,
Crystal traded as low as 4, well below the 5 1/8 closing price of the day
before, and the spreads narrowed as well, to a relatively reasonable 4
3/8 bid and 4 7/8 ask. Sharpe was blamed for that benign--to most
people--market action.

In the weeks following the Sharpe incident, Crystal shares were trading
at the kind of spreads that can only happen when the market is tightly
controlled. If you buy it from a dealer, you pay the ask price, $3.50. But
when you sell it, you get the bid--56.2 cents. (Crystal's president,
Joseph Newman, said he had no knowledge of coercion of market
makers in his stock.)

Sometimes the maneuvering involved in creating and exploiting the box
can be as subtle as a bison in a china shop. One West Coast investor,
who requested anonymity, says that brokers at a small New York firm,
Monitor Investment Group, convinced him that two small-cap
stocks--International Nursing Services and Beachport
Entertainment--were about to be pushed upward. Says the investor:
''They said they had a handle on all this stock. They said they'd run it up
and get me out of it in a week.''

So sometime around last New Year's Day, he bought warrants and a
big block of the stock--100,000 shares of International Nursing and
85,000 of Beachport. When he tried to sell, he says, his brokers flatly
refused. The shares, which had started heading southward almost from
the moment he bought them, plummeted. They're now worth one-fifth of
what he paid. Monitor Chairman William F. Palla denies the firm was
involved in stock manipulation but concedes a broker may have
promised a runup but not really meant it.

Sometimes, of course, thinly traded stocks can be run down by
aggressive short sellers, and the Mob is alleged by Street sources to
have profited from that as well. One target of investigators, sources say,
is a coterie of brokers formerly associated with the defunct penny-stock
brokerage of Stratton Oakmont. Sources familiar with the investigation
say that authorities are exploring charges that some of these brokers,
after Stratton's demise, may have extorted money from their former
colleagues in the business--allegedly threatening to short-sell stocks
underwritten by those firms. According to sources, the Stratton brokers
allegedly shared their profits with a member of a New York crime
family.

Among the trading being investigated, sources say, are stocks
underwritten by a penny-stock firm called State Street Capital Markets.
Stocks brought public by the New York-based firm--Fun Tyme
Concepts, U.S. Bridge of N.Y., and Cable & Co. Worldwide--were
pummeled in the market last August, and trading in the stocks is
allegedly being probed. At the time, State Street maintained that its
shares were victimized by concerted short-selling. State Street officials
did not return phone calls, and Stratton officials could not be reached
for comment.

''YOU'VE MADE A FRIEND''
First Colonial Ventures Ltd. is a minor venture-capital firm whose stock
trades on the OTC bulletin board--so small that it is not required to file
more than token disclosures with the Securities & Exchange
Commission. But for market makers in small-cap stocks, First Colonial
looms huge. It is an object lesson: When the Mob speaks, market
makers obey.

The incidents took place early in October, one week after the assault at
Sharpe. First came a beating. A trader at Naib Trading Corp. in Fort
Lauderdale was summoned to the office of a man by the name of Roy
Ageloff. The trader has told associates that Ageloff had beaten him
once before with a nail-pierced baseball bat. This time, he said, Ageloff
left the room. Then a 400-pound hoodlum knocked him down and
kicked him while he was on the floor. The message: Stay away from
First Colonial.

The trader at Naib was not the only one to suffer ''persuasion'' over First
Colonial. Sources say that four other firms were approached with
warnings to cease trading in the stock. To be sure, it was not a total
success. There was one rebuff: A market maker in the little town of
Hurst, Tex., Anthony Elgindy of Key West Securities Inc., says he
ignored warnings that traders who did not comply would soon be
''facing the ceiling''--and has received numerous threatening phone
calls since then. But at two other market makers, the intimidation
worked. They ceased making a market in First Colonial.

The market makers dropping the stock were William V. Frankel & Co.
in Jersey City, N.J., and the biggest name in NASDAQ stocks: Herzog,
Heine, Geduld. Sources say traders at both firms quit trading the stock
after receiving menacing visits at their offices. ''We decided we
shouldn't get involved in a stock like that,'' says Herzog's head trader,
Irwin Geduld. Was anyone at his firm threatened? ''We weren't,'' said
Geduld. ''Someone else was.'' (A Frankel trader, who declined to give
his name, says: ''We have no comment whatsoever about First Colonial
Ventures.'') Even a brokerage that was not a market maker, D.L.
Cromwell Investments Inc. in Boca Raton, received a visit from a thug, a
source says. The visitor left after demanding, and being shown, proof
that the firm was not a short-seller in the stock. Cromwell officials
declined comment.

Sources say that traders who caved in to coercion later received
expensive bottles of liquor with a note that read: ''You've made a
friend.'' But the market makers who dropped First Colonial were
making no new pals among investors. Since the incident, the ask price
paid by the public for buying First Colonial stock has climbed--from a
low of $1.13 on Oct. 2 to as high as $4.13 in recent trading. But the bid
price that the public gets when selling the stock back to the Street has
been far less buoyant. The bid promptly rose from a low of 87 cents on
Oct. 2 to $1.50 and has stayed at about that level, even as the ask price
has skyrocketed to almost three times that figure. (On Oct. 4, according
to a letter sent to market makers obtained by BUSINESS WEEK, the
NASD launched an inquiry into the dropping of First Colonial stock by
market makers. The NASD declined comment on the investigation.)

Who was behind the wave of intimidation over First Colonial?
NASDAQ trading figures point toward a New York-based firm called
PCM Securities Ltd. PCM was the largest market maker in First
Colonial in September, with 48% of the trades. By October, however,
this rose to 75%. PCM completely dominated the market in First
Colonial.

Although he is not listed in NASD records as a control person or even
as an employee of PCM--or of any other brokerage--Street sources say
that the power behind PCM is the 37-year-old Ageloff. He did not
respond to numerous messages left at PCM's office in Boca Raton. An
employee there said Ageloff nowadays spends most of his time there,
punctuated by frequent visits to New York. Asked about Ageloff, Steven
Edelson, PCM's principal, denied that Ageloff has any role in the firm
and says he has met him only once. Edelson had no comment on its
trading in First Colonial, and First Colonial President Murray
Goldenberg said he was ''shocked'' to hear reports of intimidation of
market makers.

(continued in next post)



To: Don Pueblo who wrote (93)5/24/1998 1:54:00 PM
From: Don Pueblo  Respond to of 480
 
THE MOB ON WALL STREET (con't)

businessweek.com
(c) Business Week. Written by Gary Weiss.

A TALE OF TWO MARKETS
Even though NASD records show Ageloff has not been officially
associated with any brokerage firm over the past two years, he is a
widely known figure in small-cap stock circles. Why would market
makers drop a stock just because Ageloff tells them--even when he is
not accompanied by ''persuasion''? Street sources say the fear he
inspires is justified: The force that drives Ageloff, they maintain, is a
59-year-old man who, on official record at least, has never set foot on
Wall Street. He is Alphonse Malangone, otherwise known as ''Allie
Shades,'' and his few appearances in the public record pertain almost
exclusively to another market--the Fulton Fish Market.

''Allie Shades'' Malangone is the Zelig of the Mob's Wall Street coterie.
For years, he has been observed by investigators in lower Manhattan,
ensconced in the twin worlds of the Fulton Fish Market and the stock
market. To law enforcement he is an alleged loan shark and gambler, a
longtime power behind Mob control of the Fulton market, and he is
described in court proceedings by federal and state law enforcement
officials as a capo in the Genovese crime family.

But to the very few Wall Streeters who know him, he is a sophisticated
market player who is an expert at ''working the spreads''--getting in at
the bid price and exiting at the ask price, with the help of cooperative
traders. ''He's very smart, very articulate,'' says one investigator. ''When
you hear him on the wire, he would couch what he would say in
gambling phrases'' to mislead investigators.

Investigators are not fooled, but despite close surveillance and wiretaps
dating back to the 1980s and perhaps before, they have been unable to
make a case against Malangone and other reputed Fulton market
mobsters for their suspected activities on Wall Street. One longtime
Malangone-watcher recalls that the Fulton market was believed by
law-enforcement authorities in the early '80s to be a clearinghouse for
stolen bonds. But nothing was ever proven.

Investigators thought they were on to something, finally, in 1985. They
had in their sights two big fish, so to speak--Malangone and Vincent
Romano, also identified in court papers as an alleged Genovese family
member who was suspected of involvement in the Fulton market.
Malangone and Romano were probed by federal and local authorities
for their alleged manipulation of a pharmaceutical company stock,
Nu-Med Inc., a company that later declared bankruptcy. Investigators
believed that the two men had a position in Nu-Med shares. The
investigation was never made public, for authorities couldn't build a
case against Malangone and Romano. Efforts to reach the two men
were unsuccessful.

Sources on Wall Street say that Malangone was a behind- the-scenes
player in the biggest penny-stock fiasco of recent years: Hanover
Sterling. According to sources, Malangone controlled Hanover through
his right-hand man, Alan Longo, who has been identified by federal
authorities in court filings as a member of the Genovese family. Longo,
who is described by acquaintances as a heavy gambler, is said by
sources to have worked directly with Ageloff in Hanover and other
market ventures.

Ageloff--in concert with his alleged Mob contacts--is believed by market
sources to have been the hidden control person at Hanover. It went out
of business in early 1995 and resulted in the demise of the firm that it
cleared through, Adler, Coleman & Co. An attorney for the trustee in the
Adler Coleman bankruptcy, Mitchell A. Lowenthal, says that his firm,
Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton, has discovered evidence that 65%
of Hanover's profits were shared by Ageloff and another Hanover
official. Efforts to reach Hanover execs were unsuccessful.

Street sources say that the Mob was involved in both sides of the
Hanover-Adler imbroglio. The Malangone-Longo-Ageloff faction, they
say, profited from the runup in Hanover stocks, while other mobsters
allegedly sold short the Hanover stocks and pushed their prices
downward--to the chagrin of the Malangone faction. This internecine
dispute, sources close to Hanover say, was eventually resolved without
bloodshed, but only after some tense meetings between Mob factions.
Lowenthal says that his firm's investigation has shown that ''Ageloff and
some of the shorts were all connected [to the Mob] in one way or the
other,'' but nothing was proven.

According to people close to the Hanover Sterling machinations, the
Mob was represented on the short side through Falcon Trading Group
and Sovereign Equity Management Corp. And those brokerages,
sources say, are controlled by the alleged SC&T profiteer--a
silver-haired, 51-year-old resident of northern New Jersey named Philip
C. Abramo.

Abramo's name has never surfaced in any of the thousands of pages of
deposition testimony taken by the adversaries in the Hanover-Adler
Coleman legal warfare. Nor have his recent legal troubles--a federal
fraud indictment-- resulted in exposure of his Street ties or alleged Mob
membership. Abramo's stunning success at avoiding publicity has
helped make him the most active reputed Mob honcho on Wall Street.
''He is educated. He sounds sincere,'' says one source. ''He's gotten all
these wiseguys to work together.''

THE ''CONSULTANT''
In court records and corporate filings, Philip Abramo gives his business
address as 176 Saddle River Road, South Hackensack, N.J. The
address applies to not one but several buildings, forming a kind of cul
de sac on a dreary street in an industrial town in northern New Jersey. It
is a quiet area. A cemetery is next door. Faded lettering shows that one
of the buildings was once used many years ago to process meat.
Today they house an auto-body shop, a construction company, and
other little offices with ambiguous names.

Listed in no official records is another address for Phil Abramo--one
that is far more apropos for a man who is a hidden power in the
brokerage industry. Until a couple of months ago, sources say, Abramo
maintained an office on the 14th floor of 90 Broad St. in lower
Manhattan, directly adjoining the New York office of Sovereign Equity
Management. A door linked the two offices, and it was always open. ''I
knew him as a stock promoter who always had stock deals. We hired
brokers who were friends of his,'' says one Sovereign employee who
requested anonymity. Sovereign CEO Glen T. Vittor denies that
Abramo had any role in the firm.

But sources describe his role as central--as the hidden control person
behind Sovereign, a prominent name in the micro-cap stock business,
its sister firm Falcon Trading, and two other firms that are major
penny-stock brokers and market makers, Toluca Pacific Securities
Corp. and Greenway Capital Corp. He is also described by Street
sources as controlling other dealers in small-cap stocks through
brokers and traders owing allegiance to him.

On paper, Abramo is respectability personified. Over the past decade
he has been listed as president or top shareholder of four publicly held
investment companies. He is married, with a grown daughter. He has
been a ''restaurant consultant,'' auto dealer, and construction company
operator. He has had four years of college and may even have training
as an accountant.

But inquiries about Abramo bring far from routine reactions. At
Greenway Capital, President John Margiotta is asked if he knows
Abramo. Margiotta replies: ''Who?'' and hangs up the phone. A person
answering the phone at Greenway, moments later, says that Margiotta
is ''very busy'' and ''not in the office.'' Toluca Pacific President Paul
Fiorini, when asked about reports of Abramo's control of his firm, calls
them a ''total farce.'' He says he owns 100% of the firm and goes on to
say: ''Who is this person? I don't want my name associated with this. I
don't know this person. I don't know Phil Abramo.''

The reason for the reticence is understandable. According to federal
court records in recent tax-evasion proceedings against Abramo in
Newark, the Saddle River (N.J.) resident lists his occupation as
''consultant.'' But elsewhere in the court file, the FBI gives a different
version of his livelihood. In 1994, in an affidavit filed with the court in a
bail hearing, the FBI identified him as a frequent visitor to reputed New
York Mob boss John Gotti prior to his imprisonment in 1992, and
alleged that Abramo held the rank of capo in the New Jersey organized
crime family once headed by Sam ''the Plumber'' DeCavalcante. But
sources say that since then, Abramo has risen in the ranks to No.2 in
that crime family--underboss.

Abramo is easily the highest-ranking reputed mobster to be engaged
full-time in Wall Street activities. His lawyer, Harvey Weissbard,
declined comment on Abramo's alleged ties to organized crime. Asked
about Abramo's possible role on Wall Street, Weissbard said he had
''no information of which I can respond one way or the other, and I doubt
if I did know one way or the other that I would respond.''

Little is known about Abramo's early life, such as which college he
attended. Except for a conviction for possession of stolen property in
1971 and another in 1973 for conspiracy to distribute heroin--which
yielded him a seven-year prison sentence--he has stayed out of the
limelight. Even when he was indicted in 1994 in New Jersey for
allegedly swindling 300 people nationwide out of $1 million--they were
sold phony ''lines of credit''--he received no publicity and continued to
work on the Street.

Indeed, by the time he was indicted in the credit-line scheme, Abramo
already had a lengthy, ostensibly legitimate track record. In the late
1980s Abramo founded publicly-held investment companies with
names such as Cambridge Investment Service Corp. and American
Acquisition Corp. (SEC filings by these companies show they did little
but file papers with the SEC.) According to papers filed by Abramo with
the SEC for the investment companies, Abramo was a ''restaurant
consultant to Northern Roses Inc. (Miami, Fla.),'' during 1982, and ''was
also a restaurant consultant to Bagel Nosh Inc. (1983 and 1984--New
York, N.Y.).'' Abramo's Bagel Nosh connection is significant, because
the company was brought public by Thomas J. Quinn.

Quinn was one of the most prominent figures in the penny-stock world,
but his association with Abramo has never been made public, although
regulators have long suspected it. When Quinn was jailed in France in
1988 for securities fraud, investigators say, Abramo's name was
prominently displayed in a notebook that was seized from him. Calls in
1995 from Quinn's telephone to Abramo's unlisted home phone number
also appeared in phone records that were recently subpoenaed by
investigators seeking Quinn's assets. (He was successfully sued by the
SEC for securities fraud in 1989 and owes millions of dollars in civil
penalties.) Indeed, Abramo was subpoenaed to testify before the SEC
in 1989 during a probe of Quinn, but he invoked his Fifth Amendment
privilege against self-incrimination. Efforts to reach Quinn for comment
were unsuccessful.

The Quinn-Abramo connection could become significant in the months
ahead because of an ongoing federal grand jury probe in California into
possible irregularities in the trading in Solv-Ex Corp., an
Albuquerque-based company that claims to have a process for
retrieving oil from tar sands. (Solv-Ex officials denied knowledge of any
trading irregularities and claimed that a private investigator's report,
which they refused to release, indicated there was no manipulation.)
According to sources close to the grand jury probe, Abramo and Quinn
are among those who have been a subject of the investigation.

Today, Abramo faces a one-year prison term for tax evasion. It was a
plea bargain--the guilty plea to tax evasion in return for dropping of the
loan-scheme charges. He is scheduled to report to prison on Jan. 7.
While he may well handle his Street interests while incarcerated, in
some quarters there is concern that his departure will mean an
increase in violence.

The level of violence is becoming worrisome. Early in November, a
broker at a New York-area brokerage was severely beaten, his arm
broken, in the lobby of the firm. As so often happens in such situations,
he did not notify the police. His offense: He moved from a
Mob-controlled firm, taking his customers with him, and dared to sell
their stocks. Sell pressure on stocks is just what the Mob despises
(unless, of course, they are short). It can sour a deal--and the often
immense profits that can come with it.

THE DEAL
Mama Tish's International Foods is a Chicago-based company that
makes Italian ices. But when it went public last month, it was red-hot.
The IPO went for $5, but on the first day of trading, the shares moved as
high as $9.75--a sure sign of ''flipping,'' in which favored investors cash
out of the stock immediately. Alas, the Mama Tish IPO was
canceled--wiping out all the trades--when the underwriter, a Long Island
firm called Landmark International Equities, got into a heated dispute
with the firm that clears its trades. The company and underwriter were
disappointed--and so were some people who hate to be
disapppointed.

Even before the deal began, traders began receiving phone calls
warning them not to short the IPO, which might have driven down
prices. According to Wall Street sources, among the people who would
have profited heavily from the Mama Tish IPO is John Gotti Jr., reputed
acting boss of the Gambino family and son of the imprisoned Gambino
crime family chieftain. According to Wall Street sources, ''Junior'' Gotti
is the hidden owner or control person of one of the brokerages--other
than Landmark--that was active in the Mama Tish deal. Had the deal
gone through, any Gotti people involved in the deal would have profited
handsomely from the 80% difference between the offering price and the
trading price of the shares. Gotti was unreachable for comment. A
company official said he did not know of any Mob involvement in the
IPO.

If ''Junior'' Gotti represents the younger generation of reputed mobsters
on the Street, the older generation would be epitomized by John
''Sonny'' Franzese. Franzese has been described by law-enforcement
authorities for decades as an influential, feared mobster who allegedly
was the former underboss of the Colombo crime family. Sources say
Franzese joined the Mob's rush to the stock market after his release on
parole from a 50-year term for bank robbery in 1994. According to
sources, the 77-year-old reputed Mob elder described himself to
associates earlier this year as controlling, through a confederate,
Monitor Investment Group, whose brokers allegedly ripped off the West
Coast investor by promising a guaranteed runup. Monitor chairman
William F. Palla denies that Franzese or organized crime has ever
played any role in the firm.

Monitor, which ceased active operations last June, is described by
former employees as a center for widespread stock
manipulation--specifically involving boxing of International Nursing
Services, Beachport Entertainment, and Innovative Medical Services.
Officials of the three companies say they were unaware of any
irregularities in the trading of their stocks. International Nursing
Chairman John Yeros, however, concedes he felt something was amiss
at Monitor when he attended a presentation the brokerage sponsored
for International Nursing at a downtown hotel--and found that Monitor
had hired a hooker to ''service'' the brokers in attendance. Palla says
he heard of the ''hooker incident'' but denies Monitor retained that
person.

If Franzese in fact became involved in the penny-stock business, it
would be a potent sign of the lure of the penny-stock business to the
Mob. But like Abramo, Franzese may have to cool his interest in the
market for a while. He was recently found to have violated the terms of
his parole and was ordered back to prison.

THE FUTURE
There are plenty of young mobsters ready to take the place of any
old-timers who might fall victim to any future law-enforcement
crackdown. One Brooklyn-based prosecutor, a specialist in the Mob,
observes that ''there are a lot of wannabes getting jobs on the Street,
working in these places, cold-calling.'' That might explain why there
seems to be no shortage of people willing to carry guns into brokerage
houses and beat up traders in front of witnesses, or telephone threats
to traders.

One reputed up-and-comer in the Street's Mob contingent is Dominick
''Black Dom'' Dinassio, who is said by Street and law-enforcement
sources to hold sway over Euro-Atlantic Securities, a Manhattan
brokerage that is active in penny stocks. According to a source in the
Manhattan District Attorney's office, Dinassio is allegedly an associate
in the Colombo crime family.

Law-enforcement sources say that Dinassio has lately been observed
in the company of Longo, Malangone's longtime partner. Sources say a
short-seller who was active in shorting Hanover stocks, John Fiero, told
police recently that Dinassio threatened him for his trades in one stock
brought public by Euro-Atlantic, Hollywood Productions Inc. Fiero
refused comment and company officials did not return phone calls.
Contacted at Euro-Atlantic's office in lower Manhattan, Dinassio
declined to discuss his role at the firm. Asked about the allegations that
he was connected to organized crime, he replied: ''What? I think you're
crazy, buddy. I'll talk to you later,'' and hung up. Euro-Atlantic officials
did not return phone calls.

Although whistle-blowers in Mob-run firms are rare, the increasing
violence is beginning to enter the public record. At Monitor, the firm
Franzese allegedly claimed to control, an incident last January led to a
rarity in this world--a lawsuit. In a suit filed in U.S. District Court in
Manhattan, former broker Robert Grant contends that he was
''maliciously and violently struck, battered, beaten, pummelled, pushed,
punched, and attacked'' by Monitor employees at the instigation of
Palla and another manager. At one point, the suit says, Grant was
beaten with a chair. The lawsuit does not say so, but witnesses say that
another broker was also viciously assaulted. Neither Grant nor the other
broker would comment, and Palla says he was in Philadelphia at the
time of the incident, which he describes as a ''fight.'' One witness says
Monitor management suspected that the two brokers may have been
short-selling Monitor's favorite stocks.

Some of the most violent, crudest elements to come to the Street are
part of its fastest-growing contingent--the Russian Mob, based in the
Brighton Beach section of Brooklyn. ''Over the past couple of years,
they've put people in the [brokerages], kids with clean records, and
they're washing money legitimately,'' says one law-enforcement official
who is intimately familiar with Russian organized crime. The offspring of
two major Russian mob figures, he notes, have been active on Wall
Street.

The Mob's fascination with Wall Street is understandable, for they have
had little to fear from law enforcement or regulators. If the authorities,
finally, act against Mob members who are active on the Street, it will be
the first such prosecution since 1973, when three major Mob figures
were imprisoned for securities fraud. At the time, the Mobsters were
vanquished because one of their confederates became a government
witness. ''It's practically impossible to prosecute these people unless
you have a turncoat, somebody who can walk you through all those
transactions,'' notes Ira Lee Sorkin, a former SEC regional director who
was involved in the 1970s prosecutions. So long as the Street
continues to keep silent on the Mob in its midst, organized crime will
continue to be the silent partner of the financial markets.



To: Don Pueblo who wrote (93)5/24/1998 3:05:00 PM
From: Don Pueblo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 480
 
Possible warning signs in "microcap" stocks.

The company recently did a Reg S or Reg D offering that is convertible into stock at a
percentage of the stock price at the time of conversion.
The company doesn't provide financial information to investors.
The company recommends that you buy its stock.
The company or someone else tells you that the stock is going to be hyped in the near
future.
The company or someone else tells you that a great press release "about to come out."
The company or someone else tells you that the company has an incredible new product
coming out "soon", which can't be verified.
The company claims that it trades on the "Nasdaq Bulletin Board." (There's no such
thing. The OTC Bulletin Board is not run by Nasdaq.)
The company issues massive amounts of stock and options to insiders and their
relatives.
The company spends a significant amount of time and money promoting the stock.
The company has almost no revenues but pays its top executives several hundred
thousand dollars per year