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To: david travis who wrote (3016)3/7/1999 1:41:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
"Only reason to do a research report is to hype a stock and get the public to come in and buy." What a great guy! Definitely a guy to enrust with your spec money. NOT. You're evil and you'll rot in hell old man.



To: david travis who wrote (3016)3/31/1999 6:30:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3383
 
Hey OnePunch.com: looks like another feeble attempt to run AENG is comming. More wisper BS? More insiders to dump whilst thou pumps? Howz the pattersontravis.com website comming?



To: david travis who wrote (3016)4/9/1999 3:15:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
Hey TRAV, 'sup with Eugene TRAVis, David TRAVis' progeny strikes again- he's the Veritas PR guy. Family genetics, I guess they have the tout gout in their blood. You know David TRAVis of AENG fame Aka topshelf@fiberia.com #reply-8810265



To: david travis who wrote (3016)4/18/1999 10:49:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3383
 
Hey TRAV, you can waddle, but you can't hide. DOOM TRAV, DOOM!



To: david travis who wrote (3016)5/5/1999 2:01:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3383
 
DOOM TRAV! Your stocks are all going down. 'Smatter, a run on the firm?



To: david travis who wrote (3016)5/27/1999 4:11:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
Hey TRAV, looks like Shelby has his hands full with the Series 1. So what are the lies you're telling to get this pig running again? I mean Autoweek has got a cover story on the delays associated with the $114 K Aurora powered sports cars. And your bud Don Rager has his hands full trying to get the "Volkswagen sized bugs" out of the car.

So you think they got time for your horsepucky scam deal?



To: david travis who wrote (3016)5/28/1999 12:11:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3383
 
Doom TRAV!: "Lawyer Pleads Guilty to Securities Fraud

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

artley T. Bernstein, a well-known securities lawyer in New York,
pleaded guilty Thursday to securities fraud conspiracy and perjury
in Federal District Court in Manhattan and agreed to forfeit $850,000 in
illegal proceeds made as an insider in five fraudulent public stock
offerings, Federal prosecutors said.

Bernstein's guilty pleas were the latest development in the investigation by
Mary Jo White, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of
New York, into Sterling Foster, a defunct brokerage firm in Melville,
N.Y. Last November, Ms. White secured an indictment against
Randolph Pace, the former principal of Rooney Pace, a brokerage firm
expelled from the industry in 1988, which charged that Pace and
associates had obtained more than $100 million in illegal profits through
six purportedly fraudulent offerings taken public by Sterling Foster. The
indictment also charged that Pace, who had been barred from the
securities industry, secretly controlled Sterling Foster.

Pace has denied wrongdoing in the matter. But the guilty pleas by
Bernstein, who prosecutors say was part of the Sterling Foster inner
circle, almost certainly increase the pressure on Pace. Robert G.
Morvillo, the lawyer representing Pace, expressed shock when told of
the pleas. He declined to comment until he had read the pleadings.

Bernstein, 49, the former partner of Bernstein & Wasserman,
represented Sterling Foster and various companies that issued stock to
the public through the brokerage firm between 1994 and 1996. But in
addition to providing legal advice to his clients, according to the United
States Attorney, Bernstein made loans totaling $150,000 to four
companies that were later taken public by Sterling Foster: Advanced
Voice Technologies Inc., Com/Tech Communications Technologies
Inc., the Embryo Development Corporation and Applewoods Inc.
Bernstein also received shares in Perry's Majestic Beer Inc., before it
became a public company in an offering underwritten by VTR Capital
Inc. and Investors Associates.

As part of a secret agreement, Bernstein received securities in advance of
the public offerings in return for his loans. Under the arrangement,
Bernstein agreed to sell his securities back to Sterling Foster at the time
of each offering at prices substantially above his cost but below those
paid by the investing public. As a result, the underwriters earned tens of
millions of dollars in illegal profits, representing the difference between the
below-market price paid to Bernstein for his shares and the market price
paid by public investors.

The scheme was kept secret from investors because in each offering
statement it was noted that those who had received stock from the
issuers in return for preinitial public offering loans were subject to lock-up
agreements prohibiting them from selling their securities until as long as
two years after each offering.

In addition, following the Applewoods stock offering, Bernstein sold his
securities through other brokerage firms at prearranged times. He then
kicked back the proceeds from these sales indirectly to Sterling Foster,
prosecutors said.

Finally, Bernstein committed perjury in testimony he gave before the
Securities and Exchange Commission in January 1998 relating to whether
any agreements existed surrounding the sale of his stock in Perry's
Majestic Beer.

A former assistant in the Manhattan district attorney's office, Bernstein
represented small investors in securities arbitration cases against
brokerage firms during the 1980's. He changed sides in the 1990's when
he began representing small brokerage firms. Bernstein represented
Stratton Oakmont, a brokerage firm that was closed by regulators in
1996, and Biltmore Securities, a brokerage firm in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
which has also been the subject of numerous regulatory actions.

Announcing the plea deal, Ms. White said: "Complicated criminal
schemes such as these often require the expertise of lawyers, accountants
and other professionals, whose credibility and expertise are used to sell
the scheme to the unsuspecting public. For that reason, dishonest
professionals pose a special danger to the investing public and will
continue to be aggressively prosecuted."

Bernstein faces a total of 15 years in prison and fines of $750,000 as a
result of the guilty pleas. His lawyer, Scott Edelman of Milbank, Tweed,
Hadley & McCloy, did not return a phone call seeking comment.



To: david travis who wrote (3016)6/10/1999 6:03:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3383
 
Carefull TRAV you're next: "Bail Reduced For Duke & Co Chmn, But He'll Stay In Jail

By Michael Rapoport

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--A state-court judge reduced bail Thursday
for the chairman of the now-defunct brokerage firm Duke & Co.
over stock-fraud charges, but his attorney says he still won't
be able to meet it and get out of jail.
Judge William Wetzel reduced Victor Wang's bail to $850,000
from the previous $1.25 million. He also said Wang could meet
up to $350,000 of the amount by posting property he and his family
own, instead of having to put up the full amount in cash, as was
previously the case.
But Lawrence Carra, Wang's attorney, said the new figure is
still too high for Wang to meet, and so he will have to stay in
custody. "It's an unrealistic amount tantamount to no bail at
all," he said after the hearing.
Meanwhile, Carra hinted he is still in discussions with federal
prosecutors, who have seized custody of Wang in a tug-of-war between
the feds and state prosecutors from the Manhattan district attorney's
office. Wang is under indictment on state charges filed by D.A.
Robert Morgenthau's office, but federal prosecutors from Brooklyn,
N.Y., swooped in and took custody of Wang themselves last month
without notifying Morgenthau first.
The federal prosecutors haven't explained why they want Wang.
But prosecutors from the D.A.'s office have indicated they believe
Wang approached the feds to try to cut a better deal for himself
than he would get in the D.A.'s case - a deal under which he would
plead guilty to federal charges in exchange for a more lenient
sentence. Such a deal could block the D.A.'s office from proceeding
with its own case against Wang.
Carra refused to comment on any talks he might be having with
federal prosecutors, but said that "we're considering all viable
alternatives at this juncture." Asked if he had reached a deal
with the feds, he said, "Not yet."
Wang and 17 other Duke employees face state charges of defrauding
the firm's customers out of tens of millions of dollars by inflating
the prices of Duke-underwritten stocks. All the defendants have
pleaded not guilty; four other Duke brokers pleaded guilty before
the indictment was brought.
While the feds are still holding Wang in a Brooklyn correctional
center, they released him briefly back to the state's custody
so that he could attend the bail hearing, Carra said.
Prosecutors from the D.A.'s office didn't say much during the

hearing about their turf battle with the feds, but the subject
did come up once. Wetzel said that if Wang were "across the street"
- an apparent reference to federal court, which in Manhattan is
near New York's state-court buildings - he'd receive a lower bail
package.
Replied Assistant District Attorney Richard Preiss: "Figuratively
speaking, he's already across the street."
- Michael Rapoport, 212-227-2017, michael.rapoport@cor.dowjones.com



To: david travis who wrote (3016)6/16/1999 1:51:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
Careful TRAV, you're next: "85 Charged in $100 Mln Stock Fraud by US Attorney (Update2)
6/16/99 12:39

85 Charged in $100 Mln Stock Fraud by US Attorney (Update2)

(Adds details about previous charges against two of the
defendants)

New York, June 16 (Bloomberg) -- The top federal prosecutor
in Brooklyn, New York, has charged 85 people in stock frauds that
cheated thousands of investors out of more than $100 million.
The office of U.S. Attorney Zachary Carter said the charges
involve nine brokerages and 20 micro-cap stocks that were sold
from high-pressure ''boiler rooms.''
Authorities said Robert Catoggio, a former broker barred
from the securities industry, and Roy Ageloff controlled four
brokerages: Hanover, Sterling & Co., Norfolk Securities Corp.,
PCM Securities Ltd., which changed its name to Royal Palm
Investments in 1998, and Capital Planning Associates Inc. Fifty-
two of the defendants worked as brokers, traders, and operating
personnel at those firms, officials said.
New Jersey-based stock promoter Donald Messinger was also
charged.
In December, Catoggio and Messinger were charged by Carter's
office, along with five others including an alleged mob
associate, with manipulating the shares of Transun International
Airways Inc. and with money laundering. Both schemes were
allegedly carried out through Capital Planning, a South
Plainfield, New Jersey brokerage. Capital Planning customers lost
$10 million after Transun stock collapsed in May 1998,
authorities said at the time.
Catoggio and the others were accused of agreeing to promote
Transun stock to Capital Planning customers to generate money for
themselves and others with organized crime ties. Transun billed
itself as a charter airline, yet it never owned or operated any
planes and never conducted any airline business or generated
revenue, prosecutors said.
Some of the defendants in that case allegedly acquired most
of Transun's stock and hyped it to Capital Planning customers
using a phony press release and other statements.
Prosecutors said Catoggio and his alleged associates pocketed $10
million in profits from selling the stock and then laundered the
money.
Catoggio pleaded guilty to fraud in January 1998 in another
securities case involving alleged ties to organized crime.
Prosecutors announced three indictments against the 85
defendants at a press conference today. No further details were
immediately available.

--Seena Simon in U.S. District Court in New York (212) 732-9245,
with reporting by Betsy Jelisavcic, through the Washington
newsroom (202) 624-1824/ep"



To: david travis who wrote (3016)6/21/1999 10:37:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
Biz gettin a little tough lately?: " New Rules May Mean Trouble For OTC Bulletin Board Firms

By JASON ANDERS
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION

A move to clean up the OTC Bulletin Board by requiring the small
companies quoted there to disclose basic financial information has left the
companies scrambling to comply, and investors in a bind.

The first phase of the plan, which is being
implemented by the National Association of
Securities Dealers over the next year, begins
July 1. Companies that fail to comply will be
dropped from the OTC Bulletin Board, and the NASD says that so far,
two-thirds of the 94 companies facing the first deadline don't meet the
eligibility requirements. By the time the plan is fully implemented, half the
6,700 OTC Bulletin Board companies could be booted. (The NASD also
operates the Nasdaq Stock Market.)

A place on the OTC Bulletin Board is important because the service --
along with its updated stock quotes readily available on the Internet -- has
helped many otherwise unknown companies attract legions of shareholders
and achieve heavy trading volume. Without the OTC Bulletin Board, price
quotes would be harder to find, and volume -- and potentially stock prices
-- could drop dramatically.

Many OTC Bulletin Board companies find themselves in a difficult
position: trying to calm investors worried over the new eligibility rules,
while at the same time facing what regulators say is an insurmountable
challenge to file the paperwork and win approval before July 1.

Many investors didn't know American
Benefits Group was facing eligibility trouble
until some postings on an Internet message
board noted that an "E" had been appended
to the company's stock symbol -- a
designation used by the NASD to identify companies that are within 30
days of being dropped.

The company, which was once involved in viatical settlements but now
says it operates an Internet shopping mall and several mining operations in
Madagascar, issued a press release June 4 assuring investors that it was
"committed to file the documents on June 11" and maintain its place on the
OTC Bulletin Board. (Viatical settlements let terminally ill individuals
collect a portion of their life-insurance benefits before they die.)

But as of Friday, the Deerfield Beach, Fla., company still hadn't filed with
the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Actually, we said the
soonest we could do it was June 11," Jerry G. Mikolajczyk, American's
chief executive, said in an interview. "At this time we won't be able to
comment on the exact date. Our official stance is no comment on
everything."

But even if American Benefits Group had mailed the filings when promised,
it still would have been dropped from the OTC Bulletin Board. That's
because the SEC gets a 60-day comment period before the filings go into
effect, and a company's eligibility could be delayed significantly if the SEC
has questions about the filing -- facts that some OTC companies failed to
mention when they assured investors they would meet the deadlines.

"It's not realistic to think that in 30 days or even 60 days these companies
could get the necessary filings together," says Adena Friedman, director of
trading and market services for Nasdaq. "If these companies didn't start
working on this several months ago, there's no way they're going to make
it."

Ms. Friedman admits that investors could have difficulty unloading stock in
companies that are dropped from the OTC Bulletin Board. "We've been
telling people this was happening since January, and I think the companies
bear the responsibility here for what happens in the trading of their stock,"
she says.

Many of the companies that become ineligible will likely move to the Pink
Sheets, a daily publication of quotations distributed by National Quotation
Bureau Inc., New York. NQB plans to launch an online, real-time version
of the Pink Sheets in mid-July, but those quotes will be accessible only on
a subscription basis to brokers and market makers, and won't be directly
available to investors.

Companies are being phased into the new rules alphabetically by ticker
symbol. Only 94 securities are up for review for July 1 (65 of those are
currently scheduled to drop off), but in later months as many as 700
securities will be reviewed at once. The new rules require companies to file
a Form 10 with the SEC that contains audited financial information, and to
file quarterly financial statements.

The Internet has helped turn the OTC Bulletin Board into a popular
playground for investors looking for big returns. Lured by cheap prices --
many shares trade for less than $1 -- and volatility that can send a
company soaring 500% in a single day, investors have flocked to the
service, where average daily volume has tripled since 1995 (volume on the
larger Nasdaq doubled over the same period).

But because many of the most popular OTC Bulletin Board stocks don't
report to the SEC, investors have been left to get information on such
securities from often dubious sources, including paid stock promoters.

And the OTC Bulletin Board has also proved to be fertile ground for
investment scams -- almost all of the Internet stock-fraud cases brought by
the SEC have involved companies quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board.

"These are companies you never would have heard of before the Internet,
and in many cases that would have been a good thing," says William
McDonald, director of enforcement the California Department of
Corporations, the state securities regulator. "I hope the public understands
that these delisted securities create a road map that we're going to use to
find fraudulent companies."

To be sure, SEC filings can be burdensome for small companies. Access
Power, a Jacksonville, Fla., provider of telephone service over the
Internet, is among the companies that were certified "eligible" in this first
round.

The company began filing with the SEC before the new rule went into
effect and estimates it spent about $20,000 to complete its filings -- and
that was with minimal use of outside accountants and lawyers. "It probably
took us four or five months to get things together at first, including about
four weeks just to get the financials audited," says Glenn Smith, Access
Power's chief executive.

The company now has one full-time employee -- out of its staff of 10 --
who does nothing but deal with SEC filings. "It's a strain, yes," says Mr.
Smith. "But if you're a public company, you owe this to your investors,
period."



To: david travis who wrote (3016)6/21/1999 10:39:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
Very creative name. Pumpandumporama Lives!: "ADVANCED ENGINE: JAGUAR SALES CORP FILES TO SELL 35,000 SHARES
6/17/99 7:42

FORM 144 FILED AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON 06/14/99

JAGUAR SALES CORP LTD, NO RELATION,
OF 270 N CANON DR SUITE 1936, BEVERLY HILLS, CA 90210,
HAS FILED TO SELL 35,000 SHARES OF ADVANCED ENGINE TECHNOLOGIES INC [AENG]
THROUGH PATTERSON TRAVIS INC. CONTACT PHONE (505)-323-7341.

The Washington Service reports Form 144 (Proposed Sale of Securities)
filings released by the S.E.C. Further information on our services may
be obtained by calling (202) 778-1380



To: david travis who wrote (3016)6/21/1999 10:40:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
More! But I guess they didn't trust you, gave it to SBSH: "ADVANCED ENGINE:O'BRIEN NOMINEES P FILES TO SELL 50,000 SHARES
6/9/99 22:10

FORM 144 FILED AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON 06/07/99

O'BRIEN NOMINEES PTY LTD, NO RELATION,
OF NEREID HOUSE WEST COOLUM RD, MT COOLUM,
HAS FILED TO SELL 50,000 SHARES OF ADVANCED ENGINE TECHNOLOGIES INC [AENG]
THROUGH SALOMON SMITH BARNEY INC. CONTACT PHONE (505)-323-7341.

The Washington Service reports Form 144 (Proposed Sale of Securities)
filings released by the S.E.C. Further information on our services may
be obtained by calling (202) 778-1380



To: david travis who wrote (3016)6/21/1999 10:42:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3383
 
More name creativity!: "ADVANCED ENGINE:AMEX FINANCIAL ADV FILES TO SELL 53,000 SHARES
6/9/99 22:10

FORM 144 FILED AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON 06/07/99

AMEX FINANCIAL ADVISORS, NO RELATION,
OF PO BOX 9446, MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55440,
HAS FILED TO SELL 53,000 SHARES OF ADVANCED ENGINE TECHNOLOGIES INC [AENG]
THROUGH AMERICAN EXPRESS FINL ADV. CONTACT PHONE (505)-323-7341.

The Washington Service reports Form 144 (Proposed Sale of Securities)
filings released by the S.E.C. Further information on our services may
be obtained by calling (202) 778-1380"



To: david travis who wrote (3016)9/14/1999 1:27:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3383
 
DOOM TRAV! YOU ARE SUPERCAPPED! Mr. Goldfinger's prediction of your demise has come to fruition: BWA HAHAHAHAHAHA!

Done TRAV, you are done! Finished, complete, no mass!



To: david travis who wrote (3016)9/17/1999 11:24:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
TRAV you're a dinosaur, get with the times: 'Boiler-Room' Scams Shift to the Internet. Investment Promoters Move To Web From Their Phones.

Benjamin Novick, a Los Angeles private investigator, always hangs up on
telephone salesmen offering hot investments. One guy tried to sell him
futures options. Another memorable pitch involved gold bars.

"I never respond to those things," he says.

Then one day last summer, he received an
intriguing proposal through e-mail. Small
investors were being offered partnerships by Electric Choice Investments
Inc. of Boca Raton, Fla., in a venture that was poised to cash in by selling
electricity in the newly deregulated California power market: "Profit from
the breakup of America's largest monopoly."

To Mr. Novick, the e-mail and its accompanying Web sites rendered the
offer credible. The Internet also seemingly helped him make inquiries into
the investment and the promoters. When it all checked out, he plunked
down $120,000 -- to his dismay and embarrassment.

The venture quickly turned sour, leaving the 40-year-old Mr. Novick and
some 600 other investors throughout the country with losses that they
estimate could be as much as $10 million.

Telemarketers still crowd into smoke-filled rooms to cold-call prospects
using a telephone book. But law-enforcement officials say these traditional
boiler-room operations are going the way of the horse and buggy,
increasingly replaced by investment schemes using the Internet to find and
persuade investors.

While some Internet sites offering
investments are legitimate,
government officials say the number
of questionable securities offerings is
burgeoning, though there aren't any
reliable statistics because of the
nature of the Internet.

For one thing, the Internet is
cheaper. Telemarketers typically pay as much as $100 for a list of 1,000
people to call, while it costs the same to send bulk e-mail to 100,000. The
access to potential customers is better, too. Many people nowadays use
caller I.D. or answering machines to dodge telemarketers, but those same
people often eagerly open their e-mail, which still remains a bit of a
novelty.

Cyber-promoters of questionable sites also are harder to oversee.
Regulators often must use subpoenas just to learn who they are, since
some of the e-mail and Web site pitches are sent anonymously. And Web
sites are popping up that can't even be seen by investigators using
government computers to scan the Web. While visible to the rest of the
world, some questionable sites use technology to block out regulators,
who are left with the false impression that the sites have shut down.

Internet experts say this little-known tactic grew out of the computer tricks
commonly used by child pornographers and militia groups to fly their Web
sites below the government radar. "These are sophisticated people," says
Detective Michael Menz of the Sacramento (Calif.) Valley Hi-Tech Crime
Task Force, referring to Web sites that use blocking techniques.

Such stealth has prompted the government's
cyber-cops to go undercover to search for
sites offering questionable investments. But
these patrols have only just begun and are
dwarfed by the Internet's mass. When
detected, the promoters don't even have to pack their bags, but simply can
restart their operation elsewhere in cyberspace. "They pop out of nowhere
... and then disappear," says Mark Herr, New Jersey's chief of consumer
affairs.

California and other state officials say the venture marketed by Electric
Choice is typical of the types of investments being peddled on the Internet,
as are the individuals who invested in it.

Some, like Steve Zeimet, a 41-year-old electronics technician from
Auburn, Wash., who invested about $10,000, sunk 401(k) retirement
savings into the deal. Others, like retiree Reynold Frank, 49, had been so
cautious about investing their money that they didn't even own stocks. But
Mr. Frank, who breathes with the help of oxygen bottles, invested with
$5,400 from his wife's death benefits. "When you're on Social Security,
that is a mountain of money," he says.

The investors say they were impressed by the presentation's sophistication.
The Web site even had a video link, while the deal's structure involved a
complex series of partnerships.

As do many such offerings, the proposal sounded logical. California had
opened its electricity market so consumers could buy power from any
seller, rather than only from a large utility with a monopoly. In theory, this
means that an entrepreneur who finds and buys low-priced electricity on
the spot market can then resell it for a profit; resellers only have to pay a
$100 fee to register with the state.

In reality, selling electricity is a highly competitive and complicated business
that so far hasn't resulted in significant profits for would-be entrepreneurs,
according to the state's public-utilities commission. As a result, most of the
several hundred registrants have languished without actually selling any
electricity, state officials say.

Despite the obstacles, last year, two groups of promoters from southern
Florida who registered in California began telling investors they could make
a bundle.

The first involved a classic telemarketing ploy, according to federal
regulators. Friendly Power Co. used boiler rooms to sell investments in
limited partnerships that would market electricity in California, according to
the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which got a court order
barring Friendly from making fraudulent securities sales. In May, a federal
judge in Florida imposed a $200,000 fine on the firm's owners and
ordered them to disgorge $2.4 million that they had raised from investors.
Although big returns had been promised, an SEC-appointed receiver says
the promoters took 80% of the investors' money as fees.

Weeks later, a second group also began offering investments in reselling
electricity in California. This venture involved Full Power Corp., and
partnerships also were sold, with one difference. Electric Choice, a chief
marketer of the Full Power partnerships, used the Internet -- with more
success.

Some investors ran across the proposal in surfing the Web for investments.
Most received an e-mail solicitation with a sizzling pitch: "Over 50%
Annual Returns Tax Free."

The e-mail connected to a Web site that elaborated with news blurbs and
video feeds. Potential investors were then sent to another Internet site,
where, some investors say, they thought they were getting independent
verification of Full Power's credentials. Instead, they landed on a site
owned by Stockbroker Associates Inc. of Beverly Hills, Calif., which was
paid $5,000 a month to promote Full Power; among other things, it posted
press releases about Full Power's plans. The fee was disclosed in fine
print.

Full Power, which is now based in Lakewood, Ohio, says its intentions
were genuine. Its chief executive officer, Donald Johnson, says the firm in
March abandoned its plans to market electricity in California because it
misjudged the state's market.

Mr. Johnson also maintains that Full Power had nothing to do with the
partnership sales. Rather, he says Full Power sold its "license" to another
firm, which has gone out of business, and that this firm in turn dealt with the
marketers. Nonetheless, he says that all he observed was above board.
"The investment was plainly marked with all of the risk factors," he says.

Electric Choice's owner, Donald LaBarre, denies that he misled investors.
In a statement issued through his attorney, Mark Cohen, Mr. LaBarre said:
"To the contrary, significant written information was provided to investors
in limited liability partnerships. In particular, investors executed subscription
documents, investor questionnaires and risk disclosure documents
containing detailed and specific advisements on the nature of the investment
and the risks associated therewith." Mr. LaBarre in the statement said
investors also were orally advised of the risks.

Electric Choice's sales were helped by another twist in its pitch: Investors
were directed to call what some say they thought was a Better Business
Bureau-type watchdog to check out the deal. Rather, the promoters had
directed them to a for-profit referral firm, National Business Opportunity
Bureau of Norcross, Ga.

Electric Choice paid $450 to be listed with the NBOB. Electric Choice
made further payments to NBOB for the names -- at $20 apiece -- of
everyone who made an inquiry to NBOB, so these potential investors
could be targeted for more sales pitches. NBOB owner Steve
Mooneyham says his firm began disclosing these fees to callers last year
when asked to do so by the Florida attorney general.

Investors, who say they were wowed by all they saw on the Internet and
heard from NBOB, then typically phoned the promoters, not vice versa. "If
you can get investors to call you, you're much more likely to make the
sale," says Bill McDonald, an enforcement chief with California
Department of Corporations.

State regulators scrambled to catch up after receiving complaints from
investors alleging that they had been pressured by Electric Choice to buy
and were given misinformation by Electric Choice, such as that electricity
sales had already begun. Indiana, Alabama and several other states issued
cease-and-desist orders against Electric Choice for failing to register the
securities sales, although those states took no action against Full Power.
But the Pennsylvania Securities Commission did name Full Power in its
order. Mr. Johnson said he was unaware of the action.

Investors say they have lost 80% of their money in partnerships sold to
them by Electric Choice, which they were told was spent on Full Power's
license and the marketers' fees. Full Power says it is offering to trade the
remaining value of their investments for unregistered shares in its penny
stock.

Meanwhile, the investors are getting a new pitch. "Watch how your money
could grow three to five times in as many years," reads the e-mail. It
doesn't name the promoter. But one investor who sent for more details,
Samuel Smullin of North Turner, Maine, says he received a letter from Mr.
LaBarre, of Boca Raton, this time selling shares in a mobile-radio
franchise. "We believe this is an exciting opportunity," the letter says. The
e-mail also linked to a Web site, which features a picture of Vice President
Al Gore and a quote from him calling telecommunications a "lucrative
marketplace."

Investigators in several states have discovered that they can't access the
Web site while using their government computers to surf the Web, but they
can on their home computers. They have been similarly blocked by some
other Web sites promoting electricity sales and some sites offering
foreign-currency-exchange investments, a number of which have been shut
down by regulators because of securities violations.

Mr. LaBarre's attorney said in a statement: "The matters are all either being
presently contested or were settled without any finding of wrongdoing on
the part of Electric Choice Investments."

Computer experts say that Web sites can readily block government
officials by recognizing the ".gov." or ".state." in their Internet addresses.
Or they can block out an entire Internet-service provider, if it is known to
have government officials among its customers. Since many such service
firms are small operations, the promoter doesn't risk losing many potential
victims.

The blocking can be overcome by switching into a nongovernment
computer, says David Jonson, an assistant attorney general in South
Carolina. "It's a minor hurdle -- as long as you know about it." But the
blocking technique still is not widely known among state security
regulators, who for the most part also don't have nongovernment Internet
accounts in their offices. Says Matthew Bahrenburg of North Dakota's
securities commission: "I might have to do more surfing at home."



To: david travis who wrote (3016)11/6/1999 12:31:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3383
 
Very nice, TRAV, confirms what I been sayin' for years:"Dead Men Do Talk What a murder victim told Barron's about skulduggery on Wall Street

By Bill Alpert

The recent murders of two stock promoters at a mansion in Colts Neck,
New Jersey, struck a serious chord at several publications, including
Barron's, because one of the victims, Maier S. Lehmann, had been trying for
nearly two years to get journalists to publicize his account of wrongdoing on
Wall Street. Whether his campaign had anything to do with his murder, we
don't know. But we can relay the portions of his account that we have been
able to check out.

Lehmann's main goal seemed to be to interest prosecutors and reporters in
the financial dealings of one of his former business associates, Judah L.
Wernick of Woodmere, New York. In September, Wernick, 36, was
indicted by federal prosecutors in Manhattan in a racketeering and stock
fraud case that involved the notorious stock promoter Randolph K. Pace.
Both dispute the charges. In August, the National Association of Securities
Dealers censured and fined Wernick, who consented (without admitting or
denying guilt) to findings that his brokerage firm, Patterson Travis, improperly
underwrote stocks and failed to act on customers' trading instructions.

It was late 1997 when Lehmann came
to Barron's with his detailed allegations
about Wernick. Lehmann felt that he
was owed money by Wernick, and
admitted that grudge upfront. What
Lehmann told Barron's, and any
regulator who would listen, was that
Wernick was the latest in a long line of
front-men for the legendary stock
swindler Robert E. Brennan. Wernick
denies this, but evidence shows that
Wernick and Brennan have worked together in the past and that many of
Brennan's former associates have been involved in questionable deals with
Wernick.

Brennan, you may recall, burst onto the national stage in the 1980s with TV
commercials that showed him stepping from his helicopter and inviting
would-be clients to "come grow with us." But Brennan's brokerage, First
Jersey Securities, was later found to be a "massive and continuing fraud" on
small investors, according to the federal judge who upheld a $75 million SEC
judgment against Brennan.

Contacted last week, Wernick said he hadn't spoken to Lehmann in four
years. Although he said he knew nothing about the murders beyond what he
had seen in news reports, Wernick went on to speculate that the murders
could have been some sort of retaliation motivated by Lehmann's activities in
the four years since the two parted company.

Lehmann, who was 37 when he died, did have a criminal record. He pled
guilty in 1995 to filing false insurance claims, and helped federal prosecutors
bust others involved in that scam. Then, earlier this year, Lehmann agreed to
pay $630,000 to settle Securities & Exchange Commission civil charges that
he and nearly 30 others deceptively promoted shares of Electro Optical
Systems.

Lehmann often seemed to be in the
know about unusual happenings
related to small stocks. Last
December, for example, he told
Barron's that two convicted Russian
racketeers were threatening
investors they suspected were
shorting a stock associated with
Ivana Trump (The Ivana Channel,
Part II, December 14, 1998).

The other Colts Neck murder
victim, Alain A. Chalem, age 41, has never been charged with any
wrongdoing, though he did work at A.S. Goldmen & Co., a brokerage firm
the Manhattan District Attorney indicted in July, along with many of its
brokers, for allegedly bilking investors out of more than $100 million.
Goldmen officials deny the charges, and their lawyer said in court that the firm
was forced to cut a deal with the mob to stay in business. Prosecutors decline
to say whether Chalem or Lehmann helped them build the case against
Goldmen. In any event, the fact that the two promoters had crossed paths
with mob figures can only add to the list of possible suspects in the murder
case.

In what appeared to be a cold-blooded execution, Chalem took one bullet in
the chest and five in the head, while Lehmann took one in the leg and three in
the head. At the time of their demise, Chalem and Lehman were running an
Internet stock-promotion scheme out of the Colts Neck mansion.

As for Wernick, his first known contact with Brennan came around 1990. At
the time, Wernick was a rookie stockbroker living in a Queens co-op
apartment, but he wanted to be an investment banker. Toward that end, he
found a Texas sawmill that needed cash and introduced the mill's owners to
an associate of Brennan. In the name of raising capital, Brennan's man merged
the sawmill into a shell company called Nacoma Consolidated. When the
stock subsequently surged skyward, Brennan sold $29 million of the Nacoma
shares he controlled, according to a civil racketeering suit filed by New
Jersey's attorney general.

In a related deal, involving a stock called Future Funding Corp., New Jersey
regulators say Brennan improperly pocketed $70 million in profits, thanks
largely to trades executed by Wernick. For some of the Future Funding
trades, Wernick took the unusual step of using his wife's maiden name, calling
himself Judah Pion. Wernick was not named as a defendant for his part in
either the Nacoma or Future Funding deals, but the state's pleadings detail his
prominent role in the scams. Wernick told Barron's that the trades in question
were executed by his firm and not by him. Brennan recently settled the
attorney general's charges on these matters by agreeing to pay $45 million
without admitting wrongdoing.

In an interview with Barron's, Wernick insisted that he has had nothing to do
with Brennan since 1991. Lehmann said otherwise. What there can be no
question about is that Wernick continued to run with other members of
Brennan's crowd. According to an SEC civil suit still pending in Manhattan
federal court, Wernick in 1994 was working at a firm called S.B. Cantor &
Co., and while there he rigged stock trades in cahoots with Leonard Greer,
who ran the brokerage L.C. Wegard. In their pretrial depositions, Wernick
and Greer denied any wrongdoing. Here's the Brennan connection: New
Jersey regulators charged that Greer financed Wegard with $12.5 million in
loans from Brennan's charitable foundations.

The SEC eventually shuttered Wegard, and federal prosecutors in New
Jersey indicted many Wegard brokers. Greer was not indicted.

In 1994, Wernick moved to Patterson Travis, a then-moribund firm owned
by David Travis, a Colorado man who was recovering from a heart-bypass
operation. In a Manhattan skyscraper, Wernick set up a branch office for the
firm. On paper, the operation was run by Travis, and the firm's prospectuses
modestly describe Wernick as "office manager." But Lehmann alleged that
Wernick ran the firm, and documents, customers and employees corroborate
this claim.

Many of the brokers working under Wernick at Patterson Travis were
Brennan alumni. Wernick's sales manager, for example, was Richard Laus,
the ex-brother-in-law of Brennan, who had run sales at the outlaw firm
Hibbard Brown. Wernick's operations officer was Marshall S. Maddox,
formerly the finance chief at L.C. Wegard.

When investment banking clients needed an
auditor, Wernick sent them to Brennan's
accountant, Dennis M. Gaito, who was indicted
in September of this year by the U.S. Attorney
for the Eastern District of New York. Just a
few weeks ago, according to an FBI affidavit
unsealed with Gaito's indictment, a hidden
camera videotaped Gaito telling a stock
swindler how to hide fraud proceeds in
Singapore and Monte Carlo. The alleged
scheme resembles one that bankruptcy
examiners say Gaito devised in the early 1990s
to put some $25 million of Brennan's money
beyond the reach of U.S. courts. Wernick says
he recommended Gaito to clients because Gaito
was an expert in working with shell companies. Wernick added that he hasn't
dealt with Gaito in four years.

Lehmann went to work for Wernick at Patterson Travis. Lehmann and his
wife, Tamar, lived in Woodmere, New York, where they were friends and
neighbors of Wernick and Wernick's wife, Jan. Many mornings, the two
drove in together to the Patterson Travis office in a sleek tower on
Manhattan's Battery Park.

Wernick insisted to Barron's that Travis runs Patterson Travis, and that the
Brennan alumni were "great" employees who just needed a break. "If you're
down and out," said Wernick, "I'm your best friend. No matter if you're
Jewish, black, white, green, yellow. I'm your friend."

Wernick was incredulous at any suggestion that he was a front man for
Brennan. "I have no relationship with him today," said Wernick. When we
asked Brennan if Wernick and Patterson Travis were fronting for him, he said,
"That is preposterous and absurd."

In talking to Barron's, Lehmann contended that Wernick's first underwriting
at Patterson Travis, for a Florida-based direct-marketing firm called ML
Direct, was a scam. That charge is supported by other Wernick employees
and by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, who
indicted Wernick in September for conspiracy and stock fraud. Prosecutors
charge that the ML Direct underwriting was arranged by Randy Pace, whose
Rooney Pace firm was barred from the securities business by the SEC in the
1980s. At Pace's 27th-floor suite on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan, the
indictment says, Wernick joined a secret conspiracy that enabled the Pace
gang to dump $24 million of worthless stock on the public. Like Pace,
Wernick has pled not guilty.

At Patterson Travis, Wernick did two deals with Colin Halpern, another
Brennan associate. In 1994 Halpern merged the Domino's Pizza franchise for
Ireland and Britain into a shell controlled by Wernick. This publicly held shell,
called Crescent Capital, was one of the Brennan-controlled stocks under
SEC investigation in the early 1990s when it came into Wernick's hands.
Wernick said Brennan sold his holdings in Crescent by the time Halpern came
along.

The second stock offer Wernick underwrote for Halpern, in 1995, involved a
firm called Red Hot Concepts, which owned a Chili's restaurant franchise.
This outfit was at the heart of fraud charges brought in 1997 by the New
Jersey Bureau of Securities against a group of former Brennan associates who
were working at the New York-based brokerage firm Americorp Securities,
which is now defunct. The administrative complaint says that the Americorp
brokers bid up Red Hot shares and then foisted them on the public at inflated
prices. The beneficiaries included offshore customers at Patterson Travis with
addresses in the well-known money-laundering haunts of Mauritius and the
Isle of Man.

It's impossible for us to say if Lehmann's campaign to expose skulduggery on
Wall Street was in any way connected with his violent death. But federal
investigators are taking a look, as are New Jersey prosecutors assigned to the
murder case."



To: david travis who wrote (3016)12/17/1999 1:08:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 3383
 
One Punch, they're saying more nice things about you: "Authorities say they believe Lehmann was deeply involved in penny stock fraud at a New York brokerage, Patterson-Travis, although he was not a licensed broker or principal there."

The Star-Ledger Archive
COPYRIGHT ¸ The Star-Ledger 1999
Date: 1999/11/28 Sunday Page: 001 Section: NEWS Edition: FINAL Size: 2183 words

A shady deal united 2 doomed promoters

Secrets slowly surface after Colts Neck deaths

By John T. Ward and Ted Sherman
Star-Ledger Staff

The setting was as gilded and glittering as New York gets: the Plaza Hotel at the peak of the Christmas season. But
the deal on the table was dross - a scheme based on penny stocks.

In short, five men were meeting to arrange for stock of dubious value to be used as collateral for a brokerage
account.

Not quite two years later, two of the men were killed gangland-style, and a third found their bodies. At least one of
the other two present at the meeting was at the murder scene earlier in the day.

Albert Alain Chalem and Maier S. Lehmann had never met before the December 1997 gathering.

On Oct. 25, Chalem and Lehmann were gunned down in a barrage of bullets in a Colts Neck mansion. Their bodies
were found early the next morning by a stockbroker friend of Chalem's, Allen Conkling, who also had been at the
meeting, according to sworn testimony to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Conkling and an unidentified person found the murdered men on the marble floor of the house where Chalem lived
with his girlfriend. Both victims had been disabled by initial shots before the killer or killers finished them off.

Authorities refuse to say what, if anything, they have learned about why Chalem and Lehmann were killed. They also
won't say if the deaths were related to the pair's business dealings. What is known is that the Plaza Hotel meeting
brought the two together and they died together.

While the deal discussed at the Plaza Hotel never materialized, a review of the victims' lives shows that Chalem and
Lehmann prowled the outer margins of the stock market before and after they met. Moving fluidly from deal to deal,
they apparently were regular players in a world where traders pump up the values of cheap stocks and then dump
them on unsuspecting investors.

Chalem and Lehmann appeared to have made careers out of hiding their true interests in both their business and
personal lives:

Federal prosecutors in New York say Chalem, 41, was secretly controlling Toluca Pacific Securities, a now-defunct
penny stock brokerage based in Burbank, Calif., with purported ties to organized crime. The company, which had
offices in Manhattan and on Long Island, had run afoul of regulators for unauthorized trading, misrepresentatio n and
high-pressure sales tactics. Chalem was never charged.

Chalem owned two boats, a Florida condominium and expensive cars, none of them in his name. A home in the
Hamptons was in his mother's name. Cars registered at his Hamptons address were in the name of a company that
bore his initials. The $1.1 million house where he and Lehmann died was in the name of Russell Candela, the father of
Chalem's girlfriend.

Chalem was said by Bennett Oppenheim, the founder of a controversial heroin-detoxification business, to be the
company's owner. Oppenheim, in an interview after Chalem's death, said Chalem didn't want his identity disclosed.

After Chalem's death, federal prosecutors subpoenaed the records of a recently failed day-trading firm, Harbor
Securities, to determine whether Chalem racked up $800,000 in losses last April while trading under an assumed
name, according to a report in the New York Times.

Lehmann, a 37-year-old from Woodmere, N.Y., with five young children - including two sets of twins - had no
visible means of support. His wife, Tamar, told the SEC as part of a fraud probe that her husband's sole source of
income was a job at a Manhattan property-management firm in which her brother is a partner. But her brother, Ziel
Feldman, swore he never paid Lehmann for his services.

Lehmann refused to testify in that case, invoking his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself.

Authorities say they believe Lehmann was deeply involved in penny stock fraud at a New York brokerage,
Patterson-Travis, although he was not a licensed broker or principal there.

Lehmann sought out securities regulators and several financial publications late last year in an effort to implicate the
neighbor with whom he shared his commute to the firm, all the while claiming his own hands were clean.

Chalem also had attracted the attention of federal prosecutors. According to a person familiar with the Toluca Pacific
case who spoke on condition of anonymity, prosecutors met with Chalem about 18 months ago and told him they
regarded him as the firm's unseen master.

Prosecutors "weren't shy about it," the source said. "They said they thought Toluca was a bucket shop manipulating
securities; that they thought it was a pump-and-dump operation. They thought he was behind it, and they were giving
him a chance to come in and cooperate against others. They were giving him a chance to cut his losses."

In response, Chalem told the prosecutors that he shared office space with Toluca but had nothing to do with
ownership or management of the firm, the source said. Sensing that the government was short of evidence to obtain
an indictment, Chalem refused to cooperate, according to the source.

Those prosecutors had not contacted Chalem for several months, leading him to believe the matter might have been
dropped, the source said.

George S. Canellos, the assistant U.S. attorney identified by the source as the prosecutor on the case, declined to
confirm there was a probe of Toluca and declined to comment on Chalem.

After Chalem's death, the Associated Press reported that he had been a government witness in an unspecified case.
(A Star-Ledger story used the AP quote.) But he wasn't a witness in the Toluca probe, the source insisted.

'That's absolutely impossible," the source said. "I don't think anybody would have suspected Alain Chalem of
cooperating with the government."

Public records do not tie Chalem to Toluca, which was one of several brokerages that picked up jobless brokers
from Hanover Stirling after federal prosecutors busted that firm for fraud.

(Such scampering from firm to firm by brokers is what authorities call "cockroaching." "You step on it, it's like
cockroaches running in five different directions, and they create new nests," said former federal prosecutor Joel M.
Cohen. "Of course, now the linkages are different because it's all Internet stuff. So instead of cockroaching, they're all
linking to each other over the Internet and all moving the same stocks.")

Few of those who knew Chalem and Lehmann would talk about them on the record. Kimberly Scarola, Chalem's
girlfriend, did not respond to requests for an interview. Neither did Chalem's mother or sister.

Lehmann's widow and parents in Monsey, N.Y., also did not respond to requests for interviews.

Cheap stocks, high style

Chalem's business dealings ranged from cheap hotels to cheap stocks. With his father, he ran a Clifton printing ink
company that went bankrupt in 1988. He later acquired a stake in a Hunter, N.Y., bar and hotel that burned to the
ground in 1994.

Chalem also operated a motel in Hampton Bays, N.Y., called Allen's Acres. Plans were announced to sell the
property under a lease-back deal to Clean-X-Press, a San Francisco-based laundromat chain, but property records
do not indicate the sale ever went through.

Clean-X-Press figured in an indictment in June of several West Coast brokerages that federal prosecutors linked to
associates of the Colombo crime family. The shares of the thinly traded company were manipulated to artificially
inflate its value, the federal government alleged.

Chalem was said to be active in short-selling, an investing technique in which stock is borrowed from a broker and
sold at the prevailing price, in the expectation that the price will fall. If the price drops, the short-seller buys the
replacement shares at a discount, making a profit. If the price rises, the short-seller has to replace the borrowed
shares at a loss.

Though he was not a licensed broker, Chalem worked for two years in the offices of A.S. Goldmen & Co., a
brokerage that was indicted in July on charges that it cheated thousands of investors out of nearly $100 million.
Conkling worked there at the same time, records show. Neither Chalem nor Conkling was named in the federal
indictment.

Whatever the source of his money, Chalem clearly liked to spend it and enjoyed entertaining his friends.
Acquaintances say he wore a gold Rolex watch and bought boats and numerous cars, including a Hummer, the
civilian sports utility version of the military's big Humvee truck, an expensive, limited-production vehicle driven by the
likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger.

One friend recalled that Chalem would offer his watch to anyone who admired it. He had a boat docked on the
Hudson River and another one near his condominium in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

'Alain was very friendly," said Ada Garay-Logan, who is married to Joe Logan Jr., a friend of Chalem's. "He always
has people around him. He would invite friends over, always friends."

Joe Logan Jr. was one of the men present at the Plaza Hotel meeting in 1997, according to SEC depositions in
another case. The fifth man was not identified. Logan also was at the Colts Neck house earlier in the day that Chalem
and Lehmann were killed. Logan has not returned phone calls.

Instant fountain

The Colts Neck house, faced in gleaming white brick and fronted by an ostentatious gate, was all but unfurnished 10
months after Chalem and Scarola moved in. Then, friends say, Chalem had an ornate, Italian-style fountain plopped in
the front of the home on the day of a party for Scarola's mother because he wanted the entrance to impress his
guests.

The heavy white fountain, added three weeks before the murders, features a nude male figure in apparent distress as
he is encircled by open-mouthed horse heads. It was hurriedly installed on a still-wet concrete foundation, and
Chalem was trying to get it filled with water just hours before the party.

He also lavished attention on his pet bulldogs, named Sophia Loren and Spikey, and on the night of his murder was
planning a trip to Florida around their comfort, investigators said. Determined not to put the dogs in the cargo bay of
a commercial airliner, Chalem intended to drive 700 miles to Tennessee, where he would meet a friend who would fly
him the rest of the way, according to one of Chalem's friends.

Lehmann, who was buried on his 15th wedding anniversary, pleaded guilty in 1992 to mail fraud over false insurance
reports of burglaries at a camera business he owned; his cooperation led to convictions of more than 100 people.

More recently, Lehmann settled civil charges by the SEC that he had helped rig trading in the stock of
Electro-Optical Systems, a Boston company whose stock rose from 50 cents to $7 per share in one day before
collapsing. Without admitting any wrongdoing, Lehmann agreed to pay the government $500,000 he was alleged to
have illegally pocketed, plus $130,000 in fines. At the time of his death, Lehmann was purported to have been
helping prosecutors build a criminal case in the matter.

Fateful visit

Those who knew both men insist that Chalem and Lehmann were not business partners as prosecutors have alleged.
The Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office said the two were involved in a stock-touting Web site on the Internet
called StockInvestor.com, which promoted penny stocks to subscribers. Such sites have been the focus of increasing
attention by financial regulators because of their penchant to fraudulently hype stocks.

Several of Chalem's acquaintances, however, insisted that the Internet service, registered in Panama and administered
out of Budapest, Hungary, was strictly Lehmann's brainchild.

Lehmann was a frequent visitor to Chalem's Colts Neck home but never stayed overnight, always returning home to
Woodmere, where he was active in an Orthodox Jewish temple.

On the day of Oct. 25, he drove to Chalem's place in a rented car. Conkling had left earlier in the day, after spending
the night, and Scarola had departed several days earlier to spend some time in the Fort Lauderdale condo.

According to police, the last time anyone spoke with Chalem was about 8:30 p.m. Conkling found the bodies early
the next morning, when he arrived to pick up some decorative molding that Chalem was replacing.

Both bodies were on the floor in a formal dining room that no one ever used, where the chairs were still wrapped in
plastic to protect the upholstered fabric from the dust of workers. Papers were strewn across the dining room table -
an expensive piece of furniture that Chalem normally forbade anyone to touch.

Chalem, clad in a blue sweatshirt, was shot multiple times in the head and chest. Lehmann was shot in the legs to
cripple him, then in the chest.

Police have named no suspects.

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