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To: Arcane Lore who wrote (47979)6/12/1998 9:15:00 PM
From: Kurt N  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 55532
 
>>Will the mythical short squeeze be given a proper burial? Perhaps a eulogy?<<

"Dammit Jim, I'm a doctor not a xxxxxxxx"
"It's dead Jim"

Dr Mccoy -- Startrek

[i know i have those sound clips somewhere. good 'ol days when a links to .wav files were posted in almost every other post]

Kurt



To: Arcane Lore who wrote (47979)6/12/1998 9:18:00 PM
From: Riley G  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 55532
 
That's because we have an extra 800k not on the certified list that have not been called, YET!

Riley G



To: Arcane Lore who wrote (47979)6/12/1998 9:35:00 PM
From: Ditchdigger  Respond to of 55532
 
sec.gov



To: Arcane Lore who wrote (47979)7/31/1998 3:32:00 PM
From: Arcane Lore  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 55532
 
<Off Topic>

Speaking of mythical "short squeezes", those allegedly orchestrated by Ravi Khan may be classics of the genre if the SEC account is correct:

COMMISSION CHARGES STOCKBROKERS RAFI KHAN AND TIMOTHY TYRRELL WITH STOCK
MANIPULATION

The Commission filed a complaint in federal district court in Los
Angeles charging Rafi M. Khan with fraud for manipulating the stocks
of two companies, Future Communications, Inc. (FCMI), and The L. L.
Knickerbocker Co., Inc. (KNIC). From June 30 to August 30, 1993,
FCMI's stock price rose from $6.50 to $27.25. Two months later, the
company declared bankruptcy. From July 3 to August 11, 1995, KNIC's
stock price rose from $6 to $52 per share. The complaint alleges
that Khan orchestrated these price runs using a variety of
manipulative practices, including acquiring substantial control of
the market for each stock, executing unauthorized trades, touting
wildly exaggerated earnings projections, and promoting a "short
squeeze" scheme. The complaint also alleges that Timothy J. Tyrrell
participated in the FCMI manipulation by, among other things,
orchestrating a collusive trading arrangement with another broker.
The Complaint charges Khan and Tyrrell with violating Section 17(a)
of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, and seeks permanent
injunctions, disgorgement of improper trading profits with
prejudgment interest, and civil penalties. [SEC v. Rafi M. Khan and
Timothy J. Tyrrell, Civil Action No. CV-98-6143 MMM, SHx, C.D. Cal.]
(LR-15827)

sec.gov