is still alive and kicking.....Happy 2018!!
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One Equity, how did they get those shares again?????
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/2008/comp20643.pdf
Robert Schwartz
29.
Robert Schwartz signed a loan agreement with One Equity on September 12, 2007 for a loan of $717,600 in exchange for 2.3 million shares of Nuclear Solutions, Inc. ("Nuclear Solutions"). The loan amount was based on 65 percent of the stock price, which was trading at $0.48. On September 26,2007 Schwartz transferred 2.3 million shares of Nuclear Solutions to One Equity. One Equity sold all of the shares from October 4 to October 12,2007. One Equity's sales accounted for 24 percent of the total trading volume. The stock price dropped from $.41 per share to $.24 per share.
30.
One Equity did not fund Schwartz' loan. On October 9,2007 defendant Michael Spillan sent an e-mail to the broker that arranged for the Schwartz loan. Spillan stated that he expected the loan proceeds to be wired to Schwartz later that day. The next day, after Schwartz still had not received the funds, Spillan sent another e-mail to the broker stating that the wire transfer was being processed that morning, and that the funds would be posted to Schwartz's account later that day. When Schwartz did not receive the funds, he sent a letter by Federal Express to Michael Spillan demanding that One Equity return his shares. On October 15, Spillan sent an e-mail to Schwartz informing him that he could not return the Nuclear Solutions shares to Schwartz because of a court order freezing One Equity's brokerage account. He did not tell Schwartz that, in fact, One Equity had already sold the shares. On November 5,2007 Schwartz filed a lawsuit against the Spillans, the One Equity Companies, and others in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. He reached a settlement with the defendants in January, but has not received all amounts owed under the settlement. On March 1 1,2008, he filed a motion for contempt and for sanctions against the defendants for defaulting on the settlement agreement. The court has not ruled on the motion.
hmmm, maybe the "circle" got an unexpected wobble after that???.....hey, how about a buyout instead????
Whether MLM or momentum or ride or myself, we cannot move this stock sideways, up or down.
I'm glad you had a change of opinion on that.....
during your 1st post you had a different take:
It has been amazing to see how the bashers are able to manipulate a stock so well and bring the price down and buy....though I have also profited from their antics indirectly..
also, somehow made a prediction that was uncanny, more than a month and a half before anyone that I know of had heard a hint of it:
I predict that the company has a potential buyout offer on the table and are just trying to negotiate
So the bashers...who also hold positions in the stock ....are just trying to scare people away.....and buy more....
Perhaps the bashers are linked to the company that wants to buy NSOL out
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=24198777
PS: the tender offer
Item 8.01 Other Events
On December 22, 2007, we received a letter from Inter-Americas, Inc. expressing its interest in acquiring the outstanding common stock of Nuclear Solutions. The letter is attached as Exhibit 99. Management is in contact with Inter-Americas, Inc. and intends to enter into a period of bi-latteral due dilligence to assess the credibility of Inter-Americas' expression of interest and its financial resources. Presently, we do not have enough information with which to formulate an opinion.
I hope Penny got a nice snuggle afterwards.....
Paul Simon - Kodachrome
fairly flat day, not much difference than last week's AH prices.....
hmmmmmmmmm, bery, bery interesting!!!
I'm not a big fan of shorting or puts, except when it seems obvious, or for protection on a large position.....
but C has been a great swing trade, buy around 25ish, sell around 30ish......
works well for me, almost like getting a 20% dividend a few times a year!!!!!.....but as usual, YMMV, this is my opinion, trade at your own risk, yada, yada....
It was either go forward with the design on hand and sell some fuel our improve design for a national/world rollout of p2o. No brainer
considering we are still waiting, and the stock has been diluted with more and more discounted PIPE shares "while we wait" (again), and that the "improved design" seems to do what, exactly to improve on that lousy $10 / bbl???....I agree, it was a "no brainer" to not sell MASSIVE amounts of fuel instead.....
(after all, not like there is a MASSIVE supply of free plastic, sans RKT....oh wait, there was supposed to be a land rush before RKT ever came into the picture, I forgotti once again)
OK, then what was the 2011 excuse????, I forgotti....
What could possibly be cheaper than getting it for free?
all that talk about being paid to take it!!!!!
that, or the endgame is being set up to squeeze the last drops out.....nah, impossible!!!!!.....check out this dude's poor record of predictions:
I said their nuclear materials gravity detector was a joke, and IPTH "deal" very suspicious....
I said their Toms River plant would never happen (tire shredder me!!!!), with their "pre-approved" bonds, and "performance guarantees" (sound familiar????)
I also said the same for all the other states that I lost count of, PA, IA, etc, etc
I said this would eventually be a non-filing pink without the K and Qs, and it occurred....I admit, it took longer than expected, but the results are the same....
I predicted no FFI spinoff, and looky there....
I said the "Ground Breaking" was a show to snag KY investors (shame on you, Mr Yonts....supporting a penny stock with a shady history????......nice).....and something about new courthouse curtains!!!! (figuratively speaking, with the KFA funds fiasco)
I said the IA tender offer was BS......damn, correct again, "game over"....
(the above is the short-list summary, and does not even touch on things like the "DB" (insert real initials here: __) toxic financing, or Herda's possible "kickback" insider buys)
I predict the SEC will eventually revoke for lack of filings.....they will be lucky if that is all the actions taken against the Co, and no complaint for the other stuff, such as the phony tender offer....
(and no, for those wondering, I have not reported them, not my style....unless I have a reason....)
so, who's got the best batting average in prediction????.....me, sitting out HERE, or them, sitting THERE????....how could I possibly have been more accurate????....unless this was a sham all along to scoff up shareholders' money......"shiny new Philly offices" and all......(or UPS drop box, take your pick!!!!)
boggles the mind......
PS: I applaud this message!!!!
yep, and then election season is coming.....then the holidays, very slow.....then "go away in May"......then it will be the slow summer season.....
"for every season, turn, turn, turn"
aka: wash, and repeat......
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=78907857
don't know, but someone should call Mr Klein and he can add a RNDR "plug" in an update:
http://fugitivejohnstanton.com/
http://fugitivejohnstanton.com/Known_Associates.html
Stack has a long slated history and is currently under investigation by the SEC for the crime of stock fraud. He has a conviction record in Texas of DUI 1st offense and spent six months in jail for failure to pay his child support. Further, according to federal records, he owes the United States over one million dollars in back taxes. Stack has filed for bankrupcy showing almost a million dollars in past due bills. He is considered a deadbeat lawyer according to creditors who were bilked for hundreds of thousands of dollars. He is also involved in a secondary operation called "The Spur Ranch" where investors are asked to invest in a polo ranch that simply does not exist. However, since the start of this case - investigators have found that Mr. Stack has begun construction on the property and is now associated with a company in his girlfriends name. Mr. Stacks girlfriend, Ms. Kelly. Mr. Stack still owes the IRS over one million dollars.
We borrow funds from officers and stockholders from time to time. Seven individuals have advanced the Company money for general and administrative expenses: Kenneth Brown, a Past President; James Baker, a former Director; James Thomas, a former Director; Andrew Stack, a former director and CEO; Michael O'Keefe; and John Stanton a current Director
http://www.otcmarkets.com/financialReportViewer?symbol=RNDR&id=89173
Since 2001, the Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a number of complaints related to the aiding and abetting of securities fraud. For example, CIBC and Merrill Lynch were separately charged with aiding and abetting Enron’s evasion of record keeping requirements and required financial controls. Settlements, including disgorgement, penalties, and interest reached $80 million in both cases.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aiding_and_abetting
wanted fugitive, John Stanton:
http://fugitivejohnstanton.com/
What will you say when it is not?
probably the same thing I was going to say when the Tender Offer for $150M was going to happen.....
lol, maybe OTC Markets should be sued for picking on this group of honorable business people....Calling Norman!!!!!
PS: so, how's that FFI spinoff coming along????......Schrader me!!!
http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/USFF/quote
OTC Markets Group's Policy Regarding Caveat Emptor and Promotional Activities
OTC Markets believes adequate current information must be publicly available during any period when a security is the subject of ongoing promotional activities having the effect of encouraging trading of the issuer's securities in the OTC market. As a matter of policy, when it has come to the attention of OTC Markets that a security has been the subject of promotional activities and adequate current information concerning the issuer is not publicly available, OTC Markets will label a security as "Caveat Emptor." Promotional activities may include spam email, unsolicited faxes or news releases, whether they are published by the issuer or a third party.
Generally, OTC Markets will remove the Caveat Emptor designation once the security meets the qualifications for Current Information and we are satisfied that there is no longer a public interest concern, typically no sooner than 30 days. In the case of reverse mergers, OTC Markets will remove the Caveat Emptor designation upon qualification for Current Information or, for SEC filers, with the submission of a super 8-K, with no 30 day minimum.
During the time it is labeled Caveat Emptor, any stock that is not in the Current Information category will also have its quotes blocked on www.otcmarkets.com.
oops, time to move the tents and shovels for Ground-Breaking, the Sequel:
Item 8.01 Other Events
On 30 July 2012, Schrader & Associates, LLC filed a complaint against Fuel Frontiers, Inc. in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, Muhlenberg Circuit Court Division, as Civil Action No. 12-CI-352 to Quiet Title on property acquired by Fuel Frontiers, Inc. The property that is the subject of this litigation is not the site selected for the US Fuel Muhlenberg County coal to diesel facility.
(nice how they gave Schrader FFI shares!!!!...very crafty....)
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=53951974
what's your feelings on the phony tender offer by IA????
education: no 10-K or Qs for years, thus the stock could be revoked at anytime if the SEC so wishes, and their NV business license is in default over a whopping $750....also, OTB-Markets gives them the skull and crossbones warning!!!!
PS: FFI is also in default, almost a year now, but the batphone said that was "planned" or something like that......
Status: Default File Date: 2/27/1997
Type: Domestic Corporation Entity Number: C4006-1997
Qualifying State: NV List of Officers Due: 2/29/2012
Managed By: Expiration Date:
NV Business ID: NV19971114995 Business License Exp: 2/29/2012
http://nvsos.gov/sosentitysearch/CorpDetails.aspx?lx8nvq=P1A0NcyRdMXs7bjzm%252bbCbA%253d%253d
Calculate Annual List of Officer Fees for
U.S. FUEL CORPORATION
Item Fee
Annual List (due 2/29/2012) File This List Online Now! File Offline
$ 375.00
Annual List Late Fee $ 75.00
Business License (due 2/29/2012)
$ 200.00
Business License Late Fee $ 100.00
TOTAL*
$ 750.00
IF CHANGING REGISTERED AGENT THERE IS AN ADDITIONAL $60 FEE
* These fees are current as of today's date of 08/27/2012 10:00 AM but can change based on events occurring on future dates. Calculated fees for entities in Default or Revoked status do not include fees and penalties due to resignation or other registered agent deficiency or being on administrative hold. For these types of inquiries please contact our office. The above fees assume that a State Business License Exemption does not apply. Exemptions from the State Business Licence may not be filed online.
http://nvsos.gov/sosentitysearch/FeeDetails.aspx?ctok=P1A0NcyRdMXs7bjzm%252bbCbA%253d%253d
doc, do you know anything about pyrolysis schemes in penny stocks????...it's as old as the hills....
note: the late John Rivera, former associate of fugitive John Stanton (of EFTI), was charged with the SEC for securities fraud. Stanton is still on the lam
http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2007/0226/078.html
KissyKat And The Magic Diesel
Daniel Fisher 02.26.07
When the cry goes up, "Renewable Energy!" an army of penny-stock operators swings into action.
An aerial photo on the web site of U.S. Sustainable Energy Corp. shows a plant in Natchez, Miss. where the company says it will soon begin producing 1.5 million gallons a day of biodiesel-like fuel from soybeans. To put that in perspective, that's double the current biodiesel output in the entire country.
John Rivera, U.S. Sustainable's chairman, admits he gets some skeptical looks when he describes his "secret" process for turning soybeans into liquid gold at a rate (five gallons per bushel) that experts say defies the laws of chemistry and physics. "Everybody comes out here and says, 'Hey, you're full of it,' and then they see me do it," says Rivera, who in the 1990s promoted a similar process for turning used tires into fuel oil. "That's when I turn to them and say, 'Welcome to the Liars Club. Because now nobody's gonna believe you, either.'"
Somebody's buying Rivera's story. His company, which has not yet reported any revenue (it intends to start filing financials with the Securities & Exchange Commission "soon"), carries a market value of $227 million. Hey, that's nothing. A December news release from U.S. Sustainable says that the company could have "an immediate market value" of $12 billion.
Things only get more confusing if you follow the trail to EarthFirst, a Tampa outfit that told the SEC it loaned $3.3 million to U.S. Sustainable Energy last year. EarthFirst Chairman John Stanton put out a news release in April trumpeting U.S. Sustainable's revolutionary biofuel process. In the days before the release EarthFirst's trading volume spiked to 5 million shares from several hundred thousand and the stock price bounced to 17 cents, briefly arresting a long slide to a nickel a share.
No, no, says Stanton. That's a different U.S. Sustainable Energy. Rivera wanted to use the same name for his company, explains Stanton, who admits doing business with Rivera in the past.
Details, details. The big picture: Everyone is in love with renewable energy--George Bush, any congressman you could name, the eminent venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, Goldman Sachs (nyse: GS - news - people ). At the upper end of the investment spectrum the field has attracted $53 billion in private capital over the last three years for windmills, solar panels and low-carbon energy sources. At the lower end there are the penny stocks.
Watch your wallet. Des Moines lawyer Steven Wandro is trying to recover $3.8 million stolen a few years ago from a group of grain farmers who thought they were investing in an ethanol plant. The money passed instead to a film studio and a Florida scamster named Jerry Drizin, allegedly at the behest of a Nigerian in Germany, as detailed in a federal judge's ruling in the case. "People are just running to this thing in a way that I think is scary," sighs Wandro, who recalls how legitimate ethanol projects in Iowa collapsed after oil prices fell in the mid-1980s. "It's a prescription for dashed expectations."
Capitalizing on the popular mania for sustainable energy, the penny-stock operators are converting failed Canadian mining outfits and Internet firms into green machines with names like Western Wind Energy and Hydrogen Power International. Western Wind, run by Vancouver mining-stock executive Jeffrey Ciachurski, paid Khandaker Partners, a New York research firm, $22,000 for a November report touting a "price target" of $11.59 a share. Ambitious, given that the price is now hovering around a buck. Western Wind is trading lawsuits with former employees who accuse the wife of the chief executive of posting unflattering comments on a stock bulletin board, including one suggesting that one of those employees was "caught shagging some Red Head" near the proposed wind-farm site. (Ciachurski denies his wife ever made such comments.) Hydrogen Power of Englewood, Colo. says it has a revolutionary method for making hydrogen fuel out of aluminum. One problem: The fuel source weighs more than the high-pressure hydrogen tank it is supposed to replace. That problem is being worked on.
Cornell Capital of Jersey City, N.J. has pumped at least $100 million into green-themed companies in the past couple of years. "Solar, wind, clean technology plays--we love the space," says Troy Rillo, a Cornell managing director. "We think the trends are great."
Great for Cornell, which gets shares at a discount that it can then sell in the open market. Great for investors paying full price?
Check out some Cornell clients. NewGen Technologies, which says it plans to build several hundred million dollars' worth of ethanol refineries, was formed out of a shell company. XsunX, formerly known as Sun River Mining, is now a solar-cell company with no revenue and no orders. Market cap: $86 million. Earth Biofuels, whose mascot is country music star Willie Nelson, raised $52.5 million from Cornell and other convertible-debt buyers but sank more than half the dough into a Louisiana ethanol refinery project that has stalled amid charges of excess costs and failed financial commitments. Power Technology (otcbb: PWTC.OB - news - people ) is on the verge of producing what it claims is a revolutionary lightweight lead-acid battery but has yet to find any potential customers. Still, it's aiming to raise capital in a public share offering; proceeds will repay a $1.4 million loan from Cornell.
Don't like the Cornell portfolio? Maybe there's something in the cozy family of GreenShift Corp., a holding company for six publicly traded entities--combined shares outstanding: 3 billion--with names like gs CleanTech and GS AgriFuels. GreenShift is working on technology to feed carbon dioxide to algae and then harvest the algae as if they were corn stalks. If you find this impractical you are presumably not among the investors whose enthusiasm has given GreenShift a market cap of $114 million.
In 2005 a predecessor of a GreenShift unit, called Incode, was flogging KissyKat, an online dating service for pet lovers. That operation didn't work out. Reincarnated as resource firm, GreenShift lost $9 million on sales of $17 million over the first nine months of 2006. Most of that revenue came from a waste-disposal business and a machine shop in Ohio. But GreenShift's chairman and controlling shareholder, Kevin Kreisler, has dreams, and the algae venture is just one of them. Another is to convert the waste material from corn ethanol plants into oil that can be used to make biodiesel. GreenShift says it has sold several of the $1.6 million units so far, but there's a reason it has the business largely to itself: Michael Ladisch, a Purdue University engineering professor, says that few ethanol plants produce enough waste oil to justify trucking it to a biodiesel plant.
No problem, says Thomas Scozzafava, president of GreenShift's gs AgriFuels unit and a former Lehman Brothers (nyse: LEH - news - people ) merchant banker. All you do is cluster the corn-oil units around biodiesel plants that use another money-saving GreenShift innovation: a "continuous base catalyst reaction" system that relies on a "proprietary process intensification and advanced separation technologies"--whatever those are. There are plans to use them in a new Mean Green Biofuels plant, in Memphis. Mean Green is meantime applying for emissions permits.
EarthFirst, John Stanton's firm, claims to be at "the forefront of alternative energy sources," according to its Web site, but still gets most of its revenue from moneylosing waste-disposal and biodiesel-import businesses, and recently filed to allow Laurus Capital to sell 76 million shares, whose proceeds would be used to retire convertible debt held by Laurus. A self-described turnaround expert, Chairman Stanton doesn't disclose in EarthFirst's sec filings anything about the $157 million collapse of Keller Financial, a used-car finance firm in Florida he briefly ran. A plaintiff attorney reportedly claimed that Keller preyed on unsophisticated, elderly investors. Stanton later paid $181,000 to settle a bankruptcy trustee's claim.
Stanton owns stakes in U.S. Energy Initiatives, which lost $4.5 million on sales of $426,000 in the first half of 2006 trying to sell kits to reconfigure diesel engines so they run on natural gas; and U.S. Sustainable Energy, which claims a catalytic vacuum distillation process that sounds remarkably similar to the one John Rivera is cranking up over in Natchez. Both involve heating organic materials in a vacuum until they break down into carbon and vapors that can be condensed into a low-grade fuel oil. "Why you'd put soybeans in there, I don't know," says Thomas Adams, a biofuels expert at the University of Georgia. "Sewage works just as well."
Adams questions how Rivera can produce biodiesel without methanol--or transform 60 pounds of soybeans into 37 pounds of biodiesel, versus the 27 pounds generally considered the limit. Rivera says his process is a secret and now claims he means "biofuel." He's not the only one pushing the limits of science: In its sec filings EarthFirst claims it can create more than 20 pounds of carbon, fuel oil, combustible gas and scrap steel from a 20-pound tire.
While scrambling for green-energy investments they can trumpet in news releases, penny-stock operators invariably collide. That's what happened in Plaquemines Parish, south of New Orleans, where Earth Biofuels of Dallas last year announced plans to restart an alcohol refinery, closed since the first ethanol boom went bust in the early 1990s. Months later South-ridge Enterprises, a onetime mining operation now in the ethanol business, said it was buying $6 million worth of equipment from the same plant to build its own 60-million-gallon-a-year ethanol refinery. Its shares jumped 20 cents to $1.84 on the news.
Earth cried foul, saying it owned the equipment. Southridge has sued Earth's partner in the deal, blaming it for the loss of $60 million in market value. A lawyer for the Louisiana partners says he expects the case to be dismissed, but the point seems moot: Earth has since imperiled its own $27 million investment by failing to come up with $80 million to finish the refurbishment by a Dec. 4 deadline. Earth says the project is "still viable."
So, apparently, is AFV Solutions of Irvine, which plans to import hybrid natural-gas/electric buses from China. Up until early 2005 AFV was known as Dogs International and planned a chain of "bed and biscuit" upscale kennels. (It still owned one in Flagler Beach, Fla. as of its most recent sec filing in November.) Dogs International turned green after Jeffrey Groscost, former speaker of the Arizona House of Representatives, took over as chief executive. Groscost was famous in Arizona for pushing through a subsidy program for alternative-fuel vehicles in 1999 that cost the state more than $200 million before it was shut down; buyers could get up to half the cost of a $50,000 suv back from the state.
AFV shares surged from $1.60 in 2005 to $11.30 in May 2006. That's when it announced $4.8 million in financing and plans to import Chinese buses. AFV has yet to sell a bus, and its share price has since deflated to $4.50. Groscost died suddenly in November.
Some schemes are outright fraud. LeeRoy Allen was ordered to pay $270,000 and barred from involvement with public companies last October after the sec accused him of converting a penny stock called J-Bird Music Group (former home of faded stars like Billy Squier and The Guess Who) into a purported biodiesel company with "no assets, funding or viable product." Allen consented to the charges without admitting or denying guilt.
In New Jersey the state attorney general last fall filed civil fraud charges against Brian Smith and his wife for promoting Digital Gas (other-otc: DIGG.PK - news - people ). The company lacked even a bank account yet had shares trading on the pink sheets that briefly soared to 90 cents a share last spring, giving it a theoretical value of $22 million. As he pumped the stock with press releases like the one claiming Digital Gas had a "high temperature fuel cell" that would unlock as much as 1.1 billion gallons of oil from a neglected oil shale deposit, New Jersey officials say, Smith was using stock to renovate his home and pay his attorney.
Smith insists, in an e-mail, that he's innocent and his company "is actively seeking to commercialize its energy savings, alternative energy and farming opportunities." For assets, his Web site offers a grainy image of the deed to a 178-acre granite quarry in Nova Scotia, Canada. Despite Digital's legal problems, "We're still in the pipeline," says Theo van Bakkum of iccu Holding bv, a Smith partner who is working on a new method for storing electricity.
"We are here to help farmers, lessen the heavy yoke of imported fuel, help to create food and jobs for Americans and offer the greatest solution to the world's need for energy since humans harnessed the power of fire itself," says Taylor Moffit, chief executive of Originally New York, an o-t-c bulletin board and would-be ethanol producer with a grand total $331 in revenue since it launched in 2001. Dream on--you'll get a lot of investors to dream with you.
hey doc, you have to buy all your stock on the open market like us peons???.....or are you "special", like Global, et al????
MLM, Ride and Momentum are, and have been associated with this company stock one way or the other!
PS:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=78958386
you never know, because when most everyone loves a stock, it can signal a top.....
that said, there are probably better shorts than AAPL.....for now, at least, IMO.....
YMMV, of course, carry on!!!
just posting some data supporting the huge rise since the IPO.....
yours???
nice one....thanks for the tunes, SB.....
What was the offering price at Apple's initial public offering (IPO)?
Apple went public on December 12, 1980 at $22.00 per share. The stock has split three times since the IPO so on a split-adjusted basis the IPO share price was $2.75.
http://investor.apple.com/faq.cfm
wow!!!!!
footnote #6 in this link specifically mentions "confusions" such as that:
http://www.law.yale.edu/documents/pdf/cbl/Wilcox_streetname.pdf
#18, I don't think that counts as a coherent voting "group", since it's a mix of shareholders in street name(???)....disclaimer: this is possibly an ignorant WAG reply!!!
PS: didn't read all this, but looks like lots of good info
http://www.law.yale.edu/documents/pdf/cbl/Wilcox_streetname.pdf
edit: section 12.2, "legal vs beneficial ownership" seems to explain it
edit #2: also see footnote 6
I would rather have a crab juice!!!!
http://baconbag.com/crab-juice-or-mountain-dew
lol, they need to drink some KOMA UNWIND, and chill out!!!!
I think that commercial also proves the existence of sasquatch....
I think they should just drop the plastic in by cargo parachute drops.....
then, the parachutes could also be used to "feed the beast", along with all those old tapes, ragger tail, etc....and the plane owners could get discounted fuel in an LOI, win/win.....
PS: maybe P20 Marine could even convert an old aircraft carrier, no runway needed.....the possibilities are endless!!!!!
I think this one (EPIL-STOP) got some attention as well:
on Ihub, a TOU violation often depends on how a post is worded....."cold hard facts" or not.....
PS: I'm just the messenger on that....
speaking of the FTC:
(wow, can't even trust Reader's Digest anymore!!!)
http://adage.com/article/media/rda-settles-ftc-complaint-ab-circle-pro/236847/
Reader's Digest Sheds Up to $23.8 Million to Settle With FTC on Ab Circle Pro
blast from the past:
blast from the past:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/replies.aspx?msg=29625642
BEHL, once part of the John H Rivera (old pal of fugitive John D Stanton) alt-energy scam machine:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=57548160
it all sounds so familiar, doesn't it????
So here is when the story gets ugly. Really ugly. The stocks start going down. How is it possible for the stocks to go down when the “family” owns more than the tradeable float and no one is selling?!?! Simple explanation given at the time: market makers are manipulative naked short selling crooks, and the “bear raids” were designed to separate you from your shares! Hold fast family! The good Dr. would never lead his flock astray!
http://payingtheoffer.wordpress.com/2012/08/23/its-all-about-the-family/