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Re: None

Tuesday, 04/25/2017 2:29:57 PM

Tuesday, April 25, 2017 2:29:57 PM

Post# of 13983
Someone had mentioned about Romanek and GOFF....

Perhaps that’s why only one of the shells sold by Tracy—one of his very first—has completed a corporate action request with FINRA. If doing so proves difficult for new management of shells he’s sold more recently, problems could arise. It seems something’s gone wrong with one of the companies Tracy unloaded earlier this year. He applied for custodianship of Goff, Corp (that was the name, complete with conspicuous misplaced comma, it used as an SEC registrant), on February 12 of this year. Custodianship was granted on March 18. Tracy arranged a sale fairly quickly, and reinstated the company’s corporate charter in Nevada on April 27. The sale must have at that time been tentative; he inserted his own name as sole officer and director. On July 29, he filed a new officer list, indicating that Brandon and Harvey Romanek had taken over as management.

In August, the company’s name was changed to THC Therapeutics at the Nevada SOS. The website for THC Therapeutics was added to GOFF’s profile page at OTC Markets. In mid-July, Brandon Romanek had complained in a message sent from the company website that Tracy was dragging his feet, but THC would be going public in the very near future, and that “quite a lot” of information would soon be forthcoming. Yet no information appeared. On October 21, a new amendment was noticed at the Nevada SOS: the company’s name had been changed back to Goff Corp.

The Romaneks are still listed as officers of Goff in Nevada. Perhaps they simply terminated the deal because Tracy was taking too long to complete the merger. Perhaps they learned that GOFF, which had once been the vehicle for a major Awesome Penny Stocks pump and dump operation, had been discussed at length in SEC litigation against a host of penny scammers including Philip Kueber, who was subsequently indicted by the Department of Justice, and pled guilty. Or perhaps they suspected FINRA might balk at a request for a name and ticker change. In any case, it is now clear that the GOFF shell will not be the new home of THC Therapeutics. That will not please investors who bought in recent months hoping it would become yet another hot pot stock.

Romanek isn’t Tracy’s only dissatisfied customer. On September 16, 2016, a company called GF Offshore Energy and Resources Ltd. sued him and his Securities Compliance Group for breach of agreement, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, legal malpractice, misrepresentation, conflict of interest and more. GF Offshore is a Nevada company formed in July 2015; it is located in Malaysia.