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Technology Stocks : Turbodyne Technologies Inc. (TRBDF) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nathan Hansen who wrote (1607)8/6/1998 5:17:00 PM
From: Tokyo VD  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3458
 
Nathan,

You suggest that Adrian should not write disparaging comments about Mr. Nowek (given that you "know him"), yet you felt compelled to write about Mr. Asensio's involvement with Solv-Ex: "I just know it was very false, malicious misinformation, in that case."

I'd like to know what led you make such a statement given that all evidence appears to be to the contrary?

Furthermore, regal us with stories on how you and Mr. Nowek met and tell us what kind of person he is.

Tokyo



To: Nathan Hansen who wrote (1607)8/6/1998 5:35:00 PM
From: Adrian du Plessis  Respond to of 3458
 
Hi Nathan -- I really don't plan on sticking around this Turbodyne thread, though some of the posts here are starting to make me wonder. (And the more I read about German links to this deal, the more it starts to bring back other memories.) It may be an old movie, but, hey, some classics are worth replaying. I remember that a couple of the characters who started out with this venture had not long before been involved with a garage that went bust, I recall a bankruptcy or two... well, I'm not going to dig into those files unless, of necessity, this becomes more of a demand upon my time.

The reason Leon Nowek was mentioned in my previous post is made clear by the contents of that same post. When I last looked at Dundee/Clear View/Turbodyne, (pre-Walter Ware), Nowek was the president of the company. And, not long before assuming this position with Dundee/Clear View/Turbodyne, Nowek had been secretary and director of a fraudulent Vancouver-listed public company called Northfork Ventures... I'm assuming you read my earlier post on this subject, so the relevance of this history should be obvious to yourself and any concerned investor(s).

If you want to learn more about how Nowek and his associates conduct themselves, based upon artifactual materials rather than hunches or gut feelings, my earlier post suggested various public record sources for follow-up. The feedback I receive in private emails from TRBD (and other public company) threaders indicates that knowing these things can help you and others decide how you feel about your investment(s). It's up to you whether this sort of factual information makes you feel more positively or negatively -- or neither.

You say Leon Nowek was "somewhere in the wrong place at the wrong time".

Directors of public companies have certain duties.

Northfork investors were told lies.

Those are facts.

How you feel about Nowek in light of such facts is, entirely, your call.