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Gold/Mining/Energy : Kensington Resources Ltd. (V.KRT) * Diamond in the rough! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Hausmann who wrote (3750)5/1/1999 2:41:00 PM
From: UNDERTAKER  Respond to of 5206
 
Not at all! Avg. Joe thinks that KRT is a good Short.

UNDERTAKER



To: Peter Hausmann who wrote (3750)5/1/1999 2:44:00 PM
From: UNDERTAKER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5206
 
Has this been posted on the thread yet?

Kensington Resources Ltd -

B.C. Securities Commission finds Gary
Stanhiser mastermind of fraud scheme

Kensington Resources Ltd
KRT
Shares issued 24,670,435
1999-04-29 close $0.48
Friday Apr 30 1999
See B.C. Securities Commission (BCSEC) News Release
Mr. Michael Bernard of the BCSC reports,
The British Columbia Securities Commission has found that Gary Stanhiser was
the mastermind of an investment scheme designed to raise money from the public
for the purchase of shares in contravention of the Securities Act.
In a decision issued today, the commission also made findings against Excel Asset
Management Inc., Excell Asset Management Inc., Excel Funding Inc., Excel
International Investment Corp., Diomondmark Investments Limited, The Loma
Trust, Del Knowlton and Linda Knowlton in connection with the investment
scheme.
The commission will hear further submissions before issuing any penalties
stemming from the findings.
Mr. Stanhiser set up a group of offshore companies and trusts that were ultimately
controlled by him. Through his company, Excel Asset Management Inc., Mr.
Stanhiser then hired a number of "client representatives" in Vancouver, Kelowna
and California. Their job was to contact their family and friends and encourage
them to purchase shares in companies doing private placements through Excel.
Del Knowlton and Linda Knowlton worked out of the Vancouver office and were
representatives for over 200 of Excel's more than 300 clients.
"Client representatives would raise money from clients, which would be pooled in
the Canaccord account of one of the Excel companies, Stanhiser or Knowlton,"
the panel said in describing the investment scheme.
"In only a handful of cases would a single client actually invest $97,000 or more.
Once sufficient funds had accumulated, one of the Excel companies, the Loma
Trust (one of the offshore trusts) or Stanhiser would purchase the shares of a
company pursuant to a previously negotiated private placement. The shares would
then be allocated to the clients, as indicated in the Excel portfolio summaries. In
some cases, the clients actually took delivery of the shares.
Between 1995 and 1997, Excel orchestrated at least 22 private placements in
amounts totalling over $9-million. These private placements ostensibly were made
under exemptions from the registration and prospectus requirements of the act that
required each purchaser to invest at least $97,000.
"The commission takes the position that it is abusive for a company to pool funds
of individuals to purchase shares under these exemptions unless each individual
invests $97,000. On the basis of this, the commission found that the exemptions
were unavailable for the distribution of shares to the Excel clients.
The commission found that Mr. Stanhiser, Mr. and Ms. Knowlton and the Excel
companies all acted to advance these distributions and therefore contravened the
registration and prospectus requirements of the act.
The commission also found that Mr. Stanhiser engaged in a scheme that
perpetrated a fraud on people in British Columbia.
"There can be no doubt that Stanhiser's orchestration of the Excel investment
scheme was dishonest. We consider his conduct to be underhanded, in that he
consistently remained behind the scenes. He ensured that others acted as directors
and officers of the three offshore Excel companies and that others had ostensible
authority over those companies' accounts at Canaccord (Capital Corp.)
"Yet, as protector of the trusts that owned the three companies, Stanhiser had
ultimate control over their activities. Stanhiser also hid behind the client
representatives, whose job it was to bring in clients and raise money. We are of
the view that Stanhiser, in this underhanded manner, designed and carried out the
Excel investment scheme to raise money from the public for the purchase of shares
in contravention of the Act.
"Once again, there can be no doubt that the clients of Excel Asset have been
deprived by Stanhiser. We have already determined that Stanhiser had ultimate
control over the Excel companies. Therefore, he had the ability to order the
payment of money and the distribution of shares to the Excel clients. Between
1995 and 1997, Excel Asset raised a net amount of approximately $13.5-million
from its clients.
"Approximately $9 million of that was used to purchase shares. However, shares
valued at only $1.5 to $2.4-million (based on their purchase price) were actually
distributed to clients. This means that the clients of Excel Asset are currently owed
money or shares in an amount between $11.1 and $12-million, which represents a
very significant economic loss."


UNDERTAKER