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To: trenzich who wrote (3015)6/4/1998 6:11:00 PM
From: Graham Dellaire  Respond to of 5743
 
Trenzich you are so transparent.

You are the self proclaimed master of taking info out of context.

A cent a share isn't bad for a small company with a burden of 40- 50 million shares.

That is a net revenue of about 500,000.

Not bad. That is more than ACRI's GROSS last year.

Keep it up you are gettin easier and easier to snipe at. Like a cocanut in the tree. Yeah I like that analogy. D.E. keep shooting down this NUT.

I am enjoying it.

Graham



To: trenzich who wrote (3015)6/4/1998 6:43:00 PM
From: D.E. Shetland  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5743
 
None of you have ever looked at ACRI's reports nor do you consider corporate governance issues. Frauds are created typically when a few officers control all the strings. You'll notice all their investments have cross management in the Treasury and CEO functions. That's a no-no. Further, you don't need 30 people for your Boards (all of you are really showing your rookie status, geez) you should have at least 2 non-executive directors, if not more, on any Board.

As for the wonder investment of Merkwerks --here's the math for you all since you don't seem to know where to look or how to figure it out.

1. Sep 1995 - Buy 2mil shares at $.05 - value: $100,000
2. Dec 1995 - Sell 600,000 shrs at $1.00 -value:$2,000,000
3. Jan 1998 - Buy 401,359 shrs at $1.50 - value:$3,000,000

Pretty amazing little company they have on their hands,huh? Who's the greater fool in those transactions? For a company (Merkwerk) with no product, no revenue, debt up the wazoo, tell me how it could have increased in value by 20x in 3 months! I guess you could ask Mr. Stewart since he is both Chairman of Acacia and Treasurer of Merkwerks. Pretty amazing, I'd like to ask him how it feels to screw oneself up the tokis and be happy about it all at the same time!

There's plenty more where that comes from. Seeing how the Yahoo Acacia thread is rather basic in their understanding of governance, finances and the insider sales by Mr. Lee and Mr. Schmidt --their key intellectual guiding lights -- I guess we should assume none of you have ever looked at their records.



To: trenzich who wrote (3015)6/4/1998 7:20:00 PM
From: D.E. Shetland  Respond to of 5743
 
I'll try to be more specific since none of you have gone back and put the pieces together. There's a rather well defined link between good old Mr. Ching, the rather fabulous returns they've show on a few of these cash-sucking corpes, the placement of shares at below market prices and the rush to register them all. There's a few more names to boot...

It's an old game you rookies. Maybe the sound of those CASH-SUCKING holdings you all own will wake you. Get out your checkbooks, they need a few more thousand tomorrow.



To: trenzich who wrote (3015)6/4/1998 7:35:00 PM
From: D.E. Shetland  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 5743
 
I'll give credit to Acacia for one thing, at least they openly put enough info in their filings to figure out a bit of the shenanigans. Of course, they're just obscure enough that one has to match up different documents from different time periods. There's still plenty of anonomously attributed transactions and obfuscations to leave a rookie dizzy --just their intended effect.

What is the sound of a CASH-SUCKING investment
if one does not see their money burn?

Maybe if you folks turn down the "We Own THE V-CHIP Patent" hype of Acacia, you'd hear that desperate CASH-SUCKING sound.

Grab your ankles again next quarter, Mr. Stewart.