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Technology Stocks : 2TheMart.com TMRT -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: nicmags who wrote (25)2/11/1999 4:58:00 PM
From: ilh1  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1494
 
>>please be advised that we are in the process of preparing our Form 10, which we hope to have completed in the next 4 weeks<<

Glad to hear that information; most investors are aware that nonreporting companies will eventually fall to the pink sheets under the new Nasdaq guidelines.

Here's to hoping that TMRT really can give EBAY, a run for its money..........




To: nicmags who wrote (25)3/22/1999 10:07:00 AM
From: ilh1  Respond to of 1494
 
nicmags, your stock has come alive the past two days, can we expect more positive news soon; this week?



To: nicmags who wrote (25)3/22/1999 2:34:00 PM
From: ilh1  Respond to of 1494
 



To: nicmags who wrote (25)6/3/1999 1:56:00 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
More Questions for TMRT Managment:

According to the State of Nevada, both Magliarditi and Rebeil are not of good character, honesty and integrity, and not suitable to be officers, directors, or controlling shareholders of a publically traded company.

1. Mr. Magliarditi, are you an officer of a publically traded company?

2. Mr. Magliarditi, are you a director of a publically traded company?

3. Mr. Magliarditi, are you a controlling shareholder of a publically traded company?

4. Mr. Rebeil, are you an officer of a publically traded company?

5. Mr. Rebeil, are you a director of a publically traded company?

6. Mr. Rebeil, are you a controlling shareholder of a publically traded company?

7. Does the fact that both of you were proven unfit to be either officers, directors or controlling shareholders of a public company, ever been disclosed to TMRT investors (not including the Bloomberg News article of June 3, 1999)?



To: nicmags who wrote (25)2/9/2001 9:28:07 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
Well, crooked one. I must now make it my life's work to see to it that you and Rebeil are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. I have a secret. There is much more I have on you two CRIMS. You now must be exposed for the POS that you are and I will be sending out my own investors packet to State Attorney Generals, Reporters, Congressmen and anyone that will will assist in bringing you two crooks to justice. You soon will be counter sued as well as your attorney.

Waiting for the Judgment Day!!

TheTruthseeker

The Incredible $640 Million 2TheMart Web Site
Released May 25, 1999
thetruthseeker.net

"TMRT: 2 The Mart With No Money" the ongoing saga.
Released August 25, 1999
thetruthseeker.net

TMRT Class Action, Truthseeker Hopes Rebeil and Magliarditi Don't Represent Themselves
thetruthseeker.net

TheTruthseeker.Net Investigative Journalism Research Reports on 2themart.com are now available for free to the general public.
thetruthseeker.net



To: nicmags who wrote (25)2/9/2001 6:15:57 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
NATURE OF THE CASE

This is a class action on behalf of all purchasers of the securities of 2TheMart.Com Inc., ("2TheMart" or the "Company") between January 19, 1999 and August 26, 1999 inclusive (the "Class Period"), seeking remedies under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the "Exchange Act"). Defendants include 2TheMart, Steven W. Rebeil, and Dominic J. Magliarditi.

2TheMart was conceived in January 1999 through a reverse merger with an unrelated Oklahoma corporation. Its proclaimed business strategy was to launch an E-commerce auction web site that would provide a dynamic person to person auction environment, in direct competition to those established by eBay, Onsale Inc., Excite Inc. and Ubid Inc.

From its inception, 2TheMart represented that the web site, which was the core of its business, was "currently in final development" and was expected to be running before the end of the second quarter 1999. Defendants said the site would then offer direct, meaningful, competition with established sites such as eBay. These representations were made continuously throughout the Class Period and caused the Company's stock price to soar as high as $50.00.

Throughout the Class Period, defendants assured the investing community that the web site was on schedule and that it would prove to be worthy competition to larger and better funded companies that already had or were developing similar sites.

Notwithstanding their positive statements to the investing community, defendants knew the following information which belied their representations:

a. The management of 2TheMart did not include a "full team of operational, finance, marketing and technical personnel." Rather it consisted of two men, Rebeil, and Magliarditi, who had a long checkered history of real estate dealings in Nevada. Most of 2TheMart's support came through contractual dealings with third parties.

b. The website, which is the mainstay of the 2TheMart, was not currently in "final development" and, in truth, had not yet been started. The Company's August 26, 1999 public filing on Form 10 reveals that: (a) a basic IBM Customer Agreement had not been entered into until February 3, 1999; (b) it would not be until February 2, 1999 that IBM would agree to take the preliminary steps of identifying 2TheMart's business, technical and design requirements; (c) The preliminary plan consisting of a high level application design, a budget planning estimate and schedule for the implementation had not even been delivered to 2TheMart until April 30, 1999; and (d) IBM and 2TheMart would not sign a contract for IBM to "[d]esign, build, and test the 2TheMart.com Web Site" until June 1, 1999. This was almost five months after 2TheMart began touting that its web site was in "final development."

c. The Form 10 also revealed that 2TheMart had not signed an IBM Customer Agreement until February 3, 1999. The Agreement was for a Phase 0 Solution Design which amounted to no more than an analysis and proposal for a Web Site. The contract which was signed by Magliarditi stated that this project would take an estimated "eight weeks" from the initial "three day Joint Requirements Definition" session which happened sometime after February 3, 1999. The proposal resulting from the Phase 0 Solution Design were delivered by IBM to 2TheMart on April 30, 1999. Not until June 1, 1999 was a contract entered into parties for the actual "development of an online auction web site." The final agreement gave a 6 month production plan for the completion of the site. In light of these facts, defendants representations throughout the Class Period that the web site was in "final development" or that it would be "active by the second quarter 1999" were patently false when made.

d. "2TheMart expects competition to intensify further in the future. Barriers to entry are relatively low, and current and new competitors can launch new sites at a relatively low cost using commercially available software." The Form 10 goes on to identify eBay, Amazon.com, Auction Universe, Yahoo Auctions, Excite, uBid, First Auction, Surplus Auction as competitors concluding that, "[m]any of the Company's current and potential competitors have longer operating histories, larger customer bases, greater brand recognition and significantly greater financial, marketing and other resources. Competitive pressures created by any one of these companies, or by the Company's competitors collectively, could have a material adverse effect on the Company's business, results of operations and financial condition."

e. 2TheMart's principals had already been determined to be not of good character, honesty and integrity and not suitable to act as officers or directors of public companies.

i. Magliarditi and Rebeil have been business associates for more than six years. On Feb. 19, 1997, the Nevada Gaming Commission denied their applications for a casino license. The commission found both men "not of good character, honesty and integrity. " It also found that both lied to investigators for the State Gaming Control Board, and thus each "failed to meet the burden of proving his qualifications and suitability as an officer, director or controlling shareholder of a publicly traded corporation."

ii. According to a transcript of testimony before the Gaming Control Board in 1997, investigators for the agency also discovered that Magliarditi, an attorney who previously practiced tax law, under reported his income by about $70,000 in 1994. "The board felt this wasn't an honest mistake, but purposeful underreporting," Steve DuCharme, chairman of the Nevada Gaming Control Board, said in an interview. Magliarditi testified that he owed the IRS an additional $24,000 after he amended his federal tax return to include the previously unreported income.

iii. Furthermore Magliarditi admitted that he altered K-1 tax schedules reporting Rebeil's partnership income after they were prepared and signed by the accounting firm of Arthur Andersen LLC. Magliarditi said the adjustments he made, at Rebeil's request, lowered Rebeil's 1994 income tax bill. "I think they were whited out and then the numbers were inserted," Magliarditi testified. He said more than a year passed before the accounting firm received a copy of the altered document.

iv. Separately, in December 1998, Magliarditi was fined $4,000, publicly reprimanded and placed on one-year probation by the Nevada State Bar Association. That followed his conditional guilty plea to allegations he had a conflict of interest when he represented clients on both sides of an issue.

v. Control Board investigators also found that Rebeil diverted "millions of dollars" from a homebuilding company in which he was a partner to finance construction of his personal residence. Rebeil allegedly directed subcontractors to overcharge the builder and use the excess payments as credits toward work on his house. Magliarditi testified that there "could possibly be" criminal wrongdoing by Rebeil in connection with the diversion. Frank Schreck, Rebeil's former attorney, testified that at first he believed Rebeil's denials about the skimming. However, after interviewing a concrete subcontractor, he said he became "100 percent" certain that Rebeil was lying when he denied the skimming. At that point, he said, he resigned as his attorney. The Control Board alleged that Magliarditi told its investigators Rebeil's actions were a "complete surprise" to him, even after he'd been alerted to the activity by Rebeil's business partner and by subcontractors.

f. The Company had not "secured funding" for the "final development" of the website. The Form 10, filed on August 26, 1999 demonstrates that the Company will need millions of dollars more to complete the web site. Moreover, "[A]fter the launch of the Company's Web site, there can be no assurance that the Company will generate positive cash flow and there can be no assurances as to the level of revenues, if any, the Company may actually achieve from its web operations."

g. Defendants knew that its public accountant, Deloitte & Touche, LLP ("Deloitte"), had serious concerns over the financial representations to be included in the Company's upcoming public filing, which ultimately resulted in their withdrawal from the 2TheMart account. Although defendants also knew that Deloitte withdrew from the audit because of these issues, they purposefully hid this fact from the investing community. Defendants did not reveal the material loss of Deloitte & Touche, LLP until they had secured another auditor and still have not acknowledged the reasons Deloitte left.

h. The Company was suffering huge losses and was no where near releasing its web site -- its only source of revenue. As a result, the continued viability of the Company was in serious doubt -- a fact confirmed by 2TheAmrt's outside auditors, Grant Thorton LLP. "The Company is not yet generating revenues and, as shown in the financial statements, has incurred losses in its development stage. Also. . .the Company has incurred substantial obligations and will need to raise capital to complete its development activities. These factors, among others. . .raise substantial doubt about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern."
wyca.com



To: nicmags who wrote (25)2/9/2001 6:19:04 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
In light of 2TheMart's dramatic rise, defendant Magliarditi went to stock message boards to assure investors that 2TheMart was a legitimate company which would be fully reporting in a few weeks. On February 11, 1999, Magliarditi, using the screen name Nicmags (nicmags@aol.com and nicmags@2themart.com) posted the following message on the Silicon Investor:

"Trader, I am the President of TMRT. I apologize for any failure to respond to your telephone messages, however, we believe that any and all phone messages have been responded to, most personally by me. I would welcome your future call. As for some of your notes, please be advised that we are in the process of preparing our Form 10, which we hope to have completed in the next 4 weeks. As for an investor package, we will have that available after the Form 10 is completed. As for our press releases, we will continue to provide additional information about our company through our press releases. We are currently working diligently on completing our site for a Q2 launch. We welcome you and our other new shareholders to our company at such an exciting time."



To: nicmags who wrote (25)2/9/2001 7:06:50 PM
From: Smartypts  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1494
 
Keep those subpoenas coming guys.

Final end game in a few years aye?



To: nicmags who wrote (25)4/20/2001 12:19:40 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
Hey Mags, hows that form 10 coming along?->Judge Rules in Chat Room Case

.c The Associated Press


SEATTLE (AP) - Chat room users accused by a bankrupt Internet company of posting critical messages in an effort to drive its stock price down will not be identified, a federal judge has ruled.

The company, 2TheMart.com Inc., said it needed the 23 users' names to defend itself against a shareholder lawsuit that alleges it misled investors. The lawsuit was filed in California after 2TheMart went bankrupt soon after its stock rose more than 2,000 percent, to $50 per share in 1999.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Zilly ruled on Thursday that evidence the company provided was not compelling enough to set aside the First Amendment rights of the chat room users, who used nicknames.

``The First Amendment clearly applies to the Internet,'' Zilly said. ``The law says that a person has a right to speak anonymously.''

The Irvine, Calif.-based company that hoped to compete with Internet auction giant eBay, claims the chatters conspired to spread rumors to drive down the company's stock price so they could profit by selling it short.

2TheMart wanted Bellevue-based Infospace to turn over the names of people who chatted on a site it maintained. 2TheMart wanted to prove that some of the chat room users also are members of the class-action suit against the company for alleged securities fraud, the company's attorney Keith Bardellini said.

One of the chat room users nicknamed ``No Guano'' and identified in court documents as ``J. Doe,'' turned for help to the American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an Internet privacy group.

Zilly said Thursday he agreed with 2TheMart attorneys that ``rights to speak anonymously are not unlimited.'' But he said the company's reasons for wanting the names were not sufficient, saying the firm made no direct claim against the users, except for ``innuendo'' they had manipulated the stock.

Kelsey Joyce Hooke, an attorney for 2TheMart, said the company has not decided if it will appeal.

ACLU attorney Aaron Caplan called the ruling a significant victory for Internet users.

The ruling is important because it gives Internet companies guidance for protecting customers' rights, Infospace attorney Brent Snyder said.

AP-NY-04-20-01 1142EDT



To: nicmags who wrote (25)8/29/2002 6:51:57 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
Dominic, when you going to put the Q for "Bankrupt" after the TMRT?

TMRT - 2THEMART.COM INC
Last Price: 0.06 at 15:17 EDT
Change: Up 0.015 (+33.33%)
High: 0.06 at 13:43 EDT
Low: 0.05 at 11:07 EDT
Open: 0.05
Previous Close: 0.045 on 8/28
Volume: 26,000
Currency Units: US Dollar
Exchange/Delay: Other OTC: 15 minutes

Confirm all data with your broker or financial advisor before trading.

Data by: S&P ComStock



To: nicmags who wrote (25)8/29/2002 6:54:21 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
33. In light of 2TheMart's dramatic rise, defendant Magliarditi went to stock message boards to assure investors that 2TheMart was a legitimate company which would be fully reporting in a few weeks. On February 11, 1999, Magliarditi, using the screen name Nicmags (nicmags@aol.com and nicmags@2themart.com) posted the following message on the Silicon Investor:

"Trader, I am the President of TMRT. I apologize for any failure to respond to your telephone messages, however, we believe that any and all phone messages have been responded to, most personally by me. I would welcome your future call. As for some of your notes, please be advised that we are in the process of preparing our Form 10, which we hope to have completed in the next 4 weeks. As for an investor package, we will have that available after the Form 10 is completed. As for our press releases, we will continue to provide additional information about our company through our press releases. We are currently working diligently on completing our site for a Q2 launch. We welcome you and our other new shareholders to our company at such an exciting time."

99cv01127 Harrington v 2TheMart.com, Inc, et al - 9/13/99 Complaint

216.239.51.100



To: nicmags who wrote (25)8/29/2002 7:01:49 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
"[A]s to the Internet users such as Truthseeker and Cuemaster who posted messages on the TMRT bulletin board, TMRT has failed to demonstrate that their identities are directly and materially relevant to a core defense. TMRT argues that the Internet postings caused a drop in TMRT's stock price. However, what was said in these postings is a matter of public record, and the identity of the anonymous posters had no effect on inventors. If these messages did influence the stock price, they did so without anyone knowing the identity of the speakers."

"Lastly, the court held that information sufficient to establish TMRT's defense, namely the existence, content and timing of the challenged postings, was available from other sources, as the information had been archived. The court accordingly quashed the subpoena both as to plaintiff as well as to those who anonymously posted negative comments about TMRT."

John Doe v. 2Themart.Com Inc., 140 F. Supp.2d 1088 (D.C. Wash., April 26, 2001). Court quashes subpoena served by corporation on information service provider seeking the identity of anonymous non-party posters of messages critical of the corporation. Corporation sought such information to aid it in establishing that the posting of these messages, and not the conduct of the corporation's officers, caused the stock price fluctuations complained of in a shareholders derivative class action lawsuit in which the corporation was a party.

Court holds that to obtain such information, in light of First Amendment concerns, "the party seeking the information must demonstrate, by a clear showing on the record, that four requirements are met: (1) the subpoena seeking the information was issued in good faith and not for any improper purpose, (2) the information sought relates to a core claim or defense, (3) the identifying information is directly and materially relevant to that claim or defense, and (4) information sufficient to establish or to disprove that claim or defense is unavailable from any other source." Finding that the corporation failed to satisfy this "high burden," the Court quashed the subpoena.

Silicon Investor/InfoSpace, Inc. ("Info Space") operates the 'Silicon Investor' web site, which contains a series of bulletin boards on which users are allowed to post messages. One of these message boards is devoted to a company called 2TheMart.Com Inc. ("TMRT"). A number of negative messages were posted about TMRT on this message board by anonymous posters using pseudonyms. Plaintiff John Doe was not one of these posters, however. Rather, he was alleged only to have communicated anonymously via the Internet with various of these anonymous posters.

TMRT, its officers and directors were named as defendants in a shareholder derivative class action alleging fraud on the market. To aid them in establishing one of the many affirmative defenses they advanced in that lawsuit, TMRT served a subpoena on InfoSpace, seeking, among other things, the identity of plaintiff and the anonymous posters. TMRT argued that such information would aid it in establishing that the price fluctuations complained of by the plaintiffs in the shareholder derivative class action were caused by the postings at issue and not defendants' conduct.

On plaintiff's motion, the court quashed the subpoena. The court noted that the First Amendment protects the right to speak anonymously on the Internet. State action (such as a court order directing compliance with a subpoena) which seeks to restrict "core" speech - speech which touches on matters of public political life - is subject to "exacting scrutiny," and will be upheld only where the restriction is "narrowly tailored to serve an overriding state interest." The speech at issue was not such "core" speech. Accordingly, the court held, State action affecting the speech at issue was subject to a "normal strict scrutiny analyses."

Balancing the competing First Amendment concerns with a litigant's right to discovery, the court determined that it would analyze four factors in determining whether a subpoena seeking the identity of an anonymous Internet user not a party to the underlying litigation should be sustained: "these are whether: (1) the subpoena seeking the information was issued in good faith and not for any improper purpose, (2) the information sought relates to a core claim or defense, (3) the identifying information is directly and materially relevant to that claim or defense, and (4) information sufficient to establish or to disprove that claim or defense is unavailable from any other source."

The Court found that TMRT did not meet this "high burden" and accordingly quashed the subpoena. While the court found that the subpoena was not brought in bad faith, it found that the information sought did not relate to a core claim or defense. The information sought would only aid defendant in establishing one of its many affirmative defenses, which defense was not central to the proceeding at issue.

More importantly, the court held that the information sought would not materially aid in establishing the affirmative defense defendant sought to sustain. Said the court:

[A]s to the Internet users such as Truthseeker and Cuemaster who posted messages on the TMRT bulletin board, TMRT has failed to demonstrate that their identities are directly and materially relevant to a core defense. TMRT argues that the Internet postings caused a drop in TMRT's stock price. However, what was said in these postings is a matter of public record, and the identity of the anonymous posters had no effect on inventors. If these messages did influence the stock price, they did so without anyone knowing the identity of the speakers.

Lastly, the court held that information sufficient to establish TMRT's defense, namely the existence, content and timing of the challenged postings, was available from other sources, as the information had been archived. The court accordingly quashed the subpoena both as to plaintiff as well as to those who anonymously posted negative comments about TMRT.

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To: nicmags who wrote (25)8/30/2002 4:17:23 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
paymentresource.com

paymentresource.com

paymentresource.com

Registrant:Universal Transaction Consultants

(PAYMENTRESOURCE-DOM)8415 Manuel Circle Pl, NEAlbuquerque, NM 87111USDomain Name: paymentresource.com
Enter amount (min $200.00)

Administrative Contact:Phillips, Andy (AP10842) jblag@CONCENTRIC.NETUniversal Transaction Consultants8415 Manuel Circle Pl, NE
Albuquerque , NM 87111505-858-2598 (FAX) 505-828-1634Technical Contact:Slocumb, Jack (JSR1205) Jack@Pwww.ayment Resources, Intl620 Newport Center Ste 150Newport Beach , CA 92660949-729-1400 (FAX) 949-729-1178Record expires on 12-May-2006.Record created on 12-May-1999.Database last updated on 30-Aug-2002 16:08:50 EDT.Domain servers in listed order:NS1.GOLDENORG.COM 216.237.157.10NS1.OC2NET.NET 64.3.92.100



To: nicmags who wrote (25)8/30/2002 4:21:22 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
paymentsource.com



To: nicmags who wrote (25)8/14/2007 10:16:06 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1494
 
Additional known business organizations for Dominic Joseph Magliarditi

gaming.nv.gov

gaming.nv.gov