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Gold/Mining/Energy : Solv Ex (SOLVD) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: norwalk hawk who wrote (6266)3/3/1999 5:49:00 PM
From: Spider Valdez  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6735
 
i was wondering if any solv shareholders saw this article about 'mob' manipulation in the solv market & if this pertains to those that bashed the stock so vehemently on si? thanks in advance, pm's are welcome! ;

"....According to trading records, the accounts traded in the same stocks that Business Week had identified as being exploited by the Mafia. They included SC&T, Solv-Ex Corp., Osicom Technologies and Novatek International. (There is no indication that any of these companies were in league with the Mob.) ...."

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PART 1

Thursday, February 25, 1999

Howe Street and the Mob
Stockbroker Jean-Claude Hauchecorne has been censured by a VSE panel for handling offshore securities for unknown clients. He found out exactly who some of those clients were in 1996, when two Mafioso and their gun-toting musclemen came into his hotel room demanding their money back

David Baines
The Vancouver Sun

<Picture>Phil Abramo, "a new breed of underworld businessman," seeking to expand into white collar crime.

If Howe Street stockbroker Jean-Claude Hauchecorne wasn't sure who his clients were, he found out on May 25, 1996, when four men accosted him in his room at the Drake Hotel in Manhattan.

One of the unscheduled visitors was a client he knew as Louis Metzer, although he had never met him in person. When "Metzer" burst into the hotel room, Mr. Hauchecorne recognized him from a Business Week photo as Philip Abramo, reputedly a high-ranking member of the Mafia.

With Abramo was Philip Gurian, another Mob-connected figure who had placed dozens of orders with Mr. Hauchecorne to buy and sell U.S. stocks that, according to Business Week, were being manipulated by Mafia-controlled brokerage firms.

Mr. Hauchecorne described the other two as "hit men." One had a gun in his belt and was brandishing a steel bar.

They demanded that Mr. Hauchecorne return $1.75-million that he had transferred to Switzerland on the instruction of another Mafia operative, Eric Wynn. Otherwise, they said, they would kill him.

"I was scared shitless," the 41-year-old broker said in an interview with a Vancouver Stock Exchange official.

That conversation and other details of Mr. Hauchecorne's role as broker to the Mob were revealed in a VSE hearing last fall into allegations that Mr. Hauchecorne ran a string of accounts for offshore clients without determining who they were, and allowed third parties to deal in the accounts without proper authority.

Details of the Business Week account, and several other magazine and newspaper articles, were presented at the hearing as evidence that Mr. Hauchecorne should have known with whom he was dealing.

"This is a classic example of Canadian brokerage firms acting as turnstiles for American promoters' paper coming from offshore," said one long-time Howe Street broker, who asked not to be identified.

Jean-Claude Mr. Hauchecorne's career in securities began in 1985, when he joined Continental Securities in Vancouver as an assistant to Art Charpentier, a director and vice-president of the brokerage firm. Mr. Charpentier was the picture of propriety. He was a chartered accountant, a designation that distinguished him from the morass of penny-stock dealers on Howe Street. He was well-spoken, and local press frequently sought him out for stock market commentary.

But his stock dealings belied his respectable exterior. One of Mr. Charpentier's key clients was Handelskredit Bank of Zurich, which had demonstrated an uncanny knack for buying shares of VSE companies just before the stock price took off.

One of these was Archer Communications. On Feb. 19, 1987, Archer president Larry Ryckman arranged for the company to sell -- through Charpentier -- 600,000 shares at 60¢ per share to Handelskredit Bank.

The same day, Archer announced it would acquire a three-dimensional sound technology and the stock began a long climb to the $27.50 level, affording the beneficial owners of the Handelskredit stock -- whoever they were -- the opportunity to make millions.

Archer eventually collapsed in a hail of class-action lawsuits. Despite evidence that its stock had been rigged, Mr. Ryckman escaped regulatory action. (Later, Alberta regulators caught him manipulating the share price of an Alberta Stock Exchange company called Westgroup Communications Corp. and suspended him for 18 years.) .... CONT'D




To: norwalk hawk who wrote (6266)3/3/1999 5:50:00 PM
From: Spider Valdez  Respond to of 6735
 
PART 2

Handelskredit's knack for investing at just the right time, coupled with the dubious character of many of its clients, raised suspicions that the bank was acting as front for insiders to deal anonymously in their own stock without reporting or tax consequences. Dealings involving Handelskredit bank were among the transactions that got Mr. Charpentier into deep trouble with securities regulators in 1988. He was squeezed out of the brokerage business and suspended indefinitely from the Chartered Accountants Institute of B.C.

Mr. Hauchecorne took over his accounts, including Handelskredit, which eventually changed its name to Anker Bank. At about the same time, Continental, racked by regulatory problems, merged with Yorkton Securities.

Much like Mr. Charpentier, Mr. Hauchecorne's demeanor was as smooth as silk, and his baby-faced looks made him the picture of innocence.

As one colleague said: "You would never suspect him of doing anything wrong. He had a good sense of humor. It was hard not to get along with him."

A Swiss national, Mr. Hauchecorne spoke four languages fluently and was a functionary in the classic Swiss tradition. He didn't try to analyze stocks, and rarely recommended them. He was simply an order-taker who bought and sold on his clients' instructions.This made him a natural choice to take over the Anker Bank account.

By 1995, the bank accounted for 90% of Mr.Hauchecorne's business at Yorkton Securities. This later fell to 50% when he took on some interesting new clients from the United States.

Several years earlier, Larry Ryckman had introduced Mr. Hauchecorne to Eric Wynn. At the time, Wynn was running a 1-900 stock tip line called Traders & Investors Alert, a dubious service which some brokers dubbed the "slime line."

Wynn and his partner in the tip line, Barry Davis, subsequently ran afoul of U.S. regulators, and Davis pleaded guilty to five criminal counts of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, wire and securities fraud.

In an effort to reduce his sentence, he admitted that the tip service manipulated stocks that were connected to the Mob.

In October, 1989 Wynn was sentenced to three years in jail for stock fraud and filing a false tax return. That same month, Forbes magazine reported that "Bonanno family capo Frank Coppa, his associate Eric Wynn and other friends" had visited a stock promoter and "bashed him on the side of the head with a telephone."

"Wynn was definitely the heavy," said one stockbroker who dealt with him. "You didn't want to cross the guy. That was the aura he portrayed."

Wynn didn't stay out of trouble for long: In July, 1995 he was convicted on 13 counts of conspiracy, security fraud and wire fraud for a scheme to manipulate penny stocks, in part for the benefit of Coppa's family. He was sentenced to 52 months in jail.

Mr. Hauchecorne told the VSE hearing panel that, at some point in their business relationship, he knew Wynn was issuing trading instructions from jail, but thought he had been imprisoned for tax evasion and "left it at that."

Between jail terms, Wynn introduced Mr. Hauchecorne to Philip Gurian, a 36-year-old former tennis pro and broker who had been barred from the U.S. securities industry. Gurian told Mr. Hauchecorne he was interested in shorting stocks through a Canadian broker because the rules for shorting were less stringent in Canada.

According to Business Week, which conducted an intensive investigation of mob-related securities activity, "Gurian has long been enmeshed in the world of 'chop stocks' " -- street lingo for easily manipulated penny stocks.

In 1994, the National Association of Securities Dealers accused him of acting as an unregistered trader at Falcon Trading Group Inc. in Boca Raton, Fla., and failing to honour trades from other brokerage firms. Business Week described Falcon Trading as a sister company of Sovereign Equity Management Corp., which is allegedly controlled by Philip Abramo. In 1996, Abramo was charged with a $1-million stock fraud that swindled 300 people using offshore companies in the Bahamas. He pleaded guilty to tax evasion charges, served a year in prison and now works as a "business consultant."

"Mr. Abramo, who works from his house in exclusive Saddle River (N.J.), represents a new breed of underworld businessmen who are seeking to expand the Mob's influence into a wide range of new white-collar ventures," The New York Times reported on Jan. 17.

"According to federal prosecutors, Mr. Abramo frequently socialized with Mr. [John Gotti Sr.] before the arrest of the New York mafia boss in 1992, and is now an underboss in New Jersey's only homegrown Mafia family, the DeCavalcantes."

According to Business Week, Abramo, through Sovereign, brought several companies public in 1995, including SC&T International Inc.

Gurian was said to be "the key player in organizing the offshore financial conduits that handled the SC&T deal."

Those companies reportedly made fortunes dumping their shares before the stock price collapsed. According to evidence at the VSE hearing, some of those accounts were handled by Mr. Hauchecorne.

The panel was told that, in early 1995, Gurian introduced Mr. Hauchecorne to L. Obafemi Pindling, son of the former prime minister of the Bahamas. Pindling is in the business of setting up offshore companies that are shielded by Bahamian secrecy laws.

In February, 1995, Pindling arranged with Mr. Hauchecorne to open an account in the name of First Nassau Ltd., domiciled in the Bahamas. ....CONT'D



To: norwalk hawk who wrote (6266)3/3/1999 5:52:00 PM
From: Spider Valdez  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6735
 
PART 3

The VSE hearing panel was told that Don Risling, Yorkton's chief executive officer, became "very upset" with Mr. Hauchecorne over the transactions in the account and asked whether he was part of a short-selling group that had caused the bankruptcy of two U.S. brokerage firms, Adler Coleman and Hanover Sterling.

According to Business Week, those insolvencies were caused by aggressive Mob-related shorting of stocks that Hanover had taken public, accompanied by a campaign of intimidation and assault against uncooperative brokers.

In April 1995 -- a month after he was confronted by Mr. Risling -- Mr. Hauchecorne moved to Pacific International Securities, a small Vancouver brokerage firm.

But if Mr. Risling was upset with Mr. Hauchecorne, there was no indication on Yorkton's termination form. In a section asking whether the brokerage firm was "in possession of any information which would suggest that the employee has engaged in any conduct which is . . . inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade," Mr. Risling replied, "No."

In October, 1995 Mr. Hauchecorne opened a three-person office for Pacific International in Calgary, and opened accounts in the names of First Nassau, Ubiquity Holdings Ltd., Roddy de Primo S.A. and Louis Metzer.

According to trading records, the accounts traded in the same stocks that Business Week had identified as being exploited by the Mafia. They included SC&T, Solv-Ex Corp., Osicom Technologies and Novatek International. (There is no indication that any of these companies were in league with the Mob.)

Mr. Hauchecorne told the VSE hearing panel that the trading was "largely directed by Gurian," although Gurian had no formal trading authority over the accounts. Mr. Hauchecorne admitted he had "made no inquiries as to the character or background of Philip Gurian."

Jodi Miller, an assistant to Mr. Hauchecorne, testified that Gurian called 10 to 15 times a day and dealt in all the accounts, particularly the Ubiquity account, which invested close to $2-million.

She said a person called "George" (who Mr. Hauchecorne said was his brother, but was actually Wynn) occasionally gave instructions on the accounts. She said she recalled Mr. Hauchecorne speaking to Pindling only once.

In March and April, 1996 Mr. Hauchecorne received three requests from Ubiquity Holdings to transfer a total of $1,748,000 (US) to an account in the same name in Hong Kong, which had been set up by Hans-Jorg Schneeberger, a close friend and associate of both Mr. Hauchecorne and his Anker Bank contact, Joe Eberhard.

The transfer requests were signed by Pindling, but according to a hand-writing expert hired by the VSE, the signatures were forgeries.

Mr. Hauchecorne testified that he didn't speak to either Pindling or Gurian with regard to these transfers, but took his instructions from Wynn, who had apparently had a falling-out with Gurian and Abramo. Wynn, however, had no formal authority over the account.

Several weeks later, Abramo and Gurian stormed into Mr. Hauchecorne's New York Hotel room and accused him of stealing their money.

Abramo threatened to kill Mr. Hauchecorne unless the money was returned. He and his thugs then went to another hotel room occupied by Wynn and Eberhard, and threatened Wynn.

Later, in a more civil attempt to recover the funds, Gurian filed a statement of claim against Mr. Hauchecorne and Pacific International in Alberta Court of Queen's Bench.

That lawsuit was dropped when Eberhard successfully brokered the return of the funds to Gurian.

Hong Kong authorities, however, charged Schneeberger with dealing with stolen money. During the trial, the judge noted that the accused "set up a vehicular company and bank account in Hong Kong to receive the money and re-routed it in different amounts to two further bank accounts in Switzerland."

He noted that the company and its bank account bore the same name -- Ubiquity Holdings -- but was registered in the British Virgin Islands, rather than the Bahamas.

"These facts alone are recognizable to any reasonable person, let alone a banker, as a classic 'laundering' situation . . . I have no doubt he [Schneeberger] knew there was something shady about this transaction, at least to the extent of tax evasion."

The judge concluded, however, there was reasonable doubt he knew the money had been stolen, and therefore acquitted him.

Mr. Hauchecorne didn't fare as well. On Feb. 10, the VSE hearing panel concluded he was "sufficiently experienced to recognize that offshore companies can be used for illegal activities, for example insider trading, tax evasion or money laundering."

The panel noted the broker "did not consider it necessary to investigate Mr. Gurian's background" and was impressed that while Pindling was a lawyer and son of the former prime minister of the Bahamas, "Mr. Pindling's role was only that of the incorporating lawyer who acted as the companies' agent."

The panel said that Mr. Hauchecorne testified that by early 1996, he had heard rumours that Gurian was involved in the intimidation of certain brokers in New York and might have been connected with organized crime.

Concluding he should close the accounts, he said he told Wynn: "You introduced me to Philip Gurian. You knew I traded for him. You knew he was bad. I want you to get me out."

However, despite several opportunities to close the accounts, he did not do so.

"If he was serious about closing the accounts, he could easily have reported the matter to his employer and had them take the necessary steps," the panel said.

A long-time Howe Street broker told The Vancouver Sun: "Once you check in, you can never leave this underworld. You have been compensated. You have sold your soul. You are their slave."

The panel found Mr. Hauchecorne failed to use due diligence to learn the essential facts of the offshore accounts; accepted orders without learning the essential facts of the owners and the persons placing the orders; discussed confidential information about the accounts with a person not identified as a beneficial owner or financially responsible for the accounts; and effected the transfer of funds from two of the accounts without the authority of the owners.

A penalty is yet to be determined. Until then, the VSE has instructed Pacific International to place Mr.Hauchecorne under strict supervision.

Mr. Hauchecorne could not be reached for comment. "I'm sorry, he's in Switzerland right now," said his assistant.