Retiring
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Can't help but laugh about that. Short selling syndicate? HESG? Where on Earth did this idea come along? Did the Nite mole working for the FL SOS leak some info?
Looks like this company is cleaning things up
It's like trying to polish a turd.
So, they're gonna buyback all the shares that they dumped? LOL, doesn't make any sense.
NHLE ~ continuing it's week long downtrend.
Biased, one sided article.
Not today.
Air fresheners, ashtrays, detox drinks, e-cigs, glass pipes, grinders, and hookahs.
http://evapsdp.com/
Looks like another website created to pump NHLE.
A whois search says the website was just created 2 weeks ago.
And the scam goes on....
His wife is an interior designer. I'm sure she did all the work but, I'm sure it wasn't cheap.
Problem with using that term is, the horse never gets the carrot. Here, the carrot will drop and the horse will get it. Besides, you posted that "there is no PPA bud" but, yet you refer to it as a carrot. Then there's the accusation that the company is lying... till the company comes clean believe what you want
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=104563399
I know I've bitched about how long it's taking but, I would never deny that it isn't going to happen.
Quiros' plans also include not staying on this POS exchange. That deal should help propel STLK out of this cesspool.
There's so many little, good things that are being missed when reading the SEC docs. All the negatives are being tossed around but, nobody wants to discuss the little clues of a company striving for longevity.
It may be revised many times but to suggest that there is no PPA in the works is nonsense.
Look at the SEC docs. Grasping at straws is all it is.
Do you really think that Quiros is lying about it in the latest 10-Q?
Plan of Operation
Our business is the prospective sale of electricity we plan to generate to a government owned utility company in Costa Rica (the “Utility Company”). The Company intends to enter into a Power Purchase Agreement with the Utility Company (the “PPA”). The Company has strived to maintain a small operating budget during this time prior to the signing of the PPA. If the PPA is executed and the planning and construction phase begins, the Company anticipates using particular vendors that it believes will provide the necessary deliverables. We intend to have the overall management, oversight and financial functions of the project handled internally throughout the life of the PPA.
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1569055/000149315214001661/form10q.htm
These are the same filings that all the note DD has been pulled from so, it must be real, yes?
Also, nobody has mentioned the almost $400,000 owed to STLK from a Costa Rican investment bank. That just about pays off the debt owed to the sleezeball running Tarpon.
Again, stick to the note argument, at least it holds some water.
Are you really trying to suggest that there is no PPA in the works?
C'mon Snizz!! There's a better argument about the conversions. I'd stick to that because insinuating that there isn't a PPA in the works is completely absurd.
Bill is more nonsense. Not many can see that. Blinders in full effect when it comes to Bahige.
I don't have the time to waste pointing out all the inaccuracies of this article.
Do you have time to point out all the inaccuracies of Bill's stories?
Looks like he's been spending quite a bit of money...
05/06/14
The one time home of a convent associated with the Church of St. Joseph, the townhouse at 154 Waverly Place, which dates to 1839, subsequently housed Andre O’Neal Harrell, one half of the Harlem hip-hop duo Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. (Mr. Harrell went on to found Uptown Records—the sometime home of Heavy D & the Boyz and Mary J. Blige, among others.) Since 2000, though, it has been occupied by Nicholas R. H. Toms—CEO of mobile computing and wireless provider DecisionPoint Systems—and his wife Caroline, who bought it for $4.2 million and swiftly embarked on a two-year renovation to restore the 5,900 square-foot residence to its pre-convent, single-family configuration.
With three teenage children heading for boarding school, however, the family has more recently been on the lookout for something a bit more practical for their current needs, Mr. Toms told the New York Times. The renovation was insufficient, apparently, to entice buyers at the $20 million asking price the Toms tried for last year. But $14.95 million, its most recent listing price, proved to be more like it; the townhouse has just entered contract, according to Donna Olshan’s luxury report.
“We replaced everything except the staircase,” Mr. Toms told the Times. But 154 Waverly was not the subject of a modern, high-sheen overhaul. The home has distressed, pine plank flooring, tons of intricate molding, ceilings 11 and 12 feet high, and numerous fireplaces. There is custom silk fabric on the walls and French doors opening on a terrace large enough for dining. A wet bar in bright red lacquer offers a splash of mischief amid an otherwise staid ensemble that includes toile wallpaper, chandeliers and a formal living room done in a soft shade of daffodil. The listing, held by Rachel Glazer at Brown Harris Stevens, boasts of 2,000 square feet of outdoor space, including a sunken deck and a bricked patio.
http://observer.com/2014/05/ge-thee-to-a-nunnery-ex-convent-on-waverly-asking-14-95-m-goes-into-contract/
The distributor isn't going to pay retail for the pens.
You mean pumped, not traded. There's no other reason for PNCH to make a move. No fundamentals, no revenue, a lying CEO, it's a recipe for disaster.
Diluting to build the business is one thing. Diluting to fill the CEOs pocket because his POS company hasn't had any revenue for almost a year is a different story.
I see it being frontloaded so some buffoon can go around spewing garbage about MJ coming to PNCH, then they'll sell all their shares to the naive.
The CEO is a liar and a thief, anybody that buys his garbage, deserves what they get.
That's the most absurd thing I've ever heard. Scamblis is just dump shares and kill any potential run.
You left out the recent RS.
http://otcbb.com/asp/dailylist_search.asp?DirectSymbol=PNCH&OTCBB=ALL
It's a scam UA1. That website was up weeks before NHLE even mentioned a distribution deal.
I think they created this website to help pump this turd... http://www.atlasvapingco.com/
Let me be more specific... Bill Chabaan is a FRAUD!
Chabaan is a fraud.
Nice loading here today, no news, no pump, under the radar stock.
PNCH is being falsely pumped. Somebody decided to start a rumor about PNCH getting into MJ.
Here's where reading charts actually comes in handy with OTC stocks.
You can see where it's being frontloaded...
Too bad the CEO is ready to dilute this into the ground.
It was as clear as mud.
Have you looked into Atlas Vaping yet?
Anything runs on rumor
So let's just lie to other users to get them to buy frontloaded shares? Sounds about as ethical as the CEO.
Another vague PR.
Why bring peeps into a lost cause?
I'm willing to bet that there are at least 100 other people that would agree with my assessment that the CEO is whacked out. I'm sure they'd be willing to add their own negative comments about the CEO.
He's a liar and a scam artist.
Again, if you have any information that PNCH is going into MJ, then it's insider info which is against SEC policy and I'm sure they'd love to hear where you got this info from.
Same scam, same people, different company. Do the DD. Pure BS company.
NHLE ~ On June 21, 2013, Gankit signed a Master Credit Agreement with Levantera, SA, a company formed under the laws of the Marshall Islands, to provide a lending facility of up to $1 million. The Company has the right to periodically prepare a Borrowing Certificate (a “Certificate”) drawing upon this facility. At the end of each fiscal quarter, the Lender may prepare an Evidence of Indebtedness, setting forth advances, payments and interest accruals made during that quarter. Each Certificate and the interest accrued thereon is due one year after the date of the Evidence of Indebtedness. Interest accrued on un-matured amounts is 12% per year. Matured, unpaid amounts accrue interest at 18% per year. As of February 28, 2014, we have borrowed $150,000 on this facility and accrued $11,367 in interest. No interest or principal payments have been made as of February 28, 2014. Subsequent to our most recent borrowing tranche cash receipt on November 30, 2013, we have requested additional funds on this facility which have not arrived. We conclude therefore, that no additional funds are likely to be received pursuant to this financing facility.
Using the same Foreign Entity as Bluefire Equipment(BLFR) ~
On July 1, 2013, the Company entered into a Master Credit Agreement (the “Credit Agreement”) with Levantera SA (“Lender”), a company formed under the laws of the Republic of the Marshall Islands, to provide us a lending facility of up to $1 million. The Company has the right to periodically prepare a Borrowing Certificate (a “Certificate”) drawing upon this facility. At the end of each fiscal quarter, the Lender may prepare an Evidence of Indebtedness, setting forth advances, payments and interest accruals made during that quarter. Each Certificate and the interest accrued thereon is due one year after the date of the Evidence of Indebtedness
There is zero proof of any MJ coming to PNCH. It's a false pump. If someone knows that MJ will be part of PNCH's business then someone has some insider information that I'm sure the SEC would like to hear about.
Just saying that weed is coming won't be enough to get somebody to buy this POS.
Do your DD on PNCH and it's whacked out CEO.
Stevo is gonna dilute the hell out of PNCH. There's no hope of it ever seeing the levels it did before.
She should pay you a consulting fee, lol.
The FBI Ran an Ultimate Fighting Pump-and-Dump Scam
On Friday I laid out a schematic explanation of how to operate a pump and dump scam, because that seemed like news some people could use. At about the same time, the Securities and Exchange Commission was publishing its own handbook of pump-and-dumping, in the form of a civil complaint against five guys involved with a stock called Amogear. (They were also charged criminally.)
The Amogear scheme, according to the SEC, started out brightly: Amogear's controlling shareholder "owned or otherwise controlled all but a few thousand shares of Amogear's purportedly unrestricted stock," which is important if you want to pump and dump without outside interference.1 He engaged some stock promoters, Gabe Nix and Christopher Putnam, to pump that stock. "Nix was the owner of the GMM, a promotional firm that owned and operated a number of websites that tout penny stocks, and Putnam was a Senior Account Executive at GMM."
The company didn't do much, which to you and me might be an obstacle, but to them was more of an opportunity to paint on a blank canvas:
Nix and Putnam also were told, and understood, that Amogear had no operations. When Nix asked, “[Y]ou know, what’s the plan for the actual company,” Putnam stated, “[W]ho gives a f*** about the actual company,” and the [controlling shareholder]2 referred to a cardboard box in the corner of the office where they were meeting and said, “[T]hat’s it [the company] right now.”
Meanwhile, the controlling shareholder also engaged Mike Affa and Andrew Affa, cousins who live in New Jersey and Long Island respectively, as well as a guy named Mitch Brown, to do some manipulative trading in the stock. They laid out the plan:
Andrew Affa, Brown, Mike Affa and the [controlling shareholder] then discussed performing arranged trades to increase Amogear’s stock price before the touting campaign began. The trades they discussed were to be rigged trades between participants in the scheme to manipulate Amogear's stock price in which the participants would trade with and among accounts they controlled to create the appearance of a false market, with inflated prices, for Amogear stock. Brown and the [shareholder], with Andrew Affa present, discussed the "cross trades" and the plan to follow the trades with false touting, or "media."
Mitch Brown allegedly had strong preferences about exactly how you do the fake trading: "Every other penny, so you do the 10, you do the 12, you do the 14, you do the 16, all the way to 20 ... 5 prints ..." I don't know why you have to do every other penny; I would have thought that throwing in a few odd-numbered trades would make it look more naturalistic. But then I am not an expert on penny stock manipulation, and the SEC at least thinks Mitch Brown is.
So they did some fake trades to take the price from 10 cents to 12 cents, and then they launched the media campaign on websites including "TheStockScout.com, PennyStockPlayers.net, PennyStockCircle.com, PennyStockPros.net, 123StockAlerts.com, and StockMarketQuote.us."4 Since the company had no actual business, they made one up:
Amogear is focused on providing sports and training apparel for the world-wide mixed martial arts (MMA) audience as well as for other custom athletic sports fans.
Amogear is working to design and develop sports apparel prototypes for MMA, boxing, as well as other custom athletic consumers. AMOG's prototypes are further developed into a product line and are classified into three categories - training, competition, and lifestyle. The company is focused on marketing and distributing their product line in order to build brand recognition within the MMA and boxing sports apparel industries.
Amogear could quickly become a force to be reckoned with in the MMA industry!
I feel like, if I were describing an imaginary company, I could probably do better than "this company sells T-shirts to martial arts fans," but, again, I am not the expert. Perhaps this pitch was exquisitely tailored to the audience of TheStockScout.com et al.
But we'll never know, because "On or about February 10, 2014, before the defendants’ touting campaign could artificially increase the price and trading volume of Amogear’s shares as intended, the Commission issued an order pursuant to Section 12(k) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78l(k), suspending trading in Amogear stock."
Because, while the pump-and-dump scheme was almost a textbook effort, there were a few small flaws. The main one:
Unknown to the defendants, meeting and interacting with them in the scheme to manipulate the stock price and trading of, and to pump and dump, the publicly traded stock of Amogear was an individual cooperating with federal law enforcement authorities (the “CI”) as well as undercover agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (the “FBI”).
In fact the controlling shareholder was the CI, a veteran stock manipulator cooperating with the FBI in the hopes of getting his sentence reduced.5 And the "chief executive officer," such as he was, of Amogear, who met with the conspirators a couple of times, was actually an undercover FBI agent.6
So the main lesson here is, if you want to run a pump-and-dump scam, the FBI is not a great partner.7 That or "just don't run a pump-and-dump scam," I guess, take your pick. There are other lessons, though. One is how strangely close this all was to being legal.
From the SEC complaint: On all of these websites it was falsely stated in disclaimers that those promoting and touting the Amogear stock on the websites expected to be compensated in cash in connection with their promotion of Amogear. In reality, all compensation would be from the proceeds from the sale of Amogear stock. All of GMM’s websites stated in disclaimers: “[website name] is owned and operated by Global Marketing Media LLC. Global Marketing Media, LLC expects to receive up to one hundred thousand dollars cash compensation for a one week marketing and promotional effort on AMOG.”
In fact, the confidential informant told the promoters that they'd get 5 percent of Amogear's stock, with the aim of selling at 20 cents: "I think it'd be an opportunity for you guys to make 150, 200 thousand dollars over the course of a couple weeks’ time." So the disclaimers understated the amount, and misstated the form, of the expected compensation, but they weren't that far off: The promoters readily admitted on their websites that they were expecting to be paid six figures for a week of work touting Amogear. If they'd just gotten a check for $100,000, instead of some stock, that would have been fine.
CONTINUED... http://fbi.einnews.com/article/213799131/a5NUc7wQCGvrGK_i
Big deal. After the RS that shareholders suffered they may never get their money back and Steve don't give a damn. He backstabbed too many people.