Hmmmm.....actually....when the judge hears the "five times investment" back....johnson is toast. That is the typical con man ploy that feeds off the greed of people....the judge will know this. Also, another thing that will do Johnson in is his "secret" emails where he DOES give an exact timeline on when people will be paid back.... the judge will ask for proof from BJ that these people were paid back in the timeline given.....with the "bonuses" that were promised. I am sure Audrey Gilmour has access to these emails and will use them accordingly. Also....I am sure the name Mrs Jackholm will come up. I am also sure Mrs Gilmour will be showing the Judge the BCSC claims of FRAUD against Brent Johnson......ya your right....Johnson/ Lopehandia have nothing to worry about...LMFAO!!!!! PS.....I guess we can assume that Brent's "10 million plus" financing never quite happened.....Hmmmmm.....now WHO was it that said that Brent was a liar and there was no financing? That's right....ME! YKR RIGHT AGAIN!!!!!!!
JL should be making an appearance on the board soon telling us what a crook Audrey Gilmour is....maybe even how she is the Chilean Judges niece!!!! WHERE IS TIBBY when you need another good conspiracy theory story???
Mountainstar's Johnson sued over mine payment
2017-10-16 10:54 ET - Street Wire
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by Mike Caswell
Mountainstar Gold Inc.'s president, Brent Johnson, is a defendant in a lawsuit filed in the Supreme Court of British Columbia by a Vancouver woman who claims that Mr. Johnson and two other men owe her $250,000. She says that she provided $50,000 to cover costs at a gold mine in Chile. In return, she was to receive five times her investment in a "very short time frame," she claims.
The allegations are contained in a notice of claim filed at the Vancouver courthouse on Aug. 4, 2017, by a 60-year-old woman named Audrey Gilmour. The defendants are Mr. Johnson and two other men: David Nolan Goguen and Jorge Lopehandia. According to the suit, Mr. Goguen approached Ms. Gilmour in August, 2015, and sought $50,000. The money was purportedly to cover costs at a gold mine in Chile that Mr. Lopehandia held. (Mr. Lopehandia's claim to that mine is a lengthy story of its own.)
As an incentive to provide the money, Mr. Goguen allegedly offered Ms. Gilmour the return of five times her investment. This was to consist of a return amounting to three times her investment from Mr. Johnson and two times her investment from Mr. Goguen, according to the suit. The return was to be "in a very short time frame," the suit states. Ms. Gilmour says that she deposited the $50,000 to Mr. Lopehandia's Canada Trust account on Aug. 4, 2015.
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