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Taking down pinkie promoters...................
http://www.sec.gov/News/PressRelease/Detail/PressRelease/1370543470309#
I'm not sure how many followed Spongetech and the story that continues, but here is a great post from that board..........
"So what are your expectations for the "Big Day" on 8/4?
If you are looking for a ruling from the judge, I'd guess it will go something like this:
Jay Booth: The Court appreciates your efforts on behalf of the Spongetech stockholders and would like to respond by making three major points:
1. Spongetech is no longer a going concern. Their Chapter 7 Bankruptcy is completed and resulted in the total liquidation of the company. The Trustee's work was completed and the court released him from his responsibilities. No plan was submitted for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which might have allowed for Spongetech to reorganize and continue in business. Since Spongetech has no assets and the bankruptcy process has been completed, you can expect the stock ticker to be revoked. This will leave investors with no mechanism for buying or selling Spongetech stock. Criminal cases have been completed through plea bargains. Six Spongetech employees and associates have been sentenced, with a final sentencing of Steven Moskowitz scheduled in October. Final SEC judgements are pending, but it is not clear whether any significant restitution will be made. (Restitution, if any, will be applied to SEC fines).
2. Your filing raises many issues concerning alleged illegal actions on the part of various third parties relating to naked short selling of Spongetech stock, as well as alleged actions on the part of various government agencies. However, you have not provided direct, compelling proof of naked short selling, or any direct, compelling proof of any criminal wrongdoing perpetrated by any government agency. Investigation of any naked short selling, as communicated earlier by the Court, would have to be funded by the investors, not the Court.
3. In conclusion, the Court is not in a position to provide you with any relief with regard to your filing. Again, the Court applauds your efforts to seek justice and attempt to recover some portion of the investment you made in Spongetech, including those of other stockholders. You are welcome to file civil suits against the company (now bankrupt) or individual agencies of the U.S. government, in an attempt to get relief.
The penny stock market is a dangerous place for investors to operate. The majority of the stocks in this market decline in value, posing enormous risks to anyone investing in these stocks. While the SEC, DOJ, FBI and the courts do what they can using current statutes to police this market, it is largely uncontrolled. The principal of Caveat Emptor (Buyer Beware) applies.
Smell a t-trade in the near future
I've followed this Astrom scam for years. It reminds me that scammers like these are out there making money off unsuspecting investors and idiots.
It's just a hobby, and takes very little time at all.
Really don't care.
The pinkie market has dried up. Investors don't buy into the PR's like they use too and that has all but eliminated the runs we once saw.
Garbage PR's like MCIC's oil plans combined with a resounding history of failure show this companies true colors.
Good luck.
sure sure I believe you lol
and now so do others
I actually never have bought MCIC. Played it once under XMDC and made a few bucks, but see no reason to piss away money now.
These clowns will achieve nothing but will line their pockets a bit through 144 sales.
Nothing too the company but dreams.
……..thats how MCIC makes us money…… "
truth comes out don't it but hey guess saying never buy never have never will is true too
You should ask to have this post removed.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=102142475
then you have the ones that lie say they don't buy but do
missed you glad your back its more fun with you dk a joke
I am sure having fun hope you are too
Not sure if you got my last post to you, but I believe I may have been in error....na, hell...I am in error.
It is more than possible that they have the companies mixed up.
I'm not sure what I was thinking, but just realized I wasn't looking a name and ticker on the pages I looked at.
I really don't give a chit about trading this junk, but if I find time, I'll contact them to confirm if it is or isn't MCIC.
Thanks for pointing that out. If it isn't MCIC, the trading halt can be lifted allowing those that wish to sell the chance.
I need a drink.
"is it possible there's some confusion with the company name?
MULI Multi-Corp International Inc.
MCIC MultiCorp International, Inc. "
Nope.
I posted the link to the cease trade order on the MCIC board.
Trading was ceased due to filing issues.
It is this one, although I think the order should have been lifted as they are now current.
Thanks, K9narc. We'll find something to throw the dice at. I'm a good craps player and mcic sure turned out to be crap.
Hey chalmer..............I'm the wrong person to ask.
I "play" very few stocks these days. Most of my money is tied up in stocks like GOOG and AAPL and Canadian blue chips. I roll any divi's back in and watch them grow.
My smaller cash plays are PRKR and my old favorite VCSY.
I'm avoiding the penny pigs like MCIC as they just don't run like they use to. That and this time of year, I'm just to damn busy to look for anything.
SOP has some thoughts get posted on his board, as does MLR. Just make sure you do your DD on them
If I do get one that strikes me as hot, I'll post it here.
GL
Hey, K9narc, it's just you and me. I'm looking for a good stock. Got anything up your sleeve. Something other than mcic of course.
It was just one of my general posts to the world.......
not that anyone listens. I usually don't because I know the poster.
Did you post that for me K9narc?
I've held the stock VCSY for years. Traded it a number of times for multi baggers and for a penny pig, have done very well.
They just settled with LG on a patent suit over android. No details on the $$$$$$$$$.
LG is just one of many android marketers. This could be big.
Looking for at least 5x normal volume and a 30% pop in PPS on the news.
Worth a look, but do your DD.
MCIC working with another medical product that will make millions.......lol.
If it worked, a large multi national would be all over it. It's the biofart revisited.
Me thinks the DR might need some money..............IMHO
http://www.healthgrades.com/media/english/pdf/sanctions/HGPYF364E33F5F934CF4B08232013.pdf
I still believe what I said in that post to be coming and the last financial just reinforced my thoughts....IMHBOTAF
"Will there be one last good run?....who knows, but I doubt it.
I'm expecting the usual out of it.....sell the shell, RS and name change. My guess is in the next 6-9 months."
Thanks....I was wondering where I left it.
No reward though.
I think the penny market has gone for a shit in the last 5 years.
Investors are smarter now and have learned that if it reads as too good to be true.........then it almost always is.
The Biofart sounded like a no brainer. A real winner. Problem was that other than the postings on I hub, there was nothing but a PR. No medical chatter, no blogs and little to no links. Except for us Ihubbers, it was a secret.
The PR of financing was a little over the top. 50 million from a bone cracker that has no history in finance. I don't buy it.
The green energy PR was a joke and any info I dug up kept the laughs coming.
The PR about marketing gas and oil generated the same results in spades.
The company is a shell. All it has is a basement recording studio and I bet it won't stay with the shell unless it RM's into it.
There is way to much history here. I doubt it has much of a pump left in it.
Thanks! He appears to have run out of rabbits to pull out of his hat. Not sure how anyone still believes in the PR's. It is sad as the shell itself has value if he just doesn’t rape it on the way out. IMHO of course.
There was no reason for the spike in price and based on the low volume. I agree with your line of thinking.
This was an Astrom shell and I've never thought much of it.
I've watched it only because of who started the shell. He was a case study/hobby study for a long time.
The biofart never was a viable working product and the PR's this year were just for pumping....IMHO
Will there be one last good run?....who knows, but I doubt it.
I'm expecting the usual out of it.....sell the shell, RS and name change. My guess is in the next 6-9 months.
I expect nothing from Dawson Creek, the oil deal or anything else.
The whole thing looks to me like a failed attempt at a P+D.
Good luck.
What is your take on the mini price bump on MCIC this past week? It almost feels like manipulation based on the low volume. Hopefully it takes one last run so I can get rid of every share and never look back.
Your thoughts?
BKMP was the big one.....It was at the start of "The Fight Network", claimed to be involved big and really wasn't.
These are the others......
Resource Group International (RSGR)
Imusic Worldwide Inc., WGI Holdings Inc. (WGIH)
Talisman Holdings Inc. (TMHO)
Nikron Technologies Inc. (NKRN)
Tal-Cap Inc. (TAL)
RainEarth Inc. (RNER)
Sync2 Networks Corp.
(SYNW) MASS Petroleum (MASP)
Liquid Gold International and Foy Johnston Inc. (FOYJ),
I'd be surprised if there wasn't some promotion here, but other than watching the rise and fall of BKMP, I wouldn't say this site was a "profit center".
any idea what the shell names are?
and was ihub a profit center for them?
Nine Individuals Indicted For One Of The Largest International Penny Stock Frauds And Advance Fee Schemes In History
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 13, 2013
Defendants, Arrested Across 5 States and in Canada, Created Shell Companies, Sent Out Fake Press Releases and Impersonated IRS Employees
Defendants Planned to Open Next Fraudulent Call Center in Brooklyn
BROOKLYN, NY – Earlier today, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrested six men in New York, Arizona, New Jersey, Florida and California for engaging in an international fraud conspiracy that spanned the globe from North America to Europe and Asia. A seventh defendant was also arrested today on a provisional arrest warrant in Ontario, Canada. The arrests resulted from an indictment charging nine defendants with 24 counts of securities fraud, wire fraud and false personation of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) employees in connection with the sale of securities and conspiracy.1 As set forth in court filings, the defendants masterminded securities fraud and advance fee schemes that victimized investors in approximately 35 nations and generated more than $140 million through various brokerage and bank accounts under their control. To uncover the international aspects of the scheme and gather evidence, the FBI used wiretaps in the United States and undercover agents in foreign countries.
The indictment and arrests are the result of one of the largest international penny stock investigations ever conducted by the Department of Justice and the FBI and mark the unveiling of a multi-year, ongoing investigation, which included significant assistance from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), as well as from other U.S. law enforcement agencies and law enforcement authorities in England, as well as assistance from Thailand and China.
The defendants are charged in two separate but interrelated schemes. According to the indictment, the defendants first engaged in an international ‘pump and dump’ scheme during which they fraudulently ‘pumped up’ the share price of worthless penny stocks and then ‘dumped’ billions of shares of those stocks by unloading them on unsuspecting victim investors across the globe. Second, the defendants operated boiler rooms in at least four countries that induced investors in penny stocks, including many of the same victims from the ‘pump and dump’ scheme, to pay advance fees that the defendants promised would enable the victim-investors to sell their penny stocks and recover losses that they incurred. In reality, the defendants simply stole the fees without providing any services, fraudulently extracting millions of additional dollars from their victims.
The charges and arrests were announced by Loretta E. Lynch, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York; George Venizelos, Assistant Director-in-Charge, FBI, New York Field Office; Toni Weirauch, Special Agent-in-Charge, IRS, Criminal Investigation, New York; James C. Spero, Special Agent-in-Charge, Homeland Security Investigations, Department of Homeland Security, Buffalo; and Robert O’Malley, Special Agent-in-Charge, Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA).
The ‘Pump and Dump’ Scheme
As alleged in the indictment, defendants Sandy Winick, Gary Kershner, Joseph Manfredonia, Cort Poyner, Songkram Roy Shachaisere and William Seals orchestrated one of the largest international penny stock frauds in history. First, the defendants gained controlling interests of huge quantities of worthless stock in 11 public companies known in the industry as ‘file cabinet businesses’ – thinly traded companies with minimal assets and non-existent business operations, which in many cases were mere shell companies. They then ‘pumped up’ the share prices of the companies’ stock by engaging in fraudulent and illegal sales campaigns, which included distributing false press releases, announcing non-existent business ventures and fake mergers, posting false information on social media sites and bribing stock promoters and brokers.
These efforts fraudulently inflated share prices so that the pump and dump defendants could trade billions of shares of penny stocks that they owned and controlled at a profit, ultimately generating more than $120 million worth of fraudulent stock sales in accounts under their control. As a result of the defendants’ efforts, investors in 35 countries were defrauded in connection with their purchase of the companies’ stock.
To avoid detection, the defendants, many of whom operated from outside the United States, were often careful to use “throwaway phones.” In fact, defendant Poyner was intercepted on a wire communication reminding others in the scheme to use such mobile devices to avoid being caught. The defendants also knew that they should not draw attention to their illegal trading scheme. For example, defendant Winick boasted about the superiority of the charged scheme compared to another more obvious scam, stating: “That deal is obviously a pump and dump. We know enough to be subtle.”
The Advance Fee Scheme
As the indictment alleges, defendants Winick, Gregory Curry, Kolt Curry and Gregory Ellis perpetrated a second scheme in which they fraudulently induced penny stock victims to pay advance fees, on the promise that the victims would then either be able to sell their securities to other waiting investors or join lawsuits to reclaim their losses. In reality, the advance fees were nothing more than a con, as neither the investors nor the lawsuits existed. To hoodwink the penny stock owners, the advance fee defendants invented fake trading companies and a fake law firm and then posed as employees of those entities while soliciting advance fees from the penny stock victims.
To facilitate the scheme, the defendants established boiler rooms or call centers from which members of the conspiracy would solicit advance fees from the unsuspecting penny stock victims. The call centers were located in various locales around the world, including Canada, Thailand and the United Kingdom. Recently, the defendants began planning to open a new call center in Brooklyn, New York. Some of the victims were told that they either needed to pay the advance fee to remove restrictions that were placed upon their penny stock, which prevented the victims from selling their stock in the market, or to join investors in a pending or anticipated lawsuit to recover losses that they incurred while owning the penny stock. Victims were then told that the advance fees were needed to convert the warrants of their stocks to a saleable security. In several instances, the advance fee defendants even pretended to be IRS employees collecting a bogus advance tax from victim investors before they could unload their penny stocks.2 The victims were directed to send payment of the advance fees to banks around the world, including bank accounts in New York City. The fraud proceeds were then transferred through a funds transfer network, located in Getzville, New York, to an account maintained in Beirut, Lebanon. Ultimately, these defendants generated more than $20 million in fraudulently obtained advance fees.
Defendant Kolt Curry described the Advance Fee Scheme in the following way over an intercepted wire communication: “I would say that 100 percent of these stocks are like uh pink uh… just dumps . . . . so … ya know they’re totally, they’re like, so a lot of these guys are dying . . . . to get rid of this crap. . . . The money is good, it’s easy. It’s easy money. Definitely easy money, and it’s good money.” In fact, while bragging about his prowess as a fraudster, defendant Kolt Curry further stated, “I had a guy send me a million dollars over one phone call . . . . He actually sent me almost two million dollars over the period of the hit . . . . I guess in the industry they coin it as a smash and grab.” As for the group’s recent plans to open a call center in Brooklyn, New York, defendant Kolt Curry said, “I tell you what man . . . hitting the Americans would be like taking money from a baby.”
“As alleged in the indictment, the defendants used our securities markets as a platform from which to run elaborate fraudulent schemes to victimize unsuspecting investors across the globe. Where others saw citizens of the world, the defendants saw a pool of potential marks. They cheated, lied and swindled investors into buying billions of shares of worthless stock, then turned around and used a second scam to cheat those investors again. But today, the defendants were the marks, and it was law enforcement that ran the table,” stated United States Attorney Lynch. “As this case shows, we are committed to preserving the rule of law and protecting our investors and markets from fraud. I would like to thank our partners at FBI for their hard work on this important investigation.” Ms. Lynch also thanked the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Financial Crime Intelligence Unit in Vancouver and the Integrated Market Enforcement Team in Toronto, the IRS, the Department of Homeland Security, TIGTA and the Serious Organized Crime Agency in the United Kingdom. Throughout the course of the investigation, significant assistance was also provided by the United States Embassies in Ottawa, Toronto, London, Bangkok and Beijing. Ms. Lynch also expressed her grateful appreciation to the Securities and Exchange Commission for its cooperation and assistance in the investigation.
FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Venizelos stated, “As alleged in the indictment, the defendants overstated the value of penny stocks and sold them to unwitting investors worldwide. By tricking victims into paying advance fees with the promise of realizing larger gains or recovering losses, some of the defendants dipped into the pockets of those they had betrayed—not once, but twice. The investing public has the right to trade in an uncorrupted market, and we have a responsibility to uphold the public’s confidence in the integrity of our financial markets. While the charges announced today are significant, they are but one example of what’s left to come as we continue to work with our partners in this ongoing investigation.”
“The criminals behind this scheme were shameless in heartlessly defrauding hundreds of victims out of their savings and retirement accounts for their own enrichment,” said James C. Spero, special agent in charge of Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in Buffalo. “HSI is committed to working with our partners at the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office to hold these perpetrators accountable and recover as much money as possible for their victims.”
IRS Special Agent-in-Charge Weirauch stated, “Illegal activity in the investment industry continues to bring financial ruin to unsuspecting American investors. IRS-Criminal Investigation is proud to be part of the multi-agency team that stopped this international investment scam. We stand ready to bring our forensic accounting skills to the fight against other investment schemes and white collar crimes.”
“Impersonation of an employee of the Internal Revenue Service is a violation of federal law,” said Robert E. O’Malley, Special Agent in Charge for the TIGTA. “Taxpayers should exercise extreme caution when contacted by individuals representing themselves as IRS employees, and immediately verify those individuals’ employment by contacting the IRS through their website at www.irs.gov. If the individuals cannot be verified as IRS employees, they should immediately contact TIGTA.”
The defendants have been charged with: one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, 15 counts of wire fraud, four counts of securities fraud and two counts of false personation of an officer of the United States. If convicted, the defendants will face up to 20 years’ imprisonment for each count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, substantive wire fraud and substantive securities fraud and up to five years’ imprisonment for conspiracy to commit securities fraud. The defendants face up to three years in prison for each count of false personation of an officer of the United States. In addition, all proceeds of fraudulent schemes are subject to forfeiture. The defendants will be presented for arraignment later today at the United States Courthouses in Brooklyn, New York; Los Angeles, California; Miami, Florida; and Tucson, Arizona. The defendants in Los Angeles, Miami and Tucson are expected to be removed to Brooklyn.
The government’s case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Christopher A. Ott, Sylvia Shweder and Melanie Hendry.
This prosecution was the result of efforts by President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force (FFETF), which was created in November 2009 to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. With more than 20 federal agencies, 94 U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, and state and local partners, it’s the broadest coalition of law enforcement, investigatory, and regulatory agencies ever assembled to combat fraud. Since its formation, the task force has made great strides in facilitating increased investigation and prosecution of financial crimes; enhancing coordination and cooperation among federal, state, and local authorities; addressing discrimination in the lending and financial markets; and conducting outreach to the public, victims, financial institutions, and other organizations. Over the past three fiscal years, the Justice Department has filed more than 10,000 financial fraud cases against nearly 15,000 defendants. For more information on the task force, visit http://www.StopFraud.gov.
The Defendants:
SANDY WINICK
Citizenship: Canada
Age: 55
Bangkok, Thailand
GREGORY CURRY
Citizenship: Canada
Age: 63
Bangkok, Thailand
KOLT CURRY
Citizenship: Canada
Age: 38
Ontario, Canada
GREGORY ELLIS
Citizenship: Canada
Age: 46
Ontario, Canada
GARY KERSHNER
Citizenship: United States
Age: 72
Tucson, Arizona
JOSEPH MANFREDONIA
Citizenship: United States
Age: 45
Tom’s River, New Jersey
CORT POYNER
Citizenship: United States
Age: 44
Boca Raton, Florida
SONGKRAM ROY SAHACHAISERE
Citizenship: United States
Age: 43
Huntington Beach, California
WILLIAM SEALS
Citizenship: United States
Age: 51
Fallbrook, California
_____________________________
1The charges contained in the indictment are merely allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
2 The investigation showed that the identities used were fictitious and no IRS employees were involved in the scheme.
My thoughts on the oil deal was "Just what a large consumer of oil is looking for - another middleman..."
Any interest I had in purchasing MCIC shares was lost with the PR about the "Oil" deal. My wife has a few clients involved in the business and it isn't one that you just happen into. It requires a large amount of funds and the ROI is low. The volume is what generates income.
If the oil PR didn't look bad enough, the funding was. Who puts out $50 million to get shares worth 500k?
I just can't help but think that most money made by the exec's and the company are as a result of dilution or the selling of personal holdings.
My best guess is that the OS is about 1.4 billion and rising, but with a TA that won't release info and no share update, it's hard to be spot on.
I do think my numbers are close based on the 1% rule that applies to a 144 filing.
For me that sums it up to a T.... jmho failed pump
I had berries and pancakes last nite. My feed for the year.
The syrup I made will be used in breakfast shakes and on pancakes.
Low in sugar and goes great with a cup of milk, a banana and couple of raw eggs. 30 seconds in the blender and done.
had a farm plot by lakehouse in MI,,,,full of strawB's, some folks tended it and we let pick for free,,,,,,,ride our bikes down there, stay for hrs and the red hands would last all summer
berrys and waffles
LOL...............I kept 2 flats just for freezer jam and one to make syrup.
I froze 10 flats as whole berries for my wife and dropped off the rest to the Salvation army.
By 3pm.....I'll never want to see a strawberry again.
Strawberry preserves.........bring it!!!!!!!!!!
"Wabbits Wonder Berries" on the label please
OK so I don't own the float. Shares are not free but they are at a great price. I still think things will turn out well.
based on all the ACCREDITED investors that readily offer their ever brimming PENNY available buying power, there are no new investors, just the WARREN BUFFETTS of "sell me your cheapies" "you'll be so sorry"
yeeesschhh, as usual, the biggest talkers on the playground GOT NO GAME when really guarded
the last go 'round of MEDIA blasts did not provide a large "wash" cycle.........so the DROP needs to be all that much greater.......
why else run a PENNY, or even risk the reputational hit that could end an ethical career.........
I always get the notion that its "get in on the game" or tow the straight/narrow........hardly ever a REAL SUCCESS story.........
never wanted to linger around the inner city playgrounds........thats where you get the lone stray slug "accident".............ALWAYS played, finished, then left quickly
get ready, this could be the BEST talk yet................yeh right
Christ....I hope that they are "free shares" by now.
There has been a few opps to make a good return and double up at lower prices.
I'm getting the feeling that were due for the "rinse, lather and repeat" cycle again. Sell the shell and let the shareholders wonder where any assets went.
I thought the last 2 PR's bordered on bullshit and the pump was on.
Either I was wrong, or it was a failed pump. I do think new investors are getting wiser, and see through a lot of the crap.
10 million shares at present PPS would tie up over 50K
In a pinkie?
No thanks
I would tell but it would be embarrassing. I own 501 gazillion shares. I am surprised there is any float left.
lol
without exception, the McDawson crowd has one trait I find very peculiar.....
they strive so hard to protect the baffling INTEGRITY of corporate silence...................but
squawk so loudly about how many shares they purportedly hold.........and gains they TRULY made.....
my neighbor(of 15 yrs) knows my home's security code, but HAS NO CLUE on my holdings, never will(course he's probably reading my mail when I leave town..lol, he raids the wine cellar enough!!!)
of about 20 boards I cruise, NO ONE divulges share counts like that
WHAT WILL WE DO WITH ALL THE CASH???????
we need to set up our own PENNY, what are we doing wasting time blogging
the devil tempted 3 times right????
good partnership....both feeding the needs
send some instructional manuals to CA....DC
if Ben and Jerry sold 80M scoops of ice cream since March 2013 at an average wholesale cost of .018 cents per sccop.....PLUS 3 possible SHORTcake dessert covers that netted $100k each...........they could've possibly sold enough ice cream to have $1.7M in the cash register
Now they might just show the franchisee how the shop operates, and loan him $1M to start his new franchise territory, which after a month of similar scoop selling success, might induce his rich uncle to invest a full $10M into the entire west region franchise territory.
But Ben and Jerrys needs to see ice cream prices stabilize or improve beyond the 2 cent wholesale number, so it seems as if the business is due for a flock of weekly PRs for very new flavor or sprinkle or topping being used to enhance the delicious dishes and cones sold......
this will be a supercalifragilisticexpialidocious ice cream spring and summer to watch
Mary Poppins from London is sure to be watching, to start her franchise group soon
McCreek board has no coherent, reasonable responses.
who said we werent role models.......hahahahaha
be happy, you could be family, then the
MIS-information droning would go on, & on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and onand on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and onand on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and onand on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and onand on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and onand on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and onand on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and onand on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on ..................................
WABBIT day is approaching, let me know how many hard boiled eggs you eat Cool Hand Luke
the wabbit motivated me, just won a giant sitting, and the ensuing vintage PORT celebration fueled a gaunt soliloquy on the other...........gotta love the Pacino job in the SCENT
and of course. the "UNIONS" 30% came cleanly/silently off the top
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Moderators |
Red flags are usually a signal that something is not right with a stock. It could be a Gagged T/A or float bloat. Sometimes it's a poster who hints of insider information. We all have our own thoughts of what signals a red flag , but many of them are the same.
This forum is here to discuss red flags and the companies that raise them.
If you have been in a stock or are in one now and think a red flag is flying, post it here. We will list and discuss all signals that are considered by some to be a red flag.
Good jokes are allowed too.
Please refrain from personal attacks and foul language and remember.........
It is always better to wish you had invested in a company than to wish you hadn't.
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Top ten RED FLAGS. (A work in progress)
1. A gagged transfer Agent
2. A forward split to reward shareholders.
3. Large volume increase after news and no up tick.
4. Any Astrom company or shell.
5. Pumpers. A poster who floods the board with positive posts about the company when there is nothing positive to be found or verified. Usually posts on that one board.
6. Insider information? Continued hints of upcoming news and unannounced contracts.
7. A pinkie CEO who talks to specific shareholders but doesn't PR the information to the public
8. Lack of follow through. Pr's or LOI's that never happen. The promise of an audit or financials that never materialize
9. Unusually large float or AS
10. The promise of moving to a larger exchange.
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Stocks I've red flagged and my position if any.
VCSY, almost 1B float, heavy pumping, (I own a pile.)
XDMC, XTend Medical Corp. Was PRRM, then SMMW and now this. First move of new management was a 8334 to 1 reverse split. Stock should have been in the low .80's after the RS and opened near .50
It has drooped since and has touched the mid .03's
Board was moderated by pump minded people (IMHO) and has little value.
This stock just has a 10% divi to reward shareholders. looking for float bloat.
SMMW, 80b A/S almost maxed, Astrom shell, heavy pumping, lack of follow through, audit promised twice and never delivered.
(Lost trading fee's on 10m)
PODM,now PDVP Astrom shell, split to reward shareholders, Ceo talked to shareholders.....they all got screwed. Companies on their 4 CEO in 2 years.
(Flipped once for nothing).
NRMG, Astrom shell under many symbols, more than 1 RS,
(Owned about 1m of this as NRES, with all the RS's, I think I own about 100 shares now.)
TSXT, Astrom and Hayder shell under many symbols, more than 1 RS,
(Made a 3 bagger when it was ICAN)
IAHL, was .......ICAN, IBCX, TSXT. What the new owners are offering looks too good to be true. It's a pinkie so I'm betting it is. Company take over was paid with prefered restricted shares from what I can see. Will play this one for the momo.
3 flips and counting.
Capital Oil & Gas Inc. Was PODM/PDVP....Repeat after me...........pump, dilute, reverse split.......pump, dilute , reverse split.
Symbol CPOG.PK
I guess I should have said Pump, dilute, reverse split and name change. 10,000 - 1 reverse split and CPOG will now be Southcorp Capitol Inc. Symbol STHC.PK
Spongetech Delivery Systems, Inc. SPNG Talk of massive naked shorting, a forward split, NOBO lists and lots of hints of insider info. My guess is massive dilution with front end loading.
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