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Microcap & Penny Stocks : HITSGALORE.COM (HITT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Pluvia who wrote (650)5/12/1999 10:39:00 AM
From: happa  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 7056
 
I wonder how long S.I. will allow all this bashing??



To: Pluvia who wrote (650)5/12/1999 10:43:00 AM
From: RMMOYER  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 7056
 
I see you're very good at insulting people, how much did you make the last couple of days on your short call on "Hitt".oh yes,
"Did you write the Bloomberg Article".



To: Pluvia who wrote (650)5/12/1999 11:17:00 AM
From: Mr. Pink  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7056
 
Another fine article on this frog.

latimes.com

MP



To: Pluvia who wrote (650)5/12/1999 11:36:00 AM
From: Mr. Pink  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 7056
 
latimes.com

Wednesday, May 12, 1999

Net Firm's Stock Plunges on News of Fraud Probe
Regulation: Reports surface that Hitsgalore.com's founder failed to
disclose, in SEC filings, his earlier troubles at another firm.
By JEFF LEEDS, Times Staff Writer





After soaring to a market
value of $1 billion by
appealing to investor enthusiasm
for Internet stocks, shares of a
Rancho Cucamonga-based Internet company
nose-dived Tuesday amid reports that its founder
failed to disclose federal accusations that he misled
investors at an earlier firm.
Hitsgalore.com Inc., whose market value
vaulted from $53 million to $1 billion in three
months, tanked Tuesday as word spread that
company official Dorian Reed hadn't mentioned his
earlier troubles with regulators in filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.
The company's stock, which trades on the
NASD's over-the-counter bulletin board, plunged
$10.75 to $9.38 on volume of 3.7 million shares
Tuesday. The stock, just $1.88 a share as recently
as mid-March, had reached a high of $20.69 on
Monday.
Lawyers for the Federal Trade Commission
alleged last year that Reed and his earlier firm,
Internet Business Broadcasting, made inflated claims of 100.8% returns
on investments in World Wide Web advertising. FTC officials said they
won a default judgment against Reed and two other defendants for
$613,110 and a court order barring him from assisting in the making of
false statements in the future.
Hitsgalore.com said none of its officers or employees were the
subject of a governmental investigation when it filed documents with the
SEC to merge on Feb. 11 with Systems Communications Inc. of
Clearwater, Fla. Reed's failure to disclose the FTC allegations was first
reported by Bloomberg News.

Continued

The Hitsgalore.com Web
site solicits individuals to pay
$99 to "sponsor" banner ads on
the Internet, but it is unclear what the ads are for or
what they promote. The sponsors are supposed to
make money from a "25% referral fee."
"There is no limit on how many banners you can
sponsor and that means no limit on your income for
doing nothing more than being a sponsor! Why not
become a proactive sponsor and make a killing!"
the Hitsgalore.com site claims.
Reed, named in the FTC case as IBB's top
telemarketer, said in a statement that he had "heard
nothing since I responded [to the FTC allegations],
and I assumed the matter was taken care of last
spring."
The statement said Reed had not received a
copy of the FTC's March 30 motion for a default
judgment.
If he is found to have assisted in making false
statements at Hitsgalore.com, he could be jailed for contempt of court,
authorities said.
Steve Bradford, Hitsgalore.com's chief executive, said: "I do not
believe that the company has made any fraudulent filing with the SEC. . .
. However, we have appointed a committee of independent directors to
fully investigate this matter."
According to the merger filing, Hitsgalore.com was organized in July
and launched its Web site in November. Reported revenue for last year
was less than $10,000.
On Monday, Hitsgalore.com stock rose as high as $20.69, making
its 49.7 million shares worth about $1 billion. The shares shot upward as
the firm issued a news release saying an entity called Life Foundation
Trust would invest $100 million for an equity stake at $25 per share. A
man who answered the phone for Life Foundation Trust in Scottsdale,
Ariz., said no one was available to comment.

Continued

Hitsgalore.com's statement
quotes a trustee of Life
Foundation Trust, Jeanette
Wilcher, as saying the trust "is interested in the
products and services of Hitsgalore.com. . . . No
rumor concerning the personnel is of any interest to
us."
In a separate, unrelated case involving
allegations of Internet fraud, a federal judge
ordered Inetintl.com Inc., a Santa Monica firm
pitching Internet service provider franchises, to pay
$1.8 million to consumers lured by deceptive
claims of high returns. FTC officials said the firm,
also known as Inet International, told investors they
could earn $100,000 in their first year marketing
Internet access and services. But investors earned
little or no return, the agency said.
A judge has issued an arrest warrant for one of
the principals, Craig A. Lawson, who disappeared
during the FTC investigation, authorities said.

* * *

Taking a Hit
Shares of Hitsgalore.com, which crashed Tuesday, had run up from
less thanr $1 earlier this year to more than $20 on Monday. Weekly
closes and latest on the OTC Bulletin Board:
Tuesday: $9.38, down $10.75
Source: Bloomberg News

Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved