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Re: WEEDWACKO post# 1708958

Tuesday, 12/29/2009 10:47:02 PM

Tuesday, December 29, 2009 10:47:02 PM

Post# of 4973165
Sry,, Herez Tha IOVE Soggy Loggy Bagholda Sekret Link That Gott Delete-ed... by Tha PikErrz who want to Jump Tha Gun nn Beat Tha Krowd to Tha exxxxitz Early Tomorrow,,

All Tha Dotz rr Konnekt-ed Here:

http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/Accredited-Business-Consolidators-Corp-1058262.html
http://www.caribbeanwoodproducts.com/
Mikey prolly gott Tha Munny 2 bankroll IOVE here in Jun08(Skroll 2 Btm of page):
http://alexanderbuildersja.com/wallaba_wood_shingles

"Mikey",, Or Shudd I Say "Joanna Gurl" .. Luv Thoze

Fake names
Cover Up Buyerz
Offshore entities
Thurd World Biznesses
EvryThing HomeBased with Mail-Drop front Virtual Offices
Iz UnRegistrred Securitiez Smakkin tha Bid Like Aio Case.. nnn Nekkid Shorty NITE luvz It Too... fo Maxxxximum 100%% Profit Marginz!!

nn All That juicy Skaminess:

"...Assistant State Attorney Douglas Sprotte, an Economic Crimes Unit prosecutor, said Kehl created All My Flowers as a bogus company, leading investors to believe the company had an exclusive contract to sell flowers from Chile, among other false claims.

Sprotte said Kehl started the flower company to raise the $250,000 needed to buy back AiO's technology. He planned to give the money to someone else to make the purchase as a cover-up.

But Kehl was arrested again, on Sept. 18, 2002, before he could get a dollar out of any potential investors.

A former business associate and co-defendant in the AiO case, Craig Goodie, helped organize a meeting between Kehl and an undercover detective, who Kehl thought was a potential investor in All My Flowers.

Goodie, a local insurance salesman whose charges were dropped when he agreed to testify against Kehl, noticed the officers in the company were using false names, and the company was looking to attract offshore investors. "

nnn Herez Tha Big Juiciez...

Convicted swindler pleads no contest to new fraud charges

Thursday, August 28, 2003

By CHRIS W. COLBY, cwcolby@naplesnews.com

Michael Kehl, a once-convicted swindler, became a twice-convicted felon Wednesday by pleading no contest to creating what prosecutors say was a bogus company to try to draw investors he hoped would give him enough money to bail him out of his legal troubles.

But his 33-month prison sentence is just three months more than the term Kehl is already serving, so "it would have been crazy for him to go to trial," defense attorney Donald Day said after the plea in Collier County Circuit Court.



Convicted Naples swindler Michael Kehl

Judge Frank Baker formally convicted Kehl, founder of AiO Technologies Inc., of six felony charges, including racketeering conspiracy, conducting a fraudulent transaction by the sale of securities, sale of an unregistered security and operating a boiler room.

After entering a plea to the court without any agreement with state prosecutors as to what the sentence would be, Kehl, 53, received the 33-month prison sentence. That will be followed by two years of supervised probation.

Kehl will serve the prison term at the same time he completes a 2½-year prison sentence for cheating investors in the Naples-based AiO out of millions of dollars. He has spent several months in jail awaiting trial in the newer case, so he'll receive credit for that time served.

For the most serious charge he faced, Kehl could have been sentenced to up to 30 years in state prison. Instead, he'll spend less than three years in state prison. A recent appellate court decision changed the way state sentencing guidelines calculate prison sentences in certain white-collar crimes.

"He, basically, got the same sentence he already got without having to go to trial and possibly face all that time," Day said.

Kehl's former company, AiO, was marketing a computerized system for handling food orders by phone. But state investigators say most of the money raised for the company went into Kehl's own pockets, not into the development of the technology.

In 2001, Kehl was arrested and forced to give up AiO. A receiver sold the company's assets, including its technology.

Assistant State Attorney Douglas Sprotte, an Economic Crimes Unit prosecutor, said Kehl created All My Flowers as a bogus company, leading investors to believe the company had an exclusive contract to sell flowers from Chile, among other false claims.

Sprotte said Kehl started the flower company to raise the $250,000 needed to buy back AiO's technology. He planned to give the money to someone else to make the purchase as a cover-up.

But Kehl was arrested again, on Sept. 18, 2002, before he could get a dollar out of any potential investors.

A former business associate and co-defendant in the AiO case, Craig Goodie, helped organize a meeting between Kehl and an undercover detective, who Kehl thought was a potential investor in All My Flowers.

Goodie, a local insurance salesman whose charges were dropped when he agreed to testify against Kehl, noticed the officers in the company were using false names, and the company was looking to attract offshore investors. Also, most of the employees at the flower company had worked at AiO, and they were earning generous salaries.

Goodie also noticed Kehl driving a new Mercedes around town, even though the state had seized many of his assets after his arrest.

Goodie wore a surveillance wire and set up Kehl with the undercover agent, who negotiated the purchase of $100,000 worth of shares in the flower company, Sprotte said. Kehl mentioned nothing of the trouble he was in with AiO to the undercover detective.

"All My Flowers was interesting because none of the investors lost anything," Sprotte said. "We heard he was doing it and put the undercover officer on him and got him before any damage was done."

But Day said Kehl denies the underlying allegations behind the All My Flowers case. He said Kehl simply "messed up on the paperwork" while organizing a moneymaking, legal enterprise.

"Not only is it a legitimate business, it's going gangbusters right now," Day said.

After Kehl made his plea to the court Wednesday, Sprotte argued Kehl should receive consecutive sentences, meaning he'd have to complete the 2½-year prison sentence before he could begin serving the longer 33-month sentence for the All My Flowers case.

But Baker refused, instead sentencing Kehl to what was called for under state sentencing guidelines for Kehl's offenses.

"He didn't get a break from us in any way. He pleaded to everything he was charged with and got a guideline sentence," Sprotte said. "I'd, personally, like to see the guidelines addressed by the Legislature. I don't think the guidelines adequately address white-collar crime."

In the AiO case, prosecutors say Kehl used the $3.7 million he raised by selling the company's stock to support a lavish lifestyle that included fancy cars, boats and vacation homes.

He must pay back between $5 million and $6 million in restitution to investors, according to the plea agreement, in which he was formally convicted of operating a scheme to defraud, the sale of unregistered securities, the sale of securities by an unregistered agent, fraud in the sale of securities and operating a boiler room.

...

Then You kan follow Tha Soggy Logg Saga back ovrr tha past cupple months here:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=44855878


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