To: MoneyMade who wrote (8824 ) 3/10/1999 5:04:00 PM From: T A P Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15987
MoneyMade your name change for your newsletter will not do the trick! Your still emailing insider information and pumping and dumping stock. For all you followers take a look at the historical quotes and the highs reached particulary on days with comparable volume to 3/8, 3/9 & 3/10/99...12/23/98 , 1/19 & 1/20/99. Ask yourself who is selling into this buying this time around as you receive these emails with inside info and then you will know why GSIC could'nt break .20 on such heavy volume.sec.gov You sent out email below on 3/8 and on 3/9 GSIC releases news ! Changing your name wont keep the SEC from viewing this as inside information! Just curious if you will use same attorney pictured in your SI profile? Eh Mate! Please post your response here for all to read as I have done when you came over to SOWK thread and told everyone to report T A P. Ariba Turkey Mate! (Email below sent by MoneyMade Tlhs@swbell.net on 3/8/99 .) I thought I'd share with you a "rumor"....which I think is huge After tomorrows open GSIC will announce a 1.Stategic Alliance with a major portal......Go2net..who owns SI 2. Demo the new E-commerce site I haven't post this to the public this was mailed to me about an hour ago.. This source is a good one!! MoneyMade WWW.SavvyInvestors.Com Why the name change ??? M$neyMade I N S I D E R T I P S MoneyMade@Netscape.Net sec.gov The info below was taken from sec.gov The "Pump And Dump" Scam It's common to see messages posted online that urge readers to buy a stock quickly or tell you to sell before the price goes down. Often the writers will claim to have "inside" information about an impending development or to use an "infallible" combination of economic and stock market data to pick stocks. In reality, they may be insiders or paid promoters who stand to gain by selling their shares after the stock price is pumped up by gullible investors. Once these fraudsters sell their shares and stop hyping the stock, the price typically falls and investors lose their money. Fraudsters frequently use this ploy with small, thinly-traded companies because it's easier to manipulate a stock when there's little or no information available about the company. Investors are advised to read the SEC's "Cyberspace" Alert before purchasing any investmentpromoted on the Internet. The free publication, which alerts investors to the telltale signs of online investment fraud, is available through the Investor Assistance and Complaints link of the SEC's home page on the World Wide Web, www.sec.gov. It can also be obtained by calling (800) SEC-0330. Investors are encouraged to report suspicious Internet offerings (or other suspicious offerings) via e-mail to enforcement@sec.gov. A user-friendly form to assist in making a report is available at the Enforcement Complaint Center on the Enforcement Division link of the SEC's home page, www.sec.gov. Investors can also mail a report to the Enforcement Complaint Center, Mail Stop 8-4, 450 Fifth Street, Washington, DC 20549. sec.gov