Wednesday, August 31, 2005

As August Ends....

As August ends....

I will not miss August but the passing of summer is always sad. Autumn has always been my favorite time of year. Football season, I will see my Bucks play this Saturday, the cooling air and hunting are all personal favorites of mine.

All of that said, I will not miss August due to the continued crushing of this stock. We desperately need the completion of restructuring and the removal of uncertainty to give us any hope of a recovery.

May your glass always be full

http://www.pmhj.blogspot.com/

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Rumor of the Week

Rumor of the week. Some of the pieces seem to fit but there are many reasons to be skeptical.

By: specutator05
25 Aug 2005, 04:44 PM EDT
Msg. 30672 of 30681
(This msg. is a reply to 30671 by specutator05.)
Jump to msg. #
Jupiter Global Holdings, Corp. Announces Significant Corporate Developments Expected Shortly; Specifically the Signing of Definitive Agreement for Planned Acquisition of Telecom Services Company Generating Over $12,000,000 in Revenue Annually

JUPITER Global Holdings, Corp. ("JUPITER" or the "Company") (OTC: JPHC) announced today that the Company will complete several significant corporate developments shortly. These developments include the filing of JUPITER's 10KSB annual report for the fiscal year end 2004 and subsequent 10QSB quarterly reports. Also, as previously announced, the Company has made significant progress in its planned acquisition of a US based telecom services company that is generating over $12 Million in annual revenues. The signing of the definitive agreement is expected shortly. Once closed, this acquisition will add significant revenues, cash flow and assets immediately to JUPITER'S financial statements. Progress has been slower than anticipated, but the achievement of this milestone far outweighs the time it is taking.

The telecom service company JUPITER is planning to acquire is a facilities based telecom applications service provider. Their lines of business include; prepaid calling card platforms, international gateway and arbitrage services, enhanced IVR solutions, Co-location services and Universal Point of Sale Activation Services.

The Company believes this acquisition will deliver to our shareholders what management has been working hard for these past few years; a Company with significant revenues and tremendous potential for growth and earnings.

ABOUT JUPITER GLOBAL HOLDINGS, CORP.

JUPITER Global Holdings, Corp. is a holding company with interests and developments in a diverse number of growing industries such as the VoIP telecom industry, promotional marketing industry and entertainment industry. JUPITER plans to achieve a leadership position through the building of a synergistic network of innovative, profitable and global businesses.

Statements contained herein that are not based on historical fact are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. JUPITER Entertainment Group, Inc intends that such forward-looking statements be subject to the safe harbor created thereby. Such forward-looking statements are based on current assumptions but involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause JUPITER Entertainment Group, Inc.'s actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from current expectations. These risks include economic, competitive, governmental, technological and other factors discussed in JUPITER Entertainment Group, Inc.'s applicable public filings on record with the Securities and Exchange Commission which can be viewed at its website at http://www.sec.gov.

Please visit our website: www.JUPITER.net

Please visit our website: www.jupiterglobal.net

Source: Market Wire (August 19, 2005 - 8:15 AM EDT)

More NSS Info

As posted by Mike777- message number 1089943 on the CMKX board:

Aug 25, 2005 12:42:00 AM

Aug 25, 2005 (financialwire.net via COMTEX) --

August 25, 2005 (FinancialWire) With JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM), Deutsche Bank AG (NYSE: DB), Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley (NYSE: WMD) and Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE: MER), who dominate the credit-derivatives market, reportedly among 14 banks being called on the carpet by the NY Fed over "unconfirmed trades," and a super task force of regulators reportedly auditing the top brokerages over allegations of illegal naked short selling, it could soon be "SHO and tell" time.

Regulators are smarting over allegations that they gave super hedge funds a free pass because "fails to deliver" were just too massive to reconcile in the "grandfather clause" in Regulation SHO after the FTDs couldn't be cleaned up even with a six months notice, and there is growing evidence that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the NASD and the New York Stock Exchange are not about to let some state regulator do another "Spitzer" on them.

The North American Securities Administrators Association, representing state regulators, was sharply critical of the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp., co-owned by the NYSE and NASDAQ, during the comment period over Regulation SHO, and FinancialWire has been aware for some time that some state regulators have been looking into why the DTCC has fails to deliver amounting to $6 billion a day.

NASDAQ may soon pull out of the DTCC and form its own clearing group, according to Traders Magazine. A break-up of the DTCC has been editorially endorsed by Investrend Information, publishers of FinancialWire.

A growing chorus has also risen from Congress to "make Regulation SHO effective," rather than what critics say it has been so far, a showcase of illegal manipulation.

TheStreet.com's (NASDAQ: TSCM) RealMoney said that the market "dived" Wednesday over the Fed letter, saying the market may be concerned this is "another Long term Capital type event in the making."

A banking industry group was quoted as saying as recently as July 27 that an "urgent" effort is needed to tackle the "serious" accumulation of trade confirmations.

At the same time, news reports say that examiners from the NASD, NYSE and SEC are "in the middle of a sweep designed to ferret out brokerages breaking rules designed to eliminate naked short selling."

A battle royale, including competing lawsuits, are being waged between Overstock.com (NASDAQ: OSTK), which alleges that Rocker Partners, a major hedge fund said by some to be the leading shorter of a large segment of the NYSE Regulation SHO "threshold list," is engaging I illegal manipulative activites.

TheStreet.com's Kevin Kelleher said the "scarcity of hard data on the illicit trading tactic so far has only polarized the debate on how serious a problem it has become."

Despite a number of semi-favorable articles in TheStreet.com, Overstock CEO Byrne has named the company as a part of the media conspiracy supporting misdeeds by hedge funds.

The hedge funds, Kelleher said, say that "most of the positions created by failed deliveries are related to options trading and not a concerted effort to drive stocks down.

"That may be the case. But without better data on stocks that failed to deliver, the rest of us will never know for sure.

"Meanwhile, what little data are available suggest that naked shorting may indeed be out of control and that a much-ballyhooed trading rule known as Regulation SHO has so far done little to rein it in."

He said that naked shorting "is in essence make-believe short-selling. In the same way kids play doctor without the medical equipment, naked shorters sell unborrowed stocks, stocks that no one has borrowed and possibly never will. The SEC allows naked shorting in two cases: to maintain liquidity in hard-to-find shares and for anyone who shorted unborrowed shares before 2005. That second exemption has generated its own share of controversy."

He said that the outcry has steadily increased. "In recent months, newsletters like CrossCurrents and Biotech Monthly have sounded alarms on naked shorting."

"I'm quite confident that this is a much larger issue than anyone cares to consider," Kelleher quotes CrossCurrents editor Alan Newman. "It's hard to find bears any harder-core than Newman, who in February 2000 put a then-unthinkable 3000 target on Nasdaq and who today expects the Dow to sink to 8500. When the uber-bears are worried about the adverse impact of shorting, it's time to start worrying."

Newman explains naked short-selling in eye-opening clarity, he notes: "Selling unborrowed shares means the buyer doesn't get delivery of the shares he bought. "There are now two actual owners of the same shares. The exact same shares now show up long in both accounts," Newman says. "Every 100 shares of a naked short is a duplication of real shares, just as if the shares had been photocopied and distributed."

Kelleher also quotes Larry Thompson, the First Deputy General Counsel at the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation, a central clearinghouse for trade settlement, that about 1.5% of the dollar volume of stocks traded each day fail to deliver. In a Q&A published this March on the DTCC site, "fails to deliver and receive amount to about $6 billion daily ... including both new fails and aged fails."

Overall, said TheStreet.com, "1.5% of volume may not be much of an impact. But judging from the way some stocks spend weeks and months on the threshold list of shares that face persistent delivery failures, the naked shorting is concentrated in illiquid shares known to be hedge fund targets. The bulk are traded over the counter, but some are well known, such as Netflix, Netease (NASDAQ: NTES), Shanda Interactive (NASDAQ: SNDA), and Taser International (NASDAQ: TASR).

He said that perhaps the most telling data came from a simple Freedom of Information Act filed by an individual investor who asked the SEC for aggregate data on failed deliveries on the NYSE and Nasdaq. Before Regulation SHO was passed in September 2004, an average of about 155 million shares a day failed to deliver on the two exchanges, excluding OTC and Pink Sheet stocks, TheStreet.com says the data showed.

"After Regulation SHO was passed, the delivery failures rose, averaging 205 million shares a day in December and rising as high as 259 million on Dec. 22 alone. Since the law went into effect on Jan. 3, the delivery failures have declined, but are still only about 20% below their levels of last summer.

"The SEC, wanting to avoid short-squeezes in dozens of stocks caused by the closing out of naked short positions, opted to 'grandfather in' any failed deliveries before Jan. 3. But that opened the door to another problem: In the four months between the date Regulation SHO went into effect and the date it took effect, the grandfather provision gave anyone who was so inclined a generous period of time to build up naked short positions in any stock he liked.

"Or, to use the counterfeit analogy, imagine outlawing the printing of funny money, but giving everyone four months to print up as much as they'd like. Only then would counterfeit dollars be illegal -- but only to print, not to use."

He points out that "it wasn't as if regulators weren't expecting this. The NASD, in a 2004 proposal to tighten rules on naked short-selling, wrote, "Naked short-selling ... can result in long-term failures to deliver, including aggregate failures to deliver that exceed the total float of a security. NASD believes that such extended failures to deliver can have a negative effect on the market.

"Among other things, by not having to deliver securities, naked short-sellers can take on larger short positions than would otherwise be permissible, which can facilitate manipulative activity. Further, significant failures to deliver can impact certain rights of buyers, such as the right to vote shares or the treatment of dividends."

Some 93.89% of the respondents to the Investrend Poll at http://www.investrendinformation.com said that the DTCC should be "punished" for its interferences with the media, especially FinancialWire, which has been reporting on this issue for almost two years.

The censorship has since admitted to in a letter posted at http://www.investrend.com/Admin/Topics/Articles/Resources/349_1113403487.pdf .

More than a half dozen highly-ranked Republican and Democratic U.S. Senators have weighed in that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's much-ballyhooed "Regulation SHO" has highlighted the massive extent of the illegal practice but has done nothing to stop it.

The main lists for Regulation SHO are at http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/aspx/regsho.aspx and http://www.nyse.com/Frameset.html?displayPage=/threshold .

Even the DTCC has admitted its "fails to deliver" is massive, amounting to upwards of $6 billion a day, according to DTCC Deputy General Counsel Larry Thompson.

A former U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs, Robert J. Shapiro, now chair of Sonecon, LLC, a private economic advisory firm, accused Thompson of making "inaccurate or misleading" statements. Shapiro, who holds a Ph.D from Harvard University, was the principal economic advisor to former President Bill Clinton in his initial Presidential campaign.

Shapiro currently provides economic analysis to the law firms of O'Quinn, Laminack and Pirtle, Christian, Smith and Jewell, and Heard, Robins, Cloud, Lubel and Greenwood, on issues associated with naked short sales, which he noted includes "matters raised in an interview published by @DTCC with DTCC deputy general counsel Larry Thompson."

He asserted in his letter that "the extent to which [naked short selling] occurs is in dispute. While this statement may be narrowly correct, objective academic analysis has established that naked short selling has been a widespread practice and one which, when allowed to persist, can pose a threat to the integrity of equity markets. A recent study by Dr. Leslie Boni, then a visiting financial economist at the SEC, analyzed NSCC data and found that on three random days, an average of more than 700 listed stocks had failures-to-deliver of 60 million-to-120 million shares sold short ' naked shorts ' that had persisted for at least two months. In addition, over 800 unlisted stocks on any day had fails of 120 million-to-180 million shares sold short that also had persisted for at least two months. The total number of naked shorts, including those that had persisted for less than two months, was presumably considerably greater.

"Regarding the extent of naked shorts, Thompson has provided closely-related additional information: 'fails to deliver and receive amount to about $6 billion daily.including both new fails and aged fails.' Thompson minimizes this total by comparing it to "just under $400 billion in trades (emphasis added) processed daily by NSCC, or about 1.5% of the dollar volume." By most people's standards, a problem involving hundreds of millions of shares valued at $6 billion every day is a very large problem. Moreover, the $6 billion total substantially underestimates the actual value of all failed-to-deliver trades measured when the trades actually occurred. Most of the $6 billion total represents uncovered or naked short sales, many of which have gone undelivered for weeks or months with their market price being marked-to-market every day. As a stock's price falls, the market price of naked shorts in that stock also declines, reducing the total value of the outstanding failures-to-deliver cited by Thompson.

"In other respects, Thompson's comparison to the '$400 billion in trades processed daily by NSCC' seems disingenuous and misleading, because that $400 billion total covers not only U.S. equity trades which can involve most of the failures-to-deliver at issue, but many other transactions also processed by the NSCC. The value of all equity transactions on U.S. markets in 2004, for example, averaged $82.3 billion/day. If Thompson is correct that the daily value of fails-to-deliver averages $6 billion, that total is equivalent to 7.2 percent of average daily equity trades or nearly five times the 1.5 percent level suggested by Thompson.

"Furthermore, the DTCC reports on its website that on a peak day, 'through its Continuous Net Settlement (CNS) system, NSCC eliminated the need to settle 96 percent of total obligations.' Assuming that CNS nets out the same proportion of trades on other days, $384 billion of the $400 billion in daily trades cited by Thompson are netted out, leaving only $16 billion in daily trades that require the actual delivery of securities. The $6 billion of fails-to-deliver securities existing on any day are equivalent to 37.5 percent of the average daily trades that require the delivery of securities, or 25 times the 1.5 percent level cited by Thompson.

"Thompson tries to explain the large numbers of shares that go undelivered ' in most cases arising from naked short sales -- by citing problems with paper certificates, inevitable human error, and the legitimate operations of market makers. This also seems misleading or disingenuous. Regarding problems with paper certificates, the DTCC estimates that 97 percent of all stock certificates are now kept in electronic form. Nor can human error or legitimate market-making operations explain the high levels of failures-to-deliver that persist for months ' on any day, an average of 180 million-to-300 million shares have gone undelivered for two months or longer ' as documented by Dr. Boni's analysis of NSCC data.

"Thompson also disparages the attorneys who represent companies that have been damaged or destroyed by massive naked short sales, and their shareholders, by claiming falsely that the cases in this matter have almost all been dismissed or withdrawn. The legal firms that I advise -- O'Quinn, Petrie and Laminack; Christian, Smith and Jewell; and Heard, Robins, Cloud, Lubel and Greenwood ' have not lost any motions against the DTCC or its affiliates and currently have one case against the DTCC pending in Nevada and another case against the DTCC pending in Arkansas. In addition, on February 24, 2005, these attorneys were granted an order by the New York Supreme Court ordering the DTCC to produce trading records involving two companies they represent, including records from the Stock Borrow program, which may establish whether large-scale naked short sales were used to manipulate and drive down the stock price of those two companies.

"Thompson also asserts that the plaintiffs suing the DTCC for damages associated with the handling of naked short sales rely on "theories [that] are not an accurate reflection of how the capital market system actually works." This assertion is inaccurate. There is no dispute about how the capital markets work -- nor any doubt that naked short sales have been used to manipulate and drive down the price of stocks, as seen in numerous death-spiral financing cases. The issue here is the DTCC's role in allowing or facilitating such stock manipulation through its treatment of extended naked short sales.

"In explaining the DTCC's role in these matters, Thompson rejects the claim that the NSCC's Stock Borrow program allows the same shares to be lent over and over again, potentially creating more shares than actually exist or 'phantom' shares. By Thompson's own account, shares borrowed by the NSCC to settle naked short sales are deducted from the lending member's DTC account and credited to the DTC account of the member to whom the shares have been sold. Therefore, those same shares become available to be re-borrowed to settle another naked short sale and, if that happens, to be re-borrowed again and again to settle a succession of naked short sales. Throughout this process, the actual short sellers may continue to fail-to-deliver the shares to cover their shorts and, as Dr. Boni's analysis of NSCC data found, the underlying failure can age for months or even years. The process which Thompson describes is one in which shares can be borrowed and lent over and over again, introducing more shares into the market than are legally registered and issued. If any ambiguity remains, Thompson can clarify it by responding to the following query: Once a share that has been borrowed through the NSCC Stock Borrow program is delivered to the purchaser, is that share restricted in any way so it cannot be lent again?

"It is important to note that the Stock Borrow program is used when continuous net settlement cannot locate the shares to settle. As a consequence, Stock Borrow is usually called into play when there are relatively few shares available for borrowing. These are propitious conditions for market manipulation: Unscrupulous short sellers undertake large-scale naked short sales involving stocks for which few shares are available for trading and lending, relying on the Stock Borrow program to borrow the limited available shares, again and again, at sufficient levels to drive down the market price of the shares.

"Thompson notes that of approximately $6 billion in outstanding failures-to-deliver existing on any day, "the Stock Borrow program is able to resolve about $1.1 billion . or about 20% [18 percent] of the total fail obligation." In this statement, Thompson raises very serious questions about the integrity and operations of the NSCC and DTCC, which he can clarify by responding to the following queries: If the Stock Borrow program "resolves" only 18 percent of total fails, what is the disposition of the remaining 82 percent of outstanding fails? When failures-to-deliver occur that are not resolved through Stock Borrow, does the NSCC credit the undelivered shares to the member representing the buyer, creating genuine "phantom shares"? Finally, how many shares do the borrowing brokers, clearing firms and other participants in the Stock Borrow program owe the NSCC on a typical day, and what is their total value?

"In a related matter, Thompson tries to distance the DTCC from charges that shares held in restricted accounts ' for example, cash accounts, retirement accounts and many institutional accounts ' are improperly lent through the Stock Borrow program by claiming that responsibility for segregating restricted shares from lendable shares falls to the "broker and bank members" of the DTCC, while responsibility for monitoring or regulating their performance in this matter falls to the stock exchanges and the SEC. As a trust company, the DTCC cannot hold that it has no role, duty or responsibility to ensure the probity of its operations. Thompson could address this issue by responding to the following queries: What procedures does the NSCC have to ensure that shares held in members' accounts for possible loan through the NSCC Stock Borrow program are unencumbered by regulatory or legal restrictions from being pledged or assigned and eligible to be borrowed? On any given day, how many participants in the Stock Borrow program have lent shares that exceed their lendable shares, in what numbers and of what value?

"Thompson also tries to distance the DTCC as far as possible from the naked short selling that generates most of the extended failures-to-deliver: 'We don't have any power or legal authority to regulate or stop short selling, naked or otherwise. We also have no power to force member firms to close out or resolve fails to deliver . we don't even see whether a sale is short or not.' In fact, the DTCC chooses to not distinguish short sales from long sales, chooses to not regulate or stop extended naked short sales, and chooses to not force member firms to resolve protracted naked short sales.

"First, Regulation SHO requires that all transactions be clearly marked short or long. If the DTCC and NSCC do not know whether sales are short or long as Thompson contends, they choose to not know. Second, the NSCC has a clear responsibility and adequate means to stop naked short sales of extended duration, with no legal barrier that would prevent them from so doing. As a trust company with an acknowledged duty to provide investors certainty in the settlement and clearance of equity transactions, the DTCC chose to carry out that duty by assuming the role of counterparty to both sides of every equity transaction, through the operations of the NSCC's CNS system and the Stock Borrow program. By allowing short sellers to fail-to-deliver shares for months or even years, the NSCC clearly fails to provide certainty in settlement to the buyers, sellers and issuers of securities. Since it is widely known that extended naked short sales have been used to manipulate stock prices in cases of death-spiral financing, and the NSCC created the Stock Borrow program to address failures-to-deliver that prominently include naked short sales, the NSCC and DTCC share a responsibility with the SEC and the stock exchanges to protect investors by resolving extended fails.

"Third, the DTCC and NSCC have the clear capacity to force member firms to resolve the extended failures-to-deliver of their customers by purchasing shares on the open market and deducting the cost from the member's account. A 2003 study by Dr. Richard Evans and others provides evidence that forced buy-ins by any party occur very rarely. They found that a major options market maker who failed to deliver all or a portion of shares sold in 69,063 transactions in 1998-1999 was bought-in only 86 times or barely one-tenth of 1 percent of the fails. Thompson can clarify investors' understanding of their operations by responding to the following query: What proportion of shares that are persistent fails-to-deliver, of one month or longer, are ever bought in?

"Thompson acknowledges that the DTCC and NSCC know precisely how many failures-to-deliver exist for each stock and the precise duration of each of these fails. Yet, the DTCC refuses to disclose this information even to the issuer of the stock in question, which Thompson justifies by citing 'NSCC rules' prohibiting such a release of data based on 'the obvious reason that the trading data we receive could be used to manipulate the market, as well as reveal trading patterns of individual firms.'

"This response is both disingenuous and revealing. We know now, for the first time, that the DTCC has full knowledge of the extent of protracted, large-scale naked short sales in all particular cases. We also know now that the DTCC has had this information for at least a decade, since Thompson also notes that 'fails, as a percentage of total trading, hasn't changed in the last 10 years.' Yet, based on the DTCC's own rules, it allowed these abuses to persist and fester. The DTCC and NSCC can change their rules at any time. Moreover, in this case, those rules are unjustified. Data documenting outstanding short sales in each stock are currently issued publicly, so further data on how many of those short sales are naked would not reveal additional information about the trading patterns of individual firms or in any way empower manipulators. In fact, the DTCC could substantially disarm manipulators by both publicly reporting naked short sales in each issue and pledging to force buy-ins of all naked short sales that persist for more than a limited period.

Surely, if large-scale, extended naked short sales have effectively created "phantom" shares, companies have a responsibility to their shareholders and the right to secure this information from the organization which manages the settlement of short sales. At a minimum, the DTCC should respond to requests by issuers for data on extended failures-to-deliver in their own stocks, both in the past and currently, so they can take steps to resist stock manipulators or bring them to account for past manipulation.

Thompson also claims that the DTCC did not create or manage the Stock Borrow program to serve its own financial interest, insisting that the service generates less than $2 million a year in direct fees to the DTCC and that all DTCC services are priced on a "not for profit" basis that seeks to match revenues with expenses. Without further information, these responses beg the question of whose private financial interest has been served by the Stock Borrow program, especially as the DTCC is owned by the stock markets, clearinghouses, brokerage and banking institutions that use its services. Thompson and the DTCC can clarify this serious matter by responding to the following queries: Do DTCC participant/owners receive interest or other payments through or from the Stock Borrow program for lending the shares of their customers and, if so, how much have they received for these activities over the last 10 years? Further, do DTCC participant/owners receive any dividend, interest or other payments or distributions from the DTCC or its subsidiaries?," Shapiro concluded.

Neither Thompson nor the DTCC have responded to Shapiro's wide-ranging allegations.

Recently, former SEC Attorney Peter Chepucavage, previously a staffer for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Division of Market Regulation, and a key participant in the release of Regulation SHO, has left the SEC and is now challenging his former agency over the regulation's inability to reign in illegal market manipulations.

Chepucavage has forwarded his comments to the SEC, under File Nunber 265-23:

"I am responding to your Request for Public Comments on Summary of Proposed Committee Agenda. I wish to incorporate and expand upon the comments of Brad Smith regarding a macro or more comprehensive approach to small companies and to use his term small to medium enterprises (SME'S). A more comprehensive approach is necessary and appropriate because there is a need to review not only the small company issuers but also the markets and broker dealers involved in the raising of capital for SME's and the public perception of the regulation of those markets.

"In a recent explanation of the key points of Reg. SHO, the staff stated "Speculative stocks, such as microcap stocks, often have a high probability of declining in value and a low probability of experiencing above average gains." The committee should review the underlying data for this proposition to determine whether it is true for all low priced stocks in general or just those traded on the pink sheets and otcbb with a view to determining whether such stocks could ever be suitable for retail investors or whether they should only be sold to investors qualified by knowledge of these markets.

"In the column Washington Investing, Wash Post 5/23/05 p.1 Jerry Knight refers to the "purgatory of the Pink Sheets, a nearly unregulated neither market for trading stocks." The committee should evaluate this statement and if necessary recommend increased practical regulation such as short sale reporting and Reg SHO coverage.

"Reg. SHO excluded these stocks from its coverage and the committee should therefore review why the most speculative stocks are not included.

"The SRO short sale reporting rules exclude these stocks from their coverage. See petition of the Pink Sheets to include them as an example of a market seeking more regulation.

"The SRO'S have failed to enforce their locate requirements for short sales thereby encouraging naked shorting in these markets. Except for one case, the penalties imposed over the last 10 years include modest fines probably less than trading profits made. "These stocks are not eligible for margin or options and thus the loan supply is curtailed enabling naked shorts and the inability to hedge. See Comments of Professor Angle to Reg SHO.

"The Commission is reluctant to provide an arbitrage exemption for short sales which makes the distribution of many small company issues thru Pipes and Wt arbitrage. The committee should review the merits of such an exemption.

"The presidents and CEO'S of small broker -dealers believe they are often held responsible for their employees conduct while those of large broker dealers rarely are . They also believe penalties imposed on small bd's constitute a much larger portion of their net capital and are inherently unfair. This is an old argument but continues to resurface and should be addressed.

"The chairman of the PHLX recently noted that he worried that the Commission staff would be overwhelmed with the NYSE/ARCHIPELAGO and NASDAQ/INSTINET mergers and not have time for the rule filings of other smaller SRO's.

"Small companies are more likely to be referred to as penny stocks, unless like Lucent at $2.50 a share they are listed on the NYSE.

"There may be no reliable evidence that small bd's and small companies create more regulatory issues than the Enrons, Worldcoms, Tycos and other similar large companies that have required significant regulatory resources. The committee should review whether they do in fact create more regulatory issues.

"There is a proliferation of unregistered finders operating in the area of SME'S because of the lack of clear guidance from the Commission. It should also consider studying the role of finders in the process and might consider whether those finders should be registered as investment advisers rather than bd's.

"The Committee should not be reluctant to challenge conventional norms in its approach. The Committee should therefore recommend a special study of the regulation of SME's and small bd's to determine if the regulatory scheme is adequate and consistent and does not impose a greater burden on them especially in light of their job creating value in the U.S. It might also recommend the creation of an independent small business/small bd office at the Commission with a significant increase in staffing. While it is not the Commission's role to encourage small to medium enterprises or bd's, it is their obligation not to hinder them and to pay equal attention to them. This Committee has a rare opportunity to set a future agenda for SME'S in this country .As the markets rapidly consolidate, attention to SMEs and bd's is important whether it results in more or less regulation or more reasonable regulation," the former SEC attorney concluded.

A controversial audio of a purported conference call conducted by officials of Bear Stearns (NYSE: BSC) contains allegations that the SEC had shared with Bear Stearns the names of hundreds of companies that it had said would be on the threshold lists but which were not on the official lists published, and that regulators had confided to Bear Stearns and others that the regulators are selectively enforcing provisions against "fails to deliver" securities according to a kind of floating set of "interpretations" rather than strictly according to the law.

The blockbuster audio is posted at http://www.investigatethesec.com/Bear080705.wma .

U.S. Senator Elizabeth Dole (R-SC) recently joined U.S. Senators James Talent (R-MO), Richard Shelby (D-AL), Susan Collins (R-ME), Robert Bennett (R-UT) and Richard Durbin (D-IL) in questioning U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission about what they call the "failure" of Regulation SHO to curtail unlawful, predatory securities trading.

The current Senate line-up carries significant heft. Senator Collins is chair of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee, Senator Shelby is chair of the Senate Banking Committee, Senator Durbin is Assistant Democratic Leader and Senator Bennett is Republican Whip. The Senators' letters are posted at http://www.americaneedstoknow.com

"Stockgate Today" publisher David Patch said that the Senators have 23 good reasons, citing that many companies, including Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia (NYSE: MSO), Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL), Krispy Kreme (NYSE: KKD) and Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX), that remain "not settled" on the official threshold lists maintained by the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq five months later.

"Stockgate Today" is published at http://www.investigatethesec.com . The Senators' letters to shareholders and the SEC are posted at http://www.americaneedstoknow.com

Patch said that most of the 23 companies hardest-hit by unlawful stock manipulations in full sight of market regulators, including those at the SEC, such as Annette Nazareth, head of market regulation, who belittles complaints as coming from those who "want to see their stock go up," have had double-digit declines in stock valuations over the 94 days they have been on the highly-public list.

He also noted that in the March, 2005 Euromoney Magazine article on illegal naked short selling, Head of Market Regulation Annette Nazareth's assistant, James Brigagliano said that prior lawbreakers were "grandfathered" because "we were concerned about generating volatility where there were large pre-existing open positions, and we wanted to start afresh with new regulation, not re-write history."

"So does Ken Lay, but he can't," retorted Patch.

This disputed "grandfathering" has not yet been taken up by Congress, but the 23 companies on the threshhold list for over days are new transgressions, and presumably they can't be dealt with either because Nazareth and Brigagliano are concerned about "generating volatility."

Also, in a blockbuster event almost equal to the mysterious "postponement" of "Dateline NBC," the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has inexplicably given the DTC's National Securities Clearing Corp. "immunity" in the form of limited liability for willful misconduct or violations of Federal securities laws.

The Notice regarding the SEC's action is at http://www.nscc.com/impnot/notices/notice2005/a6029.pdf

Some legal experts are questioning whether the SEC, without the approval of Congress, has the authority to limit the NSCC's liability. There have been similar questions about the SEC's authority to unilaterally "grandfather" securities violations prior to Regulation SHO.

The new regulation is sure to be litigated since the DTCC and the NSCC were the subject of lawsuits claiming their "stock borrow program" is illegal counterfeiting, prior to the rule approval by the SEC.

Also, recently a stock transfer agent, Transfer Online Inc., had asked then-SEC Chair William Donaldson to put a stop to the control the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. and Automatic Data Processing (NYSE: ADP) are fast gaining over the transfer business, and to demand DTCC transparency.

Excerpts from the letter, posted at http://www.faulkingtruth.com/Articles/LettersToEditor/1012.html , states: "Over the years as the amount of shares held at DTC has increased it has become more and more difficult to determine who owns the shares, who is trading them and if the trading is proper. This trend, and the resulting problems I will detail below, continues to increase because a minority of the total number of shareholders are reflected on the books and records of the corporation, most activity takes place behind the wall of ownership that is designated as Cede & Co. and neither the company nor the transfer agent has any access to the underlying information.

"Furthermore, DTC recently managed to put through a rule change (Release No. 34-50758A; File No.S7-24-04) that prohibits a transfer agent from representing any company who seeks to withdraw from the DTC system. This change effectively leaves companies with no voice or choice in the management of their stock and their ability to have any transparency as to what is actually taking place in the market in regard to their stock.

"I receive calls from companies seeking information as they watch millions of shares trade in a single day, who watch their share price decrease in value and who have no access to information regarding who is behind the trading of these shares, or if in fact the trades are at all legitimate. As the system now operates, most companies have a large percentage of shares on their books registered to Cede & Co.

"Given the importance of shareholder voting and communication one would assume that the same requirements placed on transfer agents as to accuracy and reporting would be placed on ADP and Cede & Co. as they usually hold or service the majority of the shares owned in any given company.

"I have found; however, that when presented with the tabulation reports from ADP the share totals they report sometimes exceed the total number of shares outstanding for the company. Let me restate this because it is a very important part of my concern about a system that is more and more headed in the direction of increased control by DTC. The shares presented by ADP, that are the shares voted by the brokers on behalf of the shareholders for whom they hold accounts, EXCEED when added to the shareholders of record the total number of shares outstanding.

"Where are these extra shares coming from? Why are there no controls on the number of shares held in the nominee name Cede & Co. vs. the ownership on the books and records of the brokers and why is the company not privy to any information unless it pays whatever fees it is told it must pay by the organizations that control the data?

"In fact, as the system is evolving, DTC is de facto becoming the largest transfer agent in the industry even though it is an organization formed by and working for the interests of the brokerage community. If, ultimately, the S.E.C. is in place to protect investors then this issue can not be ignored because in the end when the market is completely under the control of the brokers and the organizations that represent them then the market can neither be transparent nor fair."

The "Important Notice" from the DTCC regarding the NSCC demonstrates that the entities are a "self-regulatory organization" under the auspices of the SEC, which ramps up the media interference to First Amendment violations.

The DTCC said that the "approved changes create a uniform standard limiting NSCC's liability to direct losses caused by the NSCC's gross negligence, willful misconduct, or violation of Federal securities laws for which there is a private right of action."

In addition, the organization stated, "the changes memorialize an appropriate commercial standard of care that will protect NSCC for undue liability, permit the resources of NSCC to be appropriately utilized for promoting the accurate clearance and settlement of securities, and are consistent with similar rules adopted by other self-regulatory organizations and approved by the Commission."

The DTCC had asked for the rule December 8, 2004. It is not known how the proposed rule slipped through the cracks on the public and Congressional levels prior to the approval.

The National Coalition Against Naked Shorting stated that the action was sought and approved hastily because "they have been willfully violating securities laws for years, know that it will come out in court, and want to have a piece of paper to fall back on," adding that it corroborates "the theory that the stock borrow program violates a host of securities laws, that the NSCC knows it, and that they have been counterfeiting stock for years and just now are starting to catch on to the idea that they will get caught."

In his communication to then-SEC Chair William Donaldson, Sen. Durbin also contested the claim by the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp., a unit ot the New York Stock Exchange and NASD, that it has no responsibilities under Regulation SHO.

Senator Durbin's letter to Donaldson appears to sharply contest the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp.'s contention that it has no role in Regulation SHO.

"I am writing to request information regarding the August 25, 2004 Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) short sale regulation, designated Regulation SHO. On March 9, 2005, the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs held a hearing on Regulation SHO, in which Chairman Bennett spoke with you about the regulation's effects on the illegal practice of naked short selling. I thank you for your testimony and I hope that you can follow up on some of my concerns not fully addressed by the Banking Committee hearings.

"I appreciate the efforts of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to control abusive short selling practices. As a result of Regulation SHO, the names of firms with large amounts of unsettled shares are published on the Threshold Security List daily. This list assists individual investors in making informed decisions about potential manipulation of the market, and gives regulators and investigators a centralized list of firms with significant numbers of undelivered shares. However, it has come to my attention that Regulation SHO may not be curtailing abusive naked short selling practices.

"Several of my constituents have contacted me since the SEC introduces Regulation SHO. They have raised concerns about potential loopholes in settlement regulations. During your recent testimony before the Banking Committee, Chairman Bennett asked you about the ability of brokerage houses to shuttle unsettled shares every 13 days in order to avoid settling the borrowed shorted shares. Due to time constraints at the hearing, the committee did not receive a complete answer. This issue is worthy of a full response.

"Additionally, my constituents have expressed concern about SEC enforcement of Regulation SHO. While the Threshold Security List publicizes securities that might have been manipulated, I am concerned that some securities repeatedly appear on the list. What steps is the SEC taking to investigate trading practices that result in vast quantities of unsettled shares, and to punish those people who violate SEC naked short selling regulations? What is the SEC doing to ensure that the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) is complying with Regulation SHO, and what actions does the SEC undertake when the DTCC identifies large quantities of shares that have not been delivered?

"It is important that the SEC identify abuses and prevent manipulative naked short selling practices that undermine faith in the market. Thank you for your attention to this matter. I look forward to your timely response," Senator Durbin concluded.

Pink Sheets head Cromwell Coulson has asked the SEC to publish short positions on all over the counter and bulletin board stocks, and that request is currently in a comment period.

The request for rulemaking, which Coulson has told companies traded on the Pink Sheets, is needed "to make regulators turn on the lights and protect investors from the menance of hidden short selling in the OTC market," is at http://sec.gov/rules/petitions.shtml

In an email to Donaldson, Coulson had said "I believe that it is very important to require the disclosure of short positions because the lack of transparency is allowing promoters to defraud investors by blaming all selling on naked market maker short selling. Disclosure and transparency can easily remedy the issue."

In other news on the naked short-selling front known as "StockGate," adding to what TheStreet.com founder James Cramer calls the "Hedge Fund Relief Act," the termination of the Uptick Rule, is the fact that those using illegal naked short selling in the past have been granted a kind of amnesty for acts before the first of 2005. The SEC just "grandfathered" those illegally-begotten gains and resultant counterfeit shares into the system, so these windfall gains are now available to downtick with reckless abandon on downticks.

The "grandfathering" admission is at http://www.sec.gov/spotlight/keyregshoissues.htm

In the same document, the SEC has inexplicably stated that not all forms of illegal naked short selling, the equivalent of counterfeiting shares in public companies, are actually "illegal."

The DTCC actions in the StockGate mire are the most serious, if not notorious since the agent of two SROs, the New York Stock Exchange and NASD is also peopled by some 21 directors whose companies, such as Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE: MER), State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), are unlikely to support the DTCC in its media censorship.

In a recent editorial, Investrend Information head Gayle Essary questioned whether the board and principal shareholders would "be party to shenanigans that lead to the censorship or disabling of any media" that he says is "un-American activity."

Essary said that the arrogance the DTCC expressed in its censorship efforts shows that the entity has "become too large, too encompassing, too powerful, too unresponsive to those it serves, primarily the investing public, and too unresponsive to the Congress under whose auspices it should be operating.

"First, it is time to unconflict it, with real public representations on its board," he said, and second, "it is time to break it up, with its various duties provided by smaller agencies under separate unconflicted boards."

DTCC board members include Michael C. Bodson, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MWD); Gary Bullock, Global Head of Logistics, Infrastructure, UBS Investment Bank (NYSE: UBS); Stephen P. Casper, Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer, Fischer Francis Trees & Watts, Inc.; Jill M. Considine,Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC);

Also, Paul F. Costello, President, Business Services Group, Wachovia Securities (NYSE: WB); John W. Cummings, Senior Vice President & Head of Global Technology & Services, Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE: MER); Donald F. Donahue, Chief Operating Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC); Norman Eaker, General Partner, Edward Jones; George Hrabovsky, President, Alliance Global Investors Service; Catherine R. Kinney, President and Co-Chief Operating Officer, New York Stock Exchange; Thomas J. McCrossan, Executive Vice President, State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT); Bradley Abelow, Managing Director, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS); Jonathan E. Beyman, Chief Information Officer, Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH); and Frank J. Bisignano, Chief Administrative Officer and Senior Executive Vice President, Citigroup / Solomon Smith Barney's Corporate Investment Bank (NYSE: C), Eileen K. Murray, Managing Director, Credit Suisse First Boston (NYSE: CSR); James P. Palermo, Vice Chairman, Mellon Financial Corporation (NYSE: MEL); Thomas J. Perna, Senior Executive Vice President, Financial Companies Services Sector of The Bank of New York (NYSE: BNY); Ronald Purpora, Chief Executive Officer, Garban LLC; Douglas Shulman, President, Regulatory Services and Operations, NASD; and Thompson M. Swayne, Executive Vice President, JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM).

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Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Early Week Five Thoughts

Friday and Monday the market seemed to return to one that was being manipulated and not an open and free market place amongst peers.

That being said my outlook is still more optimistic. My gut tells me (among other whispers) that things are about to break in our favor. As the dog days of summer end I am more confident than ever.

We still have obstacles in our path. Tom must be successful in securing favorable financing soon. The market will continue to punish us if the restructuring drags on too long. The cost of money will only increase going forward and become more scarce. In addition, there continues to be a string of impassioned individuals who seem bent on destroying the company. As always, these individuals have a half story at best and become belligerent when facts are demanded. Many also seem to have personal grudges against one or more of the company officers or others associated with the company.

Slainte’

Thursday, August 18, 2005

End of Week Four/ Interesting Trading Day

Interesting trading today.

Over 4 million shares moved through my hands today.

The important thing is that I was able to buy low (.0008- mostly and .0007) and sell higher.

This is important since these types of trades most likely represent transactions between individuals. The mmers do not make these moves. I was able to add shares to my account at a discount.

That was not my goal. One or two more days of this and I would pronounce our little market whole. I think we have most certainly established a bottom (but I have been wrong before).

Note that while my buy orders were able to get the market to move down to .0008 and even .0007 briefly, the market would not go lower. I tendered an offer to buy 4 million shares at .0006. I owe Tom an apology. If he was truly dumping those orders would have been filled.

Most importantly, the market then moved higher and there were buyers lining up at the highest price for the day.

Good stuff. If we can rally higher from here I may have to remove the skeptical from my optimist.

May your glass always be full.

Saturday, August 13, 2005

End of Week Three

Three weeks into the "silent" period of restructuring and there is no news besides continued dilution.

Our odds have dropped from 10 to 1 to 100 to 1.

Buyer beware.

Friday, August 12, 2005

More About Stock Manipulation

Credit to RB's AlanC as posted on the UGHO board message #15850:

Overstock Sues Rocker and Gradient
From Bob Obrien at ; http://bobosrevenge.blogspot.com/

Overstock Sues Rocker and Gradient
.
Better Than American Idol, More Action Than Fear Factor…

This afternoon, shareholders of Overstock.com, along with the company, filed a groundbreaking suit against Rocker Partners, David Rocker, Marc Cohodes, Gradient Analytics (AKA Camelback), Donn Vickrey, and several other defendants in California State Court, alleging unfair business practices, and conspiring to denigrate Overstock.com's business so as to reap personal profits for themselves and for their companies.

The attorneys representing the plaintiffs are the O’Quinn Group, headed by Texas legend John O’Quinn, of big tobacco, Phen-Phen and DTCC suit fame. This is an extraordinarily well-funded consortium that can see this through to its inevitable conclusion, which will likely go on to name more entities and individuals going forward, as the facts of the case become known, and discovery is obtained.

Let me start off by saying that I’m not an attorney. I don’t claim any particular legal acumen, nor should my claims and comments be construed as any sort of statement of absolute fact – this is my opinion only, and should be taken as such.

Having said that, it appears to me that the inevitable has occurred. The bad guys have been caught with their hand in the cookie jar, and they are now going to benefit from a free and open disclosure of their misdeeds in an open court, and their techniques made part of the public record. If the claims in this suit are true, then the investors in the funds named are likely going to have significant cases against the managers of the funds, as the complaint alleges that they have participated in what to me could only be described as a systematic, organized campaign designed to depress the share value of OSTK, in order to create financial windfalls for the hedge funds and their associate conspirators. This takes on an ominous RICO characteristic, as if true we are talking a regular pattern of illegal behavior by disparate entities, colluding and acting in concert to achieve a criminal end result.

I applaud the plaintiffs for stepping forward and sending the message that this wholesale abuse of the system will not be tolerated, and I celebrate the attorneys who have stepped up to the plate to bring the perpetrators to justice.

For years, the shareholders of companies like NFI, PPD, KKD, TASR, TTWO, OVTI, NAVR, ACAS, ALD, and OSTK have been convinced that the precipitous drops in the value of those companies’ shares, and the seemingly coordinated assaults (including media attacks, class action suits, questionable regulatory probes, radio and television eviscerations, message board onslaughts by vocationally driven teams), were part of a Byzantine scheme driven by some dark force, some group that had so co-opted the regulators and the media that there was no hope of justice or fair treatment.

Now we have a face to put to the force, or at least the tip of the iceberg. Everyone should read the complaint and familiarize themselves with the charges. It would not surprise me a bit if this was followed by criminal charges being brought – if true, the alleged behavior is certainly criminal (in my untutored opinion) and deserves the prompt attention of regulators and the Department of Justice.

It’s interesting to me that the market greeted the news of the suit with an increase in the share price this afternoon. Other companies that have released news of lawsuits have experienced price drops – like NFI, when they sued PMI, and Herb jumped all over it, and the price declined precipitously. It is difficult to predict how the market will take news like this – but apparently the market liked the news. The bashing posters would have us all believe that this is folly, a nuisance suit, evidence of Byrne being unbalanced - but the market apparently sees things differently. I do hope that the trading from today becomes part of the case - it would be fitting if the trades turned out to be the same accused perpetrators selling more non-existent shares in a further effort to damage the company's share price. How much clearer would it have to be?

It is ironic that Dr. Byrne offered fair warning of discrepancies and concerns over the company’s trading in the last conference call. I’ve been wondering for some time how a company like OSTK, whose shares are essentially 100% owned by the Byrne family, their friends, and institutions who are intimately connected with them, could have huge a such a huge short interest, really un-coverable without driving the price into the stratosphere. Well, here’s an explanation. The bad guys allegedly intended to drive the company into the dirt while breaking the law – a handy way of investing, if true, as you don’t have to be correct about the company, just adequately funded and motivated to do whatever it takes.

I cannot believe that there isn’t a huge element of truth to the charges – they certainly resonate with me, and what I have been saying for some time. Now I suppose we will get to find out whether these poor hedge funds and their associates are being unjustly accused, or if they are actually as dirty and vile as we have long suspected. My hunch is that the stink wafting from this is going to turn out to be overpowering, and will involve big and influential Wall Street names before it is over, and will finally force the “see no evil” regulators to confront the decay and morbidity in the system, as well as within.

This is a huge blow to the hedge funds’ bankers as well, as if they have been complicit in aiding this organized predatory scheme, they will get sucked into it, as will the investors in the funds, their satellite of media cronies, complicit money men, and their dirty tricks operatives. As this unfolds, I am confidant that the truth will prevail, and if the allegations are true the ugly web of lies, deceit, larceny, misappropriation, collusion, etc. will unwind and strangle the perpetrators.

It can only be a matter of time before the other companies that have been preyed upon follow this lead and we see other legal challenges to a practice that the system seems content to ignore. This marks an important day for investors, and for the companies that have been targeted by this network.

It is a day that many have been waiting for, and a few have been dreading.

I shall follow the proceeding with interest.

Pundits have long been expecting a cartel of hedge funds to implode, creating a cascading domino effect in all the companies that they are short, their leverage now their worst enemy - speculating as to what the trigger would be.

Folks, I think we have ourselves the trigger.

Now, I’m sure that the industry will circle the wagons, and decry this as foolishness, and pretend that it isn’t happening, just as they have with Dr. Byrne’s now famous Q2 conference call, wherein he compared the short position in OSTK to a bus hurtling towards a cliff, while he tried to warn that the bridge was out. I’m certain that the network of enormously influential friends and co-conspirators will actively try to spin this as a non-issue, even as they eye one another for signs of flop sweat or cooperation with the authorities…as they try to figure out who will be the most likely to roll. Once it registers on them that this isn’t going to go away, and that the whole ugly truth will be known, that there isn’t any way to cover this up (as they have apparently been doing for years), you can expect distancing from the bomb blast zone. Nobody is going to want a piece of this when it becomes clear that it is going to reveal all.

I would think that the brokers that facilitate this sort of game are at risk now, as it can only be a matter of time until their role is uncovered. I would believe that they have to be trying to figure out what happens next. I’m quite confident that there are calls going out to reassure everyone that it is all going to be fine, we are good for it, have no fear, we’ve weathered worse than this. The problem is that they haven’t – the only time they’ve even come close is when L&H filed against many of the same bad guys, and they didn’t have the financial staying power to fight to the conclusion – that, and the company was up to no good. That wasn’t a challenge – that was a softball. This is the A team coming over the hill with guns blazing. A legal team with virtually limitless financial resources and access to the very best talent, well prepared for the inevitable barrage of counter-measures and stalling tactics, ready to dismantle the ugly machine and show the world its component parts.

I have a feeling the names in this are a who’s who of Wall Street, and wouldn’t be at all surprised if you see a full court press to discredit everyone and everything associated with this effort – the plaintiffs, the attorneys, the company (even thought they aren’t a party to the suit), Dr. Byrne, probably even me (I’m not a plaintiff, but they just don’t much like me, so I expect that they will target me for a slamming). I can hardly wait to see the first salvo from the hedge fund quislings, the Carols, the Jesses, the Alperts, the lapdogs, all professing that this is stupid, or unfair, or typifies companies that are in trouble, etc. The spin machine will likely now go full speed, as the bashing crews are currently doing on the message boards – no conspiracy there, folks, no siree.

All of which won’t change the story that the trading records and emails and phone logs will tell. And that is, at the end of the day, their problem. The trading tickets will tell the story, just as they did in Operation Bermuda Shorts, where a far less sophisticated group was caught with over 1200 accounts to do related party trading and evade the US rules, preying on OTCBB companies.

This suit is the first step in the process of the market getting a glimpse of the seedy underbelly of the industry, and the predatory practices that are its stock in trade. It should be quite a show.

And we have ringside seats.

Popcorn, anyone?


-----------------------

also read
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/050811/nyth150.html?.v=16

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

A High Water Mark

Today we traded 30.887 million shares.

We also closed at .0009 pps.

Today may well be the high water mark for this stock.

The question is whether or not this is the beginning or the beginning of the end.....

Only time will tell.

May your glass always be full.

Friday, August 05, 2005

End of Week Two

As we end the second week of our quiet period I remain hopeful about PMHJ's prospects.

There are many hurdles left but good things may be around the corner.

May your glass always be full.......

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

More N.S.S. Background Information

As posted in message 1063611 by member hundredtoone on the CMKX RB board:

Aug 2, 2004 (financialwire.net via COMTEX) -- (FinancialWire) Pet Quarters Inc. (OTC: PDEN), formerly a mail-order catalog and internet based pet supply company based in Lonoke, Arkansas, has filed a $400 million complaint against Thomas Badian, Rhino Advisors, Inc., Ladenburg Thalmann & Co., Inc. (LTS) for alleged stock manipulation.

Badian and Rhino Advisors settled with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for $1 million in February 2003. At the time of the settlement, the SEC said Badian was behind manipulative short sales aimed at shares of software company Sedona Corp. (SDNA), then a NASDAQ (NDAQ) listed company.

The FBI reportedly recorded dozens of conversations showing a giant conspiracy between Badian and numerous brokers and brokerages but to the dismay of opponents of illegal naked short selling, no charges have been brought against any of the others.

The complaint alleges a scheme by the defendants to defraud PQI and its investors by posing as investors and acquiring convertible securities, common stock and warrants with the intention of manipulating downward the price of the stock; a practice commonly referred to as death spiral finance which violates both federal and state securities laws.

Pet Quarters is represented by the law firms of O'Quinn, Laminack & Pirtle, Christian Smith & Jewell, and Heard, Robins, Cloud, Lubel & Greenwood, LLP, all of Houston, Texas. The consortium of law firms, famed for the giant awards they obtained suing tobacco companies, says it has filed 20 such cases, and plans many more. The group recently brought suit against the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. for allegedly participating in the short-selling conspiracy through its "stock borrow" program which the attorneys say is nothing more than an illegal electronic printing press for stock certificates.

Attorney Sean Greenwood said: "As described in the complaint, death spiral practitioners appear to be bona fide investors who carefully select companies whose shares can be manipulated and totally controlled by them. The perpetrators of these schemes work through a network of agents and finders that seek out suitable targets and steer them to a group of death spiral practitioners. The perpetrators typically operate through multiple tiers of offshore funds, advisors, directors and agents for the purpose, we believe, of obscuring the identity of the investors and impeding investigations by regulatory authorities in order to avoid civil liability.

Two of the defendants in the case, Thomas Badian and Rhino Advisors, Inc., were the subject of an SEC civil enforcement action which they settled for $1,000,000 pertaining to the trading of shares of SEDONA (R) Corporation. Badian is also currently the subject of a criminal prosecution by the United States government in the Southern District of New York which alleges stock fraud and stock manipulation in the shares of SEDONA. Mr. Badian is currently a fugitive from justice.

Steve Dempsey, Chairman and CEO of PQI says: "What happened to us, SEDONA, and other companies like us is a travesty. The promise of American business is that through hard work, good planning and good execution, you can succeed. We were never given a chance. We were targeted for destruction."

Lead counsel John O'Quinn said: "We are committed to the relentless pursuit of justice for PQI and its shareholders."

Charles Schwab & Co. recently said it is exiting the market-making business. It is one of several market makers that have been the subject of accusations and/or legal entanglements over naked shorting allegations and issues.

The company had said it is either the number one or number two market-maker in more than half of all of NASDAQ's (NDAQ) listed stocks.

Recently observers were surprised to find a comment letter submitted to the SEC by Mike Alexander, Senior VP of Charles Schwab, that admits outright that brokerages regularly ignore rules and regulations, saying it is not rules that need to be written; it is changes in behavior that is needed.

The comments were directed towards proposed changes in the U.S. settlement system, but could easily apply to other regulations as well.

"Improvements in the U.S. settlement system will only be truly achieved if and when regulations are rationalized to ensure that all market participants are held accountable for compliance. For example, the industry has struggled with the issue of institutional trade affirmation for quite some time now. While the benefits to the clearance and settlement system are self-evident, Buy-Side firms and Custodian banks have been resistant to make those changes that provide for same-day trade confirmation / affirmation and assurance of trade settlement," said Alexander.

"Schwab opposes the notion that securities intermediaries such as broker-dealers be required to police compliance," he stated. "The NYSE and other SROs have had trade affirmation rules on their books for some time. However, such rules have not been effective in changing the behavior

of Buy-Side firms or their custodians; nor do the rules provide assurance that the affirmed trade will settle.

"Recognition of this fact is evidence that changes to the settlement cycle not only require overhauling systems, but also changing behavior. We believe that only by holding all market

participants directly accountable for making required affirmations will the necessary changes to behavior," he stated at http://www.sec.gov/rules/concept/s71304/charlesschwab061604.pdf .

In a June 23 release, the SEC stated it has put into place Rule 202(T), which establishes procedures to allow the Commission to temporarily suspend the operation of the current "tick" test in Rule 10a-1, and any short sale price test of any exchange or national securities association, for specified securities.

Through a separate order, the Commission will suspend, on a pilot basis for a period of one-year, the tick test provision of paragraph (a) of Rule 10a-1, and any short sale price test of any exchange or national securities association, for approximately one-third of stocks in the Russell 3000 index.

The order also will suspend, on a pilot basis for a period of one year, the tick test provision of paragraph (a) of Rule 10a-1 for short sales executed in any security included in the Russell 1000 index after 4:15 p.m. Eastern, and all other securities after the close of the consolidated tape, and until the open of the consolidated tape the next day.

The pilot will commence on January 3, 2005 to permit broker-dealers and self-regulatory organizations to make the necessary programming adjustments.

The Commission deferred consideration of the proposal to replace the current "tick" test of Rule 10a-1 with a new uniform bid test. The Commission could reconsider any further action on these proposals after the completion of the pilot.

Rule 203, which will incorporate current Rule 10a-2 and will create a uniform Commission rule requiring broker-dealers, prior to effecting short sales in all equity securities, to "locate" securities available for borrowing.

There will be limited exceptions from the locate requirement, including for short sales by registered market makers in connection with bona-fide market making.

Rule 203 also imposes additional requirements on designated "threshold securities." Rule 203 defines a threshold security to mean an equity security for which there is an aggregate fail to deliver position for five consecutive settlement days at a registered clearing agency of 10,000 shares or more and that is equal to at least 0.5% of the issue's total shares outstanding.

Where a clearing agency participant has a fail to deliver position in threshold securities that persists for ten consecutive days after settlement, the participant must take action to close out the position. Until the position is closed out, the participant, and any broker-dealer for which it clears transactions, may not effect further short sales in the particular threshold security without borrowing or entering into a bona fide arrangement to borrow the security.

Rule 203 will become effective 30 days after publication with a compliance date of January 3, 2005, to permit firms to make programming and procedural adjustments.

Rule 200, which among other things, will redesignate current Rule 3b-3 with some modifications to define ownership and aggregation of securities positions, and include a requirement to mark all sell orders in all equity securities. Rule 200 will become effective 30 days after publication.

The Commission also adopted amendments to Rule 105 of Regulation M to remove the current shelf offering exception, and issued interpretive guidance addressing sham transactions designed to evade the rule.

The amendment applies to short sales effected within five days prior to the pricing of a shelf offering. Such short sales may not be covered with offering securities purchased from an underwriter or other broker-dealer participating in the offering.

The Rule 105 amendments will be effective 30 days after publication in the Federal Register, and the interpretive guidance will be effective upon such publication.

Opponents of naked short selling were, however, quick to denounce the provision that allows market makers an exemption, and many market observers said that the SEC should provide a public list of companies that fall into the "threshold security" category.

"The SEC claims that the number of companies involved in this 'threshold security' category is 4% of all publicly traded companies. If in fact it is that small the process is certainly manageable," said the website InvestigatetheSEC.com at http://www.investigatethesec.com . "It is also the right of every issuer, in protecting their business and their investors to know the status of their stock trading."

Some were discussing whether the SEC can keep such information private under the Freedom of Information Act.

The marketplace is already upset over promises by the Berlin Stock Exchange, since broken, that it would delist any company upon request.

"Please understand that cessation of trading in the shares of XRAYMEDIA Inc. (XRYM) is not possible," the exchange told one such requester.

It's not just U.S. companies such as Whistler Investments (WHIS), Sonoran Energy (SNRN), Celsion Corporation (CLN), and eLinear Inc. (ELU) or Israeli companies that have had serious concerns about their unannounced and unathrorized listings on the Berlin-Bremen Stock Exchange.

Apparently, some 150 British companies are protesting the same fate.

A number of UK-listed companies have demanded a London Stock Exchange investigation after they found that their shares are being traded.

Meanwhile, Whistler, Sonoran and eLinear have announced they have successfully secured their delistings, and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has rescheduled its open hearing to consider the adoption of amendments to Regulation Sho to August 2 at 9:30 a.m. The announcement is at http://www.sec.gov/news/digest/dig061504.txt .

According to the London Money Telegraph, "several companies believe the market for their shares has been distorted and that they have fallen in value after trading started on the Berlin-Bremen exchange.

"Some smaller companies, whose shares are lightly traded in London, fear the Berlin market has been used by speculators to short-sell their shares."

The Telegraph said the number of companies are thought to be as high as 150, including even "larger companies" such as Matalan (OTC: MATNF) and Halfords.

Mladen Ninkov, the chairman of Aim-listed Griffin Mining (OTC: GFNMF), was quoted as saying: "We were put on the Berlin market without our knowledge by a German broker and now we've got about 8m shares out in a short sale. It is horrifying - that is about 4 per cent of the company and it is forcing the price down."

A spokesman for the London Stock Exchange said: "If there is evidence of market abuse we would refer that on to the appropriate authorities."

Whistler said that according to its transfer agent records, "we have 5,504,680 shares held by DTC, but the ADP broker search indicates of 6,217,458 shares being reported by broker/dealers as being held on behalf of their customers, indicating a short position of more than 700,000 shares. A summary report can be viewed at http://www.whistlerinvestments.com/shorts.html .

"We have therefore commenced work with DTC for a formal review of the reported excessive broker/dealer holdings of our stock so that we can conduct our corporate affairs properly in view of our planned stockholders meeting and other upcoming corporate matters. We again advise our stockholders make sure that they receive delivery of any shares that they purchase, and also that their stock is not being borrowed without authorization.

Holly Roseberry, President of Whistler Investments, states "We intend to get to the bottom of the excessive short position and bring stability back into the trading of our stock. We're happy to say that we have 5,133 stockholders and we expect all our stockholders to benefit from the shorters having to cover their short positions."

FinancialWire has reported on the disclosure that "Dateline," the investigatory TV program aired by General Electric's (GE) NBC unit, has purportedly been preparing a blockbuster expose of "Stockgate" (see separate story at http://www.financialwire.net).

It is not known if "Dateline" has uncovered continuing underworld connections to the scandal, but FinancialWire reported that Dateline may be pointing a large finger of conflict at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission itself, which reportedly receives a slice of every transaction fee as part of its budget. According to court filings supported by the O'Quinn/Christian legal network, almost $1 billion annually is received by the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. for its "Stock Borrow Program," which the lawsuits claim is just a fancy name for counterfeiting, as the DTCC purportedly lends out many multiples of the actual certificates in the float. Apparently the SEC receives a transaction fee for each transaction facilitated by these loans of non-existent certificates, which could knock a hole in its budget should the revenues from the practice be halted.

The North American Securities Administrators Association, comprised of state and Canadian regulators, has pointedly told the SEC that either it must rethink its cozy DTCC relationship, or it hints, some of its more aggressive state practitioners (think Eliot Spitzer) may do the rethinking for the SEC.

Naked short selling is worrisome for hundreds of small U.S. companies, including those recently asking to be delisted from the Berlin Stock Exchange, such as Golden Phoenix Minerals, Inc. (GPXM), Nannaco, Inc. (NNCO), 5G Wireless Communications, Inc. (FGWC), CyberAds, Inc. (CYAD), Provectus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (PVCT), House of Brussels Chocolates (HBSL), InforMedix, Inc. (IFMX), Tissera, Inc. (TSSR), Americana Publishing, Inc. (APBH), Celsion Corporation (CLN), ChampionLyte Holdings, Inc. (CPLY), Pickups Plus, Inc. (PUPS), China Wireless Communications Inc. (CWLC), CareDecision Corp. (CDED), Titan General Holdings, Inc. (TTGH), IPVoice Communications, Inc. (OTCBB: IPVO), Whistler Investments (WHIS), WARP Technology Holdings, Inc. (WRPT), BGR Corp. (OTCBB: BGRR), ICOA, Inc., (ICOA), DICUT, INC. (OTCBB: DCUTE), NHC Communications Inc. (NHC), Stratus Services Group, Inc. (OTCBB: SERV), Golden Phoenix Minerals, Inc. (GPXM).

Berliner Freiverkehr (Aktien) AG has been singled out as the broker and market maker that has been "listing" the companies. It is suspected that one broker, RA Angsar Limprecht, is involved in all if not most of the listings.

Small public companies are squeezed not only by hedge funds, naked short sellers, overseas listers such as the Berlin Stock Exchange, and the out-of-control "Stock Borrow Program" run by the governance-conflict-laden Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation, but to the amazement of the industry, as often and not by their own regulators.

A new staff recommendation by Annette Nazareth, director of the division of market regulation at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to "outlaw" ownership of paper certificates at the same time the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation is under intense scrutiny for alleged electronic counterfeiting has begun hitting the small public company markets, company executives, shareholders and manipulative short-selling opponents like the proverbial ton of bricks.

A Dow Jones (DJ) article by Judith Burns sparked the uproar, as the inextricably intertwined web of connections between the SEC and the DTC, which is sagging from the weight of conflicted governance by representatives from a rollcall of industry heavyweights, including NASD, which owns NASDAQ (NDAQ), the New York Stock Exchange, Goldman Sachs (GS) and Lehman Brothers (LEH), to name only a few.

The rule proposal would bar stock transfer agents from handling shares that carry any limitations on transfer. Control over stock certificates is one of the ways that small companies have combated illegal naked short sellers. Burns quoted Nazareth as saying that these companies' "self-help" efforts "aren't helping U.S. markets overall." Nazareth was quoted as saying restrictions on stocks are "a significant step backwards" in the "move from paper stock certificates to automated computerized trading."

Nazareth said that abusive "naked" short selling has been a problem "in some cases," but that is "best dealt with by a pending SEC proposal," presumably Regulation SHO.

SEC Commissioner William Donaldson purportedly publicly refused to answer any questions from the NASD about the timing of the Commission's consideration of the Regulation at a conference where he was simultaneously proposing early reforms of the mutual fund scandals. The Dow Jones said, however, that Robert Colby, SEC deputy market regulation division director, predicted the SEC will take that to a vote in early June.

The Dow Jones report noted that "naked short-selling occurs when sellers don't buy shares to replace those they borrowed, a manipulative practice that can drive a company's stock price sharply lower.

The stock certiticate plan has been put to a 30-day comment periodl Then the SEC would have to vote to adopt it. If adopted, Colby was quoted as saying that regulators might "sue firms that seek to impose restrictions on stock transfers."

The recent lawsuit filed by Nanopierce Technologies (NPCT) alleges that the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. has a lot of reasons, almost one billion of them a year, to keep illegal naked short selling in operation. It was the shot across the bow by the legendary Houston law firms of Christian, Smith, Wukoson and Jewell, and OQuinn, Laminack and Pirtle, whose notches already include environmental targets, the breast implant industry and the tobacco industry, all brought to their knees.

In comments to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, C. Austin Burrell, who is providing litigation support and research for the law firms, said that StockGate is more massive than anyone may have imagined. "Illegal Naked Short Selling has stripped hundreds of billions, if not TRILLIONS, of dollars from American investors," and have resulted in over 7,000 public companies having been "shorted out of existence over the past six years." Burrell said some experts believe as much as $1 trillion to $3 trillion has been lost to this practice.

He stated that the restrictions on short selling were deliberately put into the Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934 because of the first-hand evidence then available that the "sheer scale of the crashes was a direct result of intentional manipulation of US markets through abusive short selling by a massive conspiracy."

Burrell noted that the 65-lawyer team presided over by lead lawyers Wes Christian and John O'Quinn has uncovered more than 1,200 hedge fund and offshore accounts working through more than 150 broker-dealers and market makers in a joint cooperative effort to strip small and medium size public companies of their value.

Recently the NASD and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission approved an interim naked short-selling band-aid, requiring U.S. brokers to make an "affirmative determination" that short-sellers, even foreign short-sellers, mostly Canadian, can find certificates to cover before processing the order.

Last year, many besieged public companies sought refuge from the manipulation by seeking to exit the DTC, but on August 2, 2003, the SEC stated "the issues surrounding naked short selling are not germane to the manner in which DTC operates as a depository registered as a clearing agency. Decisions to engage in such transactions are made by parties other than DTC. DTC does not allow its participants to establish short positions resulting from their failure to deliver securities at settlement. While the Commission appreciates commenters' concerns about manipulative activity, those concerns must be addressed by other means."

The Nanopierce lawsuit, said to be the first of many out of the box, emphatically suggests otherwise. According to lawyer Christian, et.al., the DTC is at the very heart of the problem, and has almost a billion dollars a year at stake in keeping the problem.

The Depository Trust Company (DTC) is a member of the U.S. Federal Reserve System, a limited-purpose trust company under New York State banking law and a registered clearing agency with the SEC. The depository supposedly brings efficiency to the securities industry by retaining custody of some 2 million securities issues, effectively "dematerializing" most of them so that they exist only as electronic files rather than as countless pieces of paper. The depository also provides the services necessary for the maintenance of the securities it has in "custody."

According to the suit, the DTCC has an enormous pecuniary and conflicted interest in the entire short selling scandal through the huge income stream they were realizing from it every day. They have made literally billions of dollars lending individual real shares, in most cases over and over, getting a fee each time they made a journal entry in the "Stock Borrow Program."

The Stock Borrow Program was purportedly set up to facilitate expedited clearance of stock trades. Somewhere along the line, the DTCC became aware that if it could lend a single share an unlimited number of times, it could collect a fee each time, according to Burrell. "There are numerous cases of a single share being lent ten or many more times," giving rise to the complaint that the DTCC has been electronically counterfeiting just as was done via printed certificates before the Crash.

"Such re-hypothecation has in effect made the potential 'float' in a single company's shares virtually unlimited and the term 'float' meaningless. Shares could be electronically created/counterfeited/kited without a registration statement being filed, and without the underlying company having any knowledge such shares are being sold or even in existence." Burrell said the Christian/O'Quinn lawsuits will seek to show that the "counterfeiting/creation of unregistered shares is a specific violation of the Securities Act of 1933, barring the 'Sale of Unregistered Securities'."

While the Nanopierce lawsuit has been filed at the state level, another companion lawsuit just heading to the courts on behalf of Exotics.com (EXII) will be argued at the Federal level.

Nanopierce's suit in the 2nd Judicial District Court in Nevada, is Case No. CV04-01079, alleges that the DTC's "stock borrow program" was "purportedly created to address SHORT TERM delivery failures," but that the "end result of the program has been to create tens of millions of unissued and unregistered shares to be traded in the public market," and in some instances resulting in "two or more shareholders who purchase shares in separate transactions to own the same shares."

The complaint alleges that the DTC has a colossal disincentive to stop the "stock borrow" program, booking revenues from services of $425,416,000 and similarly, the NSCC deriving revenues of $293,133,000.

Further, the suit alleges that "open positions" resulting from this activity at the close of business on December 31, 2003, "approximated $3,025,467,000" due to NSCC, and $2,303,717,000 due by NSCC, and unsettled positions of $721,750,000 for securities borrowed through the NSCC's "Stock Borrow Program."

Nanopierce claims that DTCC and NSCC have joined in a "scheme" to "manipulate downward the price of the affected securities, thereby reducing the market value of the open fail to deliver positions." The suit also claims that the s have permitted sellers to maintain open fail to deliver positions of tens of millions of shares for periods of a year and even longer.

It quotes the National Association of Security Dealers as admitting that "concerns have been raised by members, issuers, investors and other interested parties about potentially abusive short selling activities occurring in the marketplace. In particular, naked short selling, or selling short without borrowing securities to make delivery, can result in long term failures to deliver, including aggregate failures to deliver that exceed the total float of a security. NASD believes such extended failures to deliver can have a negative effect on the market. Among other things, by not having to deliver securities, naked short sellers can take on larger short positions than would otherwise be permissible, which can facilitate manipulative activity."

Nanopierce claims that it had "relied on material misrepresentations and omissions by DTC and NSCC in trading its shares in the stock market "without knowledge of s' fraud-on-the market through statements they made about the clearing and settlement services they provided." Further, it claims that the s acted with "scienter" since they had a major financial financial motivation to falsely represent their services, which Nanopierce claims are also anticompetitive.

The largely unregulated DTC has become something of a defacto Czar presiding over the entire U.S. markets system, wielding more day-to-day influence and control than the SEC, the NASD and NASDAQ combined. And, as the SEC's August 2 ruling indicates, its monopoly over the electronic trading system appears even to be protected.

The Depository Trust and Clearing Corp.'s two preferred shareholders are the New York Stock Exchange and the NASD, a regulatory agency that also owns the NASDAQ (NDAQ) and the embattled American Stock Exchange! Regulators, regulate thyself?

In an era when corporate governance is the primary interest for the SEC and state regulators, the DTCC is hardly a role model. Its 21 directors represent a virtual litany of conflict:

They include Bradley Abelow, Managing Director, Goldman Sachs (GS); Jonathan E. Beyman, Chief Information Officer, Lehman Brothers (LEH); Frank J. Bisignano, Chief Administrative Officer and Senior Executive Vice President, Citigroup / Solomon Smith Barney's Corporate Investment Bank (C); Michael C. Bodson, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley (MWD); Gary Bullock, Global Head of Logistics, Infrastructure, UBS Investment Bank (UBS); Stephen P. Casper, Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer, Fischer Francis Trees & Watts, Inc.; Jill M. Considine,Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC);

Also, Paul F. Costello, President, Business Services Group, Wachovia Securities (WB); John W. Cummings, Senior Vice President & Head of Global Technology & Services, Merrill Lynch & Co. (MER); Donald F. Donahue, Chief Operating Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC); Norman Eaker, General Partner, Edward Jones; George Hrabovsky, President, Alliance Global Investors Service; Catherine R. Kinney, President and Co-Chief Operating Officer, New York Stock Exchange; Thomas J. McCrossan, Executive Vice President, State Street Corporation (STT); Eileen K. Murray, Managing Director, Credit Suisse First Boston (CSR); James P. Palermo, Vice Chairman, Mellon Financial Corporation (MEL); Thomas J. Perna, Senior Executive Vice President, Financial Companies Services Sector of The Bank of New York (BNY); Ronald Purpora, Chief Executive Officer, Garban LLC; Douglas Shulman, President, Regulatory Services and Operations, NASD; and Thompson M. Swayne, Executive Vice President, JPMorgan Chase (JPM).

In their comments to the SEC regarding Regulation SHO in January, the 50 state regulators, through their association, the North American Association of Securities Administrators (NASAA) issued what many consider to be a strong warning that if the DTC is not dealt with in the final regulations, state regulators such as New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer may step to the plate.

In what many considered to have been explosive comments, Ralph Lambiase, NASAA president and Director of the Connecticut Division of Securities, warned "NASAA urges the Commission to reconsider its stance regarding the role of the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (the DTC). As a threshold matter, NASAA believes that the Commission should explicitly prohibit the DTC from lending more shares of a security than it actually holds. The ability of the overall proposed rule would be severely impared unless the Commission undertakes to implement such a prohibition."

As the Nanopierce lawsuit reveals, those were indeed strong words, meddling as it did, in a substantial revenues base for the DTCC.

Recently, leading market makers and brokers named in various lawsuits and other actions, including FleetBoston (NYSE: FBF), Goldman, Sachs & Co. (GS), H. Myerson & Co., Inc. (NASDAQ: MHMY), Olde / H&R Block (HRB), Charles Schwab (SCH), Toronto-Dominion's (TD), TD Waterhouse Group, Bank of America's (BAC) Banc of America Securities LLC, Societe Generale's (SCGLF) SG Cowen Securities Corp. vFinance, Inc. (VFIN), Knight Trading Group, Inc. (NITE), A.G. Edwards, Inc. (AGE), Ameritrade Holding Corp. (AMTD), Deutsche Bank AG (DB), and ETrade Group, Inc. (ET), were forced to comply with new short-selling market regulations imposed by the NASD after the SEC had "sat on" the NASD request to plug material loopholes for almost 2-1/2 years.

"The new rules expand the scope of the affirmative determination requirements to include orders received from broker/dealers that are not members of NASD ("non-member broker/dealers").

The new rule is on the web at http://www.nasdr.com/2610_2004.asp#04-03

The rule itself, while welcomed by small companies and their shareholders in the U.S., nevertheless raised an outcry because the NASD's request to put it into effect had set on a shelf at the SEC since 2001.

The scandal has embroiled hundreds of companies and dozens of brokers and marketmakers, in a web of internaitional intrigue, manipulative short-selling and cross-border acctions and denials.

Comments on Regulation SHO ended January 5, and may be viewed at http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s72303.shtml .

Some 122 companies, including 13 brokers, such as FleetBoston (NYSE: FBF), Goldman, Sachs & Co. (GS), H. Myerson & Co., Inc. (NASDAQ: MHMY), Olde / H&R Block (HRB), Charles Schwab (SCH), Toronto-Dominion's (TD), TD Waterhouse Group and vFinance, Inc. (VFIN). A.G. Edwards, Inc. (AGE), Ameritrade Holding Corp. (AMTD), Deutsche Bank AG (DB), Knight (NITE) and ETrade Group, Inc. (ET), have been embroiled for over a year in a raging controversy

The remaining 109 companies among the 122 named to date have issued press releases or been named in the media as having been victimized, or as taking various actions, either alone or in concert with other companies, to oppose manipulative trading in the form of illegal naked short selling. The actions have ranged from lawsuits to withdrawals and threatened withdrawals from the electronic trading system managed by the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp., to withdrawals from toxic financings, to the issuance of dividends or name changes designed to squeeze manipulators, to joining associations or networks or to contacting regulatory authorities to provide documentation of abuses or otherwise complain.

The complete list of those 108 companies include Advanced Viral Research Corp. (ADVR), AdZone Research, Inc. (ADZR), Amazon Natural Treasures (OTC: ANTD), America's Senior Financial Services (OTCBB: AMSE), American Ammunition, Inc. (AAMI), AngelCiti Entertainment (OTCBB: AGLC), ATSI Communications, Inc. (ATSC), Federal Agricultural Mortgage / Farmer Mac (AGM) Allied Capital (ALD), American Motorcycle (OTC: AMCYV), American International Industries (AMIN), Ameri-Dream (OTC: AMDR), Adirondack Pure Springs Mt. Water Co. (OTCBB: APSW), ATSI Communications,Inc. (ATSC) Bluebook International (BBIC), Blue Industries (OTCBB: BLIIV), Bentley Communications (OTCBB: BTLY), BIFS Technologies Corporation (BIFT), Biocurex (BOCX). Broadleaf Capital Partners, Inc. (BDLF), Chattem, Inc. (CHTT), Critical Home Care (CCLH), Composite Holdings (COHIA), CyberDigital, Inc. (CYBD). Diamond International Group (OTCBB: DMND), Dobson Communications Corp. (DCEL), Eagle Tech Communications (EATC), Edgetech Services (EDGH);

Also, Endovasc Ltd. (EVSC), Enviro-Energy Corporation (ENGY), Environmental Products & Technologies (OTC: EPTC), Environmental Solutions Worldwide, Inc. (ESWW), EPIXTAR Corp. (EPXR), eResearchTechnologies, Inc. (ERES), Flight Safety Technologies (OTCBB: FLST), Freddie Mac (FRE), FreeStar Technologies (OTCBB: FSRCE), Front Porch Digital,

Inc. (FPDI), Geotec Thermal Generators, Inc. (GETC), Genesis Intermedia (GENI), GeneMax Corp. (GMXX), Global Explorations Inc (GXXL), Global Path (OTCBB: GBPI), GloTech Industries, Inc. (OTCBB: GTHI), Green Dolphin Systems (OTCBB: GLDS), Group Management (OTCBB: GPMT), Hop-On (HPON), H-Quotient, Inc., (HQNT), Hyperdynamics Corp. (HYPD), International Biochem (IBCL), Intergold Corp. (OTCBB: IGCO), International Broadcasting Corporation (IBCS), InternetStudios, Inc. (ISTO), ITIS Holdings (ITHH), Investco Corp. (IVCO), Lair Holdings (LAIR), Lifeline BioTechnologies Inc. (LBTT), Life Energy & Technology (LETH), MBIA (MBI);

Also, MegaMania Interactive (MNIA), MetaSource Group, Inc. (MTSR),Midastrade.com (MIDS), Make Your Move (OTCBB: MKMV), Medinah Minerals (MDMN), MSM Jewelry Corp. (OTC: MSMC), Nanopierce Technologies, Inc. (NPCT), Nutra Pharmaceutical (NPHC), Nutek (OTCBB: NUTK), Navigator Ventures (NVGV), Orbit E-Commerce, Inc. (OECI), Pitts & Spitts (OTC: PSPP), Sales OnLine Direct (OTCBB: PAID), Pacel Corp. (OTCBB: PACC), PayStar Corporation (PYST),Petrogen Corp. (PTGC), Pinnacle Business Management (OTC: PCBM), Premier Development & Investment, Inc. (PDVN), PrimeHoldings.com, Inc. (PRIM), Phlo Corporation (PHLC), Resourcing Solutions (RESG), Reed Holdings (OTC: RDHC), Rocky Mountain Energy Corp. (OTCBB: RMECE), RTIN Holdings (OTCBB: RTNHE), Saflink Corp. (SFLK), Safe Travel Care (OTCBB: SFTVV), Sedona Corp. (SDNA);

Also, Sionix Corp. (SINX), Sonoran Energy (SNRN), Starmax Technologies (SMXIF), Storage Suites America (SSUA), Suncomm Technologies (OTC: STEH), Sports Resorts International (SPRI), Technology Logistics (TLOS), Swiss Medica, Inc. (SWME), Ten Stix, Inc. (TNTI), Tidelands Oil (TIDE), Titan Construction (TTCS), Trezac Corp. (OTCBB: TRZAV), Universal Express, Inc. (USXP), Valesc Holdings, Inc. (OTCBB: VLSHV), Vega Atlantic (OTCBB: VGAC), Viragen (VRA), Viragen International (VGNI), Vista Continental Corporation, (VICC), Viva International (VIVI), Vtex Energy (OTCBB: VXENE) and Wizzard Software (WIZD), WorldTradeShow.com (WTSW) and Y3K Secure Enterprise Software, Inc. (OTCBB: YTHK).

Earlier in 2003, the SEC fined Rhino Advisors, Inc., $1 million for its representation of Amro International in the financing and manipulation of Sedona Corp. Amro, also known as AMRO, was registered in Panama, a secretive offshore haven, but was not named in the SEC settlement. Another 60 public companies may have been manipulated by the fined Rhino Advisors and its indicted principals, or its funding apparatus, Amro.

These include:

All American Food Group Inc (AAFGQ), Amanda Co Inc (AMNA), Antra Holdings (RECD), Aquis Communications Group Inc (OTCBB: AQUIS), Avanir Pharmaceuticals (AVN), Bionutrics Inc (BNRX), Brilliant Digital Entertainment Inc (AMEX: BDE), Bravo! Foods International Corp. (OTCBB: BRVOE), Butler National Corp (BUTL),Calypte Biomedical Corp (CYPT), Chemtrak Inc/DE (CMTR), Clicknsettle Com Inc (CLIK), Corporate Vision Inc (OTC: CVIA), Crown Laboratories Inc/DE (CLWB), Dental Medical Diagnostic Systems Inc (DMDS), Detour Media Group Inc (DTRM),

Also, Digital Privacy Inc/DE (OTC: DGPV), Senior Services Inc (DISS), International Inc (DYNX), Endovasc Ltd Inc (EVSC), Esynch Corp/CA (OTCBB: ESYN), Focus Enhancements Inc (NASDAQ: FSCE), Frederick Brewing Co (FRBW), Greystone Digital Technology Inc (GSTN), Havana Republic Inc/FL (HVNR), Henley Healthcare Inc (HENL), Hollywood Media Corp (HOLL), Ibiz Technology Corp (IBZT), Diagnostic Systems Inc/FL (IMDS), Imaging Technologies (OTCBB: IMTO), Integrated Surgical Systems Inc (RDOC),

Also, Interferon Sciences Inc (IFSC), Interiors Inc (OTC: ITRNA), Laminaire Corp (THMZ), Medisys Technologies Inc (SCEP), Milestone Scientific Inc/NJ (MS), Nevada Manhattan Group Inc (NVMH), Innovations Inc (OTCBB: NTGE),Systems Group (OSYM), Pacific Systems Control Technology Inc (PFSY), Professional Transportation Group Ltd Inc (TRUC), Rnethealth Inc (RNTT),

Also, Sand Technology Inc (SNDT), Sedona Corp (SDNA), Silverado Foods Inc (SVFO), Stockgroup Information Systems (SWEB) Surgilight Inc (SRGL), Tasty Fries Inc (TFRY), Tech Laboratories Inc (TCHL), Teltran International Group Ltd (TLTG), Titan Motorcycle Co of America Inc (TMOTQ), Trans Energy Inc (TSRG), Motorcycle Co (UMCC), Universal Communication Systems Inc (UCSY), Medical Systems Inc (UMSI), Vianet Technologies Inc (VNTK),Viragen Inc (VRA), Webcatalyst Inc (WBCL), Worldwide Wireless Networks Inc (WWWNQ), and ZAP (ZAPZ).

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