InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 11
Posts 3235
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 01/06/2007

Re: None

Friday, 03/26/2010 4:54:42 AM

Friday, March 26, 2010 4:54:42 AM

Post# of 118239
Your company's securities offering may qualify for one of several exemptions from the registration requirements. The most common exemptions are listed below. You must remember, however, that all securities transactions, even exempt transactions, are subject to the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. This means that you and your company will be responsible for false or misleading statements, whether oral or written. The government enforces the federal securities laws through criminal, civil and administrative proceedings. Some enforcement proceedings are brought through private law suits. Also, if all conditions of the exemptions are not met, purchasers may be able to obtain refunds of their purchase price. In addition, offerings that are exempt from provisions of the federal securities laws may still be subject to the notice and filing obligations of various state laws. Make sure you check with the appropriate state securities administrator before proceeding with your offering.

Regulation D
Regulation D establishes the following exemptions from Securities Act registration:

Rule 504. Rule 504 provides an exemption for the offer and sale of up to $1,000,000 of securities in a 12-month period. Your company may use this exemption so long as it is not a blank check company and is not subject to Exchange Act reporting requirements. Like the other Regulation D exemptions, in general you may not use public solicitation or advertising to market the securities and purchasers receive "restricted" securities, meaning that they may not sell the securities without registration or an applicable exemption. However, you can use this exemption for a public offering of your securities and investors will receive freely tradable securities under the following circumstances:

You register the offering exclusively in one or more states that require a publicly filed registration statement and delivery of a substantive disclosure document to investors;

You register and sell in a state that requires registration and disclosure delivery and also sell in a state without those requirements, so long as you deliver the disclosure documents mandated by the state in which you registered to all purchasers; or,

You sell exclusively according to state law exemptions that permit general solicitation and advertising, so long as you sell only to "accredited investors," a term we describe in more detail below in connection with Rule 505 and Rule 506 offerings.
Even if you make a private sale where there are no specific disclosure delivery requirements, you should take care to provide sufficient information to investors to avoid violating the antifraud provisions of the securities laws. This means that any information you provide to investors must be free from false or misleading statements. Similarly, you should not exclude any information if the omission makes what you do provide investors false or misleading.


Was this offering made exclusively in the states noted in the filing, and did those investors receive a substantial disclosure document? RCCH's filing states that the offering will be made to ONLY accredited investors. That's 200k a year salary - $1,000,000 net worth...Just pointing out the obvious facts.

RCCH's Registration Filing

http://edgar.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/vprr/08/9999999997-08-039420
Join InvestorsHub

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.