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The present SEC under the new administration and the newly appointed Solicitor General notified the United States Supreme Court yesterday, May 6, 2009, that they surrender and waive their right to reply to the Petition For Review filed in the Universal Express case by its officers and now pending before the Supreme Court for review.
This constitutes clear admissions by the present SEC and new Solicitor General of the validity of the claims set forth in the Petition for Review on the naked shorting scandal, the SEC's prior cover up of that scandal for over 10 years until it admitted at the end of 2008 that naked shorting was a huge problem, the large part played by counterfeit shares in the present financial meltdown, and the Company's and its officers' rights and immunities under the United States Bankruptcy Statutes, the broad powers of the Bankruptcy Court and its confirmed Reorganization Plan and the overwhelming weight of the many Supreme Court cases supporting the Company and its officers cited in the Petition.
Mr. Carl Person, as counsel for the Petition For Review, is to be commended
No. 08-1272
Title:
Richard A. Altomare, et al., Petitioners
v.
Securities and Exchange Commission
Docketed:
April 15, 2009
Lower Ct:
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
Case Nos.:
(07-2407)
Decision Date:
November 13, 2008
~~~Date~~~
~~~~~~~Proceedings and Orders~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jan 29 2009
Application (08A696) to extend the time to file a petition for a writ of certiorari from February 11, 2009 to April 12, 2009, submitted to Justice Ginsburg.
Feb 12 2009
Petition for a writ of certiorari filed. (Response due May 15, 2009)
Feb 17 2009
Application (08A696) granted by Justice Ginsburg extending the time to file until April 13, 2009.
May 6 2009
Waiver of right of respondent Securities and Exchange Commission to respond filed.
May 12 2009
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of May 28, 2009.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
~~Name~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~Address~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~Phone~~~
Attorneys for Petitioners:
Carl E. Person
325 W. 45th Street - SUite 201
(212) 307-4444
New York, NY 10036-3803
Party name: Richard A. Altomare, et al.
Attorneys for Respondent:
Elena Kagan
Solicitor General
(202) 514-2217
United States Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20530-0001
Party name: Securities and Exchange Commission
Supreme Court of the United States - SEC and Solicitor General Surrender Right to Respond To Petition For Review
The present SEC under the new administration and the newly appointed Solicitor General notified the United States Supreme Court yesterday, May 6, 2009, that they surrender and waive their right to reply to the Petition For Review filed in the Universal Express case by its officers and now pending before the Supreme Court for review.
This constitutes clear admissions by the present SEC and new Solicitor General of the validity of the claims set forth in the Petition for Review on the naked shorting scandal, the SEC's prior cover up of that scandal for over 10 years until it admitted at the end of 2008 that naked shorting was a huge problem, the large part played by counterfeit shares in the present financial meltdown, and the Company's and its officers' rights and immunities under the United States Bankruptcy Statutes, the broad powers of the Bankruptcy Court and its confirmed Reorganization Plan and the overwhelming weight of the many Supreme Court cases supporting the Company and its officers cited in the Petition.
Mr. Carl Person, as counsel for the Petition For Review, is to be commended.
The fortune 500 company is RIMM
http://ca.finance.yahoo.com/q?s=rimm
Also on 05/28/2008 when they first announved "reverse split "
It was a reaction to the volume which hit 550 million shares before 2:00 .
Management had a plan to buy up and retire a boat load of shares at these depressed prices 0.0001 . When they saw the volume explode they issued the reverse split news to deter buyers . Im guessing over 4 billion shares were bought by management between 05/28/08 and 08/28/08
exactly 3 months .
They waited til after 2,147,484M shares were bought ..then disclosed "no reverse split" , thats 2 BILLION shares ..management bought and will retire these shares .
2008/08/29 0.00010 0.00020 0.00010 0.00010 275,847,097 0.00010
2008/08/28 0.00010 0.00080 0.00010 0.00010 2,147,484M 0.00010
check out the date
The naked shorting scandal makes Madof look like a saint ..xrayvision should know
This one is too good .
Turns out Stephen Greenspan who wrote the book " annals of gullibility " ( a book on how to avoid scams) just got fleeced by Madoff .,,yeah im buying his book ...sure ...
Fooled by Ponzi (and Madoff)
How Bernard Madoff Made Off with My Money
http://www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/08-12-23.html
MT is in no position to cash anyone out ...PNMS is not liquid , one of the bonus's of being listed in the U.S markets as opposed to foreign is the liquidity.
this stock is naked shorted to the max ..Santini will never get out of it ..cellar boxed and nowhere to go
http://www.deepcapture.com/hedge-funds-to-us-soldier-i-need-a-maybach-so-you-can-die-too/
The SEC was "RIGHT" to CLAMP DOWN" on NAKED SHORT SELLING
The Wall Street Journal stated in a lead editorial that the SEC was "reasonable" to "clamp down" on naked short selling. Well, that was progress of sorts, though one wonders how it could have taken all these years for the nation's most important newspaper to suggest that it might be "reasonable" to put an end to criminal activity that has eviscerated hundreds of companies and destroyed countless lives.
And now that this criminal activity has been implicated in the Humpty Dumptying of our financial system, one grows wistful for the golden age of journalism when editorialists (people working for famous newspapers, not just cyber weirdos) would express a little outrage, demand that heads roll – muster something better than "reasonable" to describe the limpid "clamp down" of an SEC that bows in oily servitude to the very short-sellers who manhandled our markets.
Alas, The Wall Street Journal is not angry about the scandal of naked short selling. To the contrary, it devotes most of its editorial to tut-tutting the SEC for taking the mild step of requiring hedge funds to disclose their short positions. This, the Journal laments, means the government wants to "slap a scarlet letter on short sellers." And (shed a tear) hedge funds will now have to "worry that their crooked schemes & strategies will be put on display for the world to see."
Might the world like to see which hedge funds are employing the strategy of illegal naked short selling – offloading huge chunks of phantom/fake stocks that they do not possess – phantom stock – in order to drive down prices? No, nothing to see there, says the Journal. Having thoroughly investigated the matter, the editorialist reports that there is "no evidence of widespread naked shorting of financial stocks in this panic." Indeed, the Journal assures us that there is no evidence that short sellers have engaged in any market manipulation whatsoever.
That is a mighty bold claim. As the Wall Street Journal itself reported, the SEC has ordered two dozen hedge funds to turn over trading records as part of its investigation into possible short-seller manipulation of six big financial institutions — American International Group, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley, Washington Mutual, and Merrill Lynch.
The SEC has never in history prosecuted a major case against a short seller, and there is no reason to believe that it is actually going to nail someone now. But it is not difficult to see why the SEC feels that is has no choice but to investigate.
It must investigate, or at least appear to investigate, because the data scream, "Investigate!"
Take the case of Washington Mutual, which met its demise on the same day that the Journal published its editorial. While the SEC has not yet released data covering the last couple weeks of turmoil, the data through June show that at one point that month "failures to deliver" of Washington Mutual's stock reached an astounding 9 million shares. From June 5 to June 19 there were, on any given day, at least 1 million WaMu shares that had "failed to deliver."
In other words, HEDGE FUNDS and BROKERS sold as many as 9 million shares that they did not possess (which is why they "failed to deliver" them[what were the suckers getting when they put up cash to buy this trash), and they kept the market saturated with at least 1 million phantom shares for more than two weeks. WaMu's stock price dropped by more than 30% during this period. Similar attacks, with similar effects, occurred one after another in the months leading up to June.
That is very good evidence of illegal market manipulation and fraud!!!!!
Aside from Washington Mutual, Bank of America, Fannie Mae, MBIA, Ambac, and close to 50 smaller financial firms – not to mention a couple hundred non-financial companies – have appeared on the SEC-mandated "threshold" list of companies whose stock has "failed to deliver" in excessive quantities.
That, too, is very good evidence of illegal market manipulation.
What media manipulation can that explain the Journal's claim that there is "no evidence" that naked short selling contributed to our financial crisis. Or it the Journal does not understand the methods that naked short sellers use to manipulate the markets. The Journal also does not understand how powerful financial elites manipulate the government (and the media).
Peter Chepucavage, the former SEC official who authored Regulation SHO (the rules that governed short sales from 2005 until the SEC temporarily banned short-selling of financial stock last week) has told us that the rules were watered down under fierce pressure from the hedge fund lobby.
One result is that Regulation SHO did not force short sellers to borrow real shares before they sold them. They were given three days to produce stock before it was declared a "failure to deliver." If they missed the three-day deadline, they were given another ten days, after which they were supposed to buy (not borrow) real shares and deliver them, or face penalties.
In practice, HEDGE FUNDS and BROKERS ignored the deadlines without repercussions.
A FREE RIDE FOR 13 DAYS ON NO SHARES. But even traders who met the deadlines were able to churn the markets. Since they were not required to possess real shares before they hit the sell button, they could offload a large block of phantom FAKE stocks and let them push the down price and dilute supply with counterfeit stock for three to 13 days. When the deadline arrived, they might borrow real shares and deliver them, and then sell another block of phantom stock, which would hammer prices down again for another three to thirteen days.
Or, rather than borrow real shares, the hedge fund might buy stock (the price having been knocked down during 13 days of diluted supply) from a FRIENDLY BROKER. WHEN THEIR FRENDLY BROKERS [CO CONSPIRITORS] did not have any stock to sell the hedge fund, but they pushed the sale button anyway. The hedge funds then used the broker's phantom stock to settle its initial sale of phantom stock, and when the broker's deadline came, he bought an equal quantity of phantom stock from another broker, and so on.
A lot of bought friendly journalists have portrayed this naked short selling as "legal." In fact, it is grossly illegal assuming the goal is to manipulate markets. But the SEC until recently shied away from making that assumption. So long as the hedge funds met the delivery deadlines, they could distort and destroy at will.
Another result of the short-seller lobby's intervention is that a company does not appear on the SEC's "threshold" list unless there are failures to deliver of more than 10,000 of the company's shares (and at least 0.5% of its total shares outstanding) for five consecutive days. So long as there are no failures on day six, there are no flashing red lights at the SEC. That is, threshold (excessive) levels of phantom shares can float around the system for a total of eight days (three days before they are registered as "failures to deliver," plus five more) without a company and their inocent honest shareholders being designated a VICTIM OF NAKED SHORT SELLING
An eight-day NAKED SHORT ATTACK (or even just a one day blast) of, say, a couple-hundred thousand phantom shares can knock down a stock's price very nicely. NAKED SHORT ATTACKS s of a MILLION-PLUS shares, which ARE COMMON, can do MUCH more damage.
If a company has weaknesses that can be blown out of proportion with help from CERTAIN FRIENDLY MEDIA, and if hedge funds blast the company with phantom stock, then pause, then blast again, then pause, then blast again — over and over — for a couple of months, each time driving the share price down [stealing cash from the honest innocent investor shareholder] then the company's share price can soon be in the single digits. – without ever having appeared on the SEC's threshold list.
Unsurprisingly, the data through June shows this NAKED SHORTING BLAST-pause-blast pattern in the stocks of nearly every major financial institution that has been wiped off the map, and quite a few that were in death spirals before the SEC temporarily banned short-selling. Very often, huge failures to deliver have occurred in stretches of precisely five days – just long enough to keep a stock off the threshold list.
The attack on Bear Stearns, for example, began on January 9, when hedge funds naked shorted more than 1.1 million shares. The shares "failed to deliver" at the end of Friday, January 11 (the three-day deadline). For the next four days, beginning Monday, January 14, there were massive failures to deliver, peaking at 1 million shares on January 17. That is, the attack lasted a total of eight days, with failures to deliver lasting precisely five days. On day six, there were few failures to deliver, so Bear did not appear on the threshold list.
Over the next few weeks, there were several more NAKED SHORT ATTACKS blasts – with failures to deliver ranging from 200,000 to 500,000 shares. Those were threshold levels, but the failures lasted less than five consecutive days, so no flashing red light at the SEC.
On February 28, 800,000 shares of Bear Stearns failed to deliver. For the next five business days, anywhere from 100,000 to 350,000 shares failed to deliver. On day six, there was a pause — few failures to deliver. So no threshold list – no flashing red light at the SEC.
A week later, just before CNBC's David Faber reported the false information (given to him by a hedge fund "friend" whom he had "known for twenty years") that Goldman Sachs had cut off Bear's credit, somebody NAKED SHORTED more than a MILLION shares of Bear's stock.. Over the course of the next couple of weeks, there was a sustained effort to drive the stock to zero, with massive failures to deliver every day — peaking at 13 MILLION SHARES. [REMEMBER NAKED SHORTERS RECIEVED REAL CASH FOR THEIR COUNTERFIET SHARES FROM SOME POOR INNOCENT NEW INVESTOR AND AT THE SAME TIME THEY THEY WERE KILLING THE PRESENT SHARE HOLDERS
This attack lasted long enough to put Bear Stearns on the threshold list, but by then, it was too late. The bank's mangled remains had been swallowed by JP Morgan. Ultimately, at least 11 MILLION SHARES of Bear Stearns were sold and EVER DELIVERED never delivered.
THE NEXT QUESTION IS WHERE DID ALL THE SHARES GO?? IS ALL OUR COMPUTER TRADING SYSTEM DISHONEST & ALL SCREWED UP GARBAGE GARBAGE OUT????
Meanwhile, the naked short sellers began their attack on Lehman Brothers. On March 18, Lehman's stock had begun to increase sharply, so somebody unleashed more than 1.5 MILLION PHANTOM shares. Those failed to deliver on March 20. For the next three days, there were failures to deliver of between 400.000 and 800.000 shares — far exceeding the daily "threshold." That helped the share price to fall sharply, but on day five, there were no failures, so Lehman didn't appear on the threshold list of companies victimized by naked short selling.
On April 1, another round of naked short selling commenced, coinciding with a wave of false rumors about Lehman's liquidity. That continued until April 3, when SEC Chairman Christopher Cox, for the first time, told a Senate committee hearing that naked short selling was a big problem. Using the words "phantom stock," he said many companies had been affected and vowed to crack down.
For a few weeks after that, there was not much new naked short selling.
Then, on May 21, short-seller David Einhorn gave his famous speech accusing Lehman's executives of cooking their books. Though Lehman, like most banks, was guilty of participating in the dodgy business of securitized debt, it was not cooking its books. It had, however, failed to mark some of its assets down to levels prescribed by Einhorn, who waved the CMBX index as the proper barometer of commercial mortgages.
The CMBX comes from a company called Markit Group, which is owned by four HEDGE FUNDS funds, the names of which the Markit Group will not disclose. I don't know if the managers of those hedge funds are friends of David Einhorn, but the Wall Street Journal's Lingling Wei published a story in February noting that the CMBX "doesn't make sense." It grossly undervalues commercial property, implying default rates, for example, that are four-times higher than they are in reality.
Nonetheless, the "FRIENDLY MEDIA YAHOOS" including the Wall Street Journal, trumpeted Einhorn's analysis, which was distorted in many other ways – .
For now, it is enough to know that coinciding with Einhorn's speech, somebody naked shorted more than 200,000 shares (the settlement date for that sale was May 27, three business days after the speech, owing to a holiday weekend). Thus began a five day stretch of failures to deliver (ranging from 120,000 to 450,000 shares). On day six, as usual, there were few failures to deliver, so Lehman did not appear on the threshold list.
After a pause of a few days, somebody circulated the falsehood that Lehman had gone to the Fed for a handout. Coinciding with that rumor, hedge funds naked shorted close to 1.5 million shares. Those shares failed to deliver three days later, on June 9. The next day, there were 650,000 failures. The day after that, 263,000 failures. On day four, there were 510,000 failures. On day five, there were 623,000 failures. Time for Lehman to appear on the threshold list. But, on day six, of course, the failures to deliver stopped. No list – no flashing red light at the SEC.
Throughout this time, Einhorn continued to appear on CNBC and in the major newspapers, doing his best to make Lehman's problems (which were real, but probably, at this stage, manageable) appear to be both catastrophic and criminal. From May 21, the day of Einhorn's speech, to June 15, the stock lost almost half its value.
For reasons that I cannot fathom, Lehman then opted for a strategy of appeasement. Rather than challenge Einhorn's assumptions, Lehman aimed to silence him and his media yahoos by doing what they asked. It "reduced its exposure" to mortgages, primarily by marking them down to levels dictated by Einhorn's bogus index – the CMBX. This is the main reason why it booked a 2.8 billion loss in the second quarter.
When Lehman announced its quarterly results, on June 16, there was another blast of naked short selling, with failures to deliver at threshold levels from June 19 to June 24. Exactly five days. Then the failures stopped. No threshold list. No flashing red light.
I look forward to the day (in a few months) when the SEC will release data covering July to September. But I can tell you right now what happened next.
On June 30, somebody floated the false rumor that Barclays was going to buy Lehman at 15 dollars a share (it was then trading at 20). Simultaneously, hedge funds no doubt naked shorted large blocks of shares. It's a safe bet that the data will show failures to deliver lasting precisely five days.
On July 10, somebody (SAC Capital?) circulated the false rumor that SAC Capital was pulling its money out of Lehman. Hours later, there was another false rumor — that PIMCO was pulling out its money. Quite certainly, these rumors were accompanied by naked short selling, with failures to deliver beginning three days later, and probably continuing at threshold levels for precisely five days. Lehman's stock lost almost 50% of its value in the four weeks leading to July 15..
At this point, the SEC FINALLY WAS FORCED to realize what was happening to Lehman. It realized that similar madness had destroyed Bear Stearns. It realized that AIG, Citigroup, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bank of America and fifty other financial companies were getting clobbered in exactly the same fashion.
Clearly, CRIMINAL NAKED SHORT SELLING WAS A CURRENT & PRESENT real DANGER to the stability of the financial system. So the SEC issued an emergency order forcing hedge funds to borrow real stock before they sold it. No more saying "Yeah, my cousin Louie has the stock in a drawer somewhere." No more naked short selling.
This order protected only 19 big financial institutions – which is as far as the SEC thought it could go and still retain friendly relations with its short-selling paramours – but it was something. During the three weeks that the emergency order was enforced, Lehman's stock price increased by around 50 percent. The other companies that had been under attack enjoyed similar rebounds.
The short-sellers, of course, fumed. Some of those fumes wafted to The SHORT SELLER FRIENDLY Wall Street Journal and other prestigious publications, which lambasted the SEC for issuing the emergency order. They published all manner of mumbo-jumbo about the emergency order wrecking "market efficiency" – though the only evidence of this was an utterly dubious report circulated by the short seller lobby (see here for the details), and it was hard to comprehend what could possibly have been "efficient" about a market getting smothered with false information and fake supply.
Of course, the SEC, captured by the short-sellers, and ever mindful of the media, decided to let its emergency order expire, and announced no new initiatives to stop naked short selling..
The day after the emergency order expired, Lehman's stock nosedived. So did a lot of other stocks that had enjoyed a temporary reprieve.
Mark my words, the data for August and September will show that soon after the order was lifted, rampant naked short selling began anew.
It will show a sustained attack on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, with failures to deliver exceeding one million shares, until the day the two companies were nationalized. It will show Lehman getting hammered (blast-pause-blast) until its stock was so low that there was no way it could raise capital. And it will show that in Lehman's final days, hedge funds sold unprecedented amounts of phantom stock, knowing that the stock would never, ever have to be delivered.
Two days after Lehman was vaporized, AIG watched its stock fall to as low as one dollar. The data through June shows that AIG was repeatedly blasted with phantom stock, often in stretches of eight days (three + five), with peak failures to deliver reaching 2 million shares. It's a safe bet that the data will show that these attacks continued, and grew in magnitude, until a price of one buck per share resulted in paralysis, and AIG had to be nationalized. But the company never appeared on the SEC's threshold list.
After AIG, the rumor was that Citigroup would go down next. The data through June shows that Citigroup was bombarded – blast, pause, blast – with massive amounts of phantom stock. Failures to deliver peaked at 8 million shares. No doubt, the blasts continued and grew in magnitude in the days leading up to September 16, when Citigroup's stock went into a death spiral.
On September 17, the SEC rushed out new rules governing naked short selling. The new rules seemed a lot like the old rules. Hedge funds would not have to actually possess stock before selling it. Instead, they would merely have to "locate" the stock. The SEC would have no way of knowing whether hedge funds had "located" stock, but if they lied and told their broker, "Yeah, I located the stock, I got it somewhere, push the sell button," then that would be "fraud." Presumably, the BROKERS, who depend on the hedge funds for most of their income, and are COMPLICIT in their NAKED SHORT SELLING, would line up to inform the SEC that their clients were telling them lies.
Meanwhile, the hedge funds would still have three days to deliver stock, with no strong penalties for failing to do so, and no mechanism for determining whether a hedge fund had delivered real stock, as opposed to new phantom stock that it had received from a friendly broker. As for the "threshold" of five consecutive days before a company could get on the list that sets off the flashing red lights that the SEC ignores – that would remain the same.
When these rules were announced, the short-seller lobby cheered loudly. The media transcribed the lobby's cheerful press releases, and then the naked short sellers eliminated Merrill Lynch. After that, they turned on Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, at which point both stocks went into death spirals and the companies' CEOs treated us to the spectacle of calling the SEC to complain that Morgan and Goldman (ie., the companies that housed the brokerages that invented and profited the most from naked short selling) were now getting mauled by their own monstrous creations.
http://www.deepcapture.com/
The SEC was "RIGHT" to CLAMP DOWN" on NAKED SHORT SELLING
The Wall Street Journal stated in a lead editorial that the SEC was "reasonable" to "clamp down" on naked short selling. Well, that was progress of sorts, though one wonders how it could have taken all these years for the nation's most important newspaper to suggest that it might be "reasonable" to put an end to criminal activity that has eviscerated hundreds of companies and destroyed countless lives.
And now that this criminal activity has been implicated in the Humpty Dumptying of our financial system, one grows wistful for the golden age of journalism when editorialists (people working for famous newspapers, not just cyber weirdos) would express a little outrage, demand that heads roll – muster something better than "reasonable" to describe the limpid "clamp down" of an SEC that bows in oily servitude to the very short-sellers who manhandled our markets.
Alas, The Wall Street Journal is not angry about the scandal of naked short selling. To the contrary, it devotes most of its editorial to tut-tutting the SEC for taking the mild step of requiring hedge funds to disclose their short positions. This, the Journal laments, means the government wants to "slap a scarlet letter on short sellers." And (shed a tear) hedge funds will now have to "worry that their crooked schemes & strategies will be put on display for the world to see."
Might the world like to see which hedge funds are employing the strategy of illegal naked short selling – offloading huge chunks of phantom/fake stocks that they do not possess – phantom stock – in order to drive down prices? No, nothing to see there, says the Journal. Having thoroughly investigated the matter, the editorialist reports that there is "no evidence of widespread naked shorting of financial stocks in this panic." Indeed, the Journal assures us that there is no evidence that short sellers have engaged in any market manipulation whatsoever.
That is a mighty bold claim. As the Wall Street Journal itself reported, the SEC has ordered two dozen hedge funds to turn over trading records as part of its investigation into possible short-seller manipulation of six big financial institutions — American International Group, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley, Washington Mutual, and Merrill Lynch.
The SEC has never in history prosecuted a major case against a short seller, and there is no reason to believe that it is actually going to nail someone now. But it is not difficult to see why the SEC feels that is has no choice but to investigate.
It must investigate, or at least appear to investigate, because the data scream, "Investigate!"
Take the case of Washington Mutual, which met its demise on the same day that the Journal published its editorial. While the SEC has not yet released data covering the last couple weeks of turmoil, the data through June show that at one point that month "failures to deliver" of Washington Mutual's stock reached an astounding 9 million shares. From June 5 to June 19 there were, on any given day, at least 1 million WaMu shares that had "failed to deliver."
In other words, HEDGE FUNDS and BROKERS sold as many as 9 million shares that they did not possess (which is why they "failed to deliver" them[what were the suckers getting when they put up cash to buy this trash), and they kept the market saturated with at least 1 million phantom shares for more than two weeks. WaMu's stock price dropped by more than 30% during this period. Similar attacks, with similar effects, occurred one after another in the months leading up to June.
That is very good evidence of illegal market manipulation and fraud!!!!!
Aside from Washington Mutual, Bank of America, Fannie Mae, MBIA, Ambac, and close to 50 smaller financial firms – not to mention a couple hundred non-financial companies – have appeared on the SEC-mandated "threshold" list of companies whose stock has "failed to deliver" in excessive quantities.
That, too, is very good evidence of illegal market manipulation.
What media manipulation can that explain the Journal's claim that there is "no evidence" that naked short selling contributed to our financial crisis. Or it the Journal does not understand the methods that naked short sellers use to manipulate the markets. The Journal also does not understand how powerful financial elites manipulate the government (and the media).
Peter Chepucavage, the former SEC official who authored Regulation SHO (the rules that governed short sales from 2005 until the SEC temporarily banned short-selling of financial stock last week) has told us that the rules were watered down under fierce pressure from the hedge fund lobby.
One result is that Regulation SHO did not force short sellers to borrow real shares before they sold them. They were given three days to produce stock before it was declared a "failure to deliver." If they missed the three-day deadline, they were given another ten days, after which they were supposed to buy (not borrow) real shares and deliver them, or face penalties.
In practice, HEDGE FUNDS and BROKERS ignored the deadlines without repercussions.
A FREE RIDE FOR 13 DAYS ON NO SHARES. But even traders who met the deadlines were able to churn the markets. Since they were not required to possess real shares before they hit the sell button, they could offload a large block of phantom FAKE stocks and let them push the down price and dilute supply with counterfeit stock for three to 13 days. When the deadline arrived, they might borrow real shares and deliver them, and then sell another block of phantom stock, which would hammer prices down again for another three to thirteen days.
Or, rather than borrow real shares, the hedge fund might buy stock (the price having been knocked down during 13 days of diluted supply) from a FRIENDLY BROKER. WHEN THEIR FRENDLY BROKERS [CO CONSPIRITORS] did not have any stock to sell the hedge fund, but they pushed the sale button anyway. The hedge funds then used the broker's phantom stock to settle its initial sale of phantom stock, and when the broker's deadline came, he bought an equal quantity of phantom stock from another broker, and so on.
A lot of bought friendly journalists have portrayed this naked short selling as "legal." In fact, it is grossly illegal assuming the goal is to manipulate markets. But the SEC until recently shied away from making that assumption. So long as the hedge funds met the delivery deadlines, they could distort and destroy at will.
Another result of the short-seller lobby's intervention is that a company does not appear on the SEC's "threshold" list unless there are failures to deliver of more than 10,000 of the company's shares (and at least 0.5% of its total shares outstanding) for five consecutive days. So long as there are no failures on day six, there are no flashing red lights at the SEC. That is, threshold (excessive) levels of phantom shares can float around the system for a total of eight days (three days before they are registered as "failures to deliver," plus five more) without a company and their inocent honest shareholders being designated a VICTIM OF NAKED SHORT SELLING
An eight-day NAKED SHORT ATTACK (or even just a one day blast) of, say, a couple-hundred thousand phantom shares can knock down a stock's price very nicely. NAKED SHORT ATTACKS s of a MILLION-PLUS shares, which ARE COMMON, can do MUCH more damage.
If a company has weaknesses that can be blown out of proportion with help from CERTAIN FRIENDLY MEDIA, and if hedge funds blast the company with phantom stock, then pause, then blast again, then pause, then blast again — over and over — for a couple of months, each time driving the share price down [stealing cash from the honest innocent investor shareholder] then the company's share price can soon be in the single digits. – without ever having appeared on the SEC's threshold list.
Unsurprisingly, the data through June shows this NAKED SHORTING BLAST-pause-blast pattern in the stocks of nearly every major financial institution that has been wiped off the map, and quite a few that were in death spirals before the SEC temporarily banned short-selling. Very often, huge failures to deliver have occurred in stretches of precisely five days – just long enough to keep a stock off the threshold list.
The attack on Bear Stearns, for example, began on January 9, when hedge funds naked shorted more than 1.1 million shares. The shares "failed to deliver" at the end of Friday, January 11 (the three-day deadline). For the next four days, beginning Monday, January 14, there were massive failures to deliver, peaking at 1 million shares on January 17. That is, the attack lasted a total of eight days, with failures to deliver lasting precisely five days. On day six, there were few failures to deliver, so Bear did not appear on the threshold list.
Over the next few weeks, there were several more NAKED SHORT ATTACKS blasts – with failures to deliver ranging from 200,000 to 500,000 shares. Those were threshold levels, but the failures lasted less than five consecutive days, so no flashing red light at the SEC.
On February 28, 800,000 shares of Bear Stearns failed to deliver. For the next five business days, anywhere from 100,000 to 350,000 shares failed to deliver. On day six, there was a pause — few failures to deliver. So no threshold list – no flashing red light at the SEC.
A week later, just before CNBC's David Faber reported the false information (given to him by a hedge fund "friend" whom he had "known for twenty years") that Goldman Sachs had cut off Bear's credit, somebody NAKED SHORTED more than a MILLION shares of Bear's stock.. Over the course of the next couple of weeks, there was a sustained effort to drive the stock to zero, with massive failures to deliver every day — peaking at 13 MILLION SHARES. [REMEMBER NAKED SHORTERS RECIEVED REAL CASH FOR THEIR COUNTERFIET SHARES FROM SOME POOR INNOCENT NEW INVESTOR AND AT THE SAME TIME THEY THEY WERE KILLING THE PRESENT SHARE HOLDERS
This attack lasted long enough to put Bear Stearns on the threshold list, but by then, it was too late. The bank's mangled remains had been swallowed by JP Morgan. Ultimately, at least 11 MILLION SHARES of Bear Stearns were sold and EVER DELIVERED never delivered.
THE NEXT QUESTION IS WHERE DID ALL THE SHARES GO?? IS ALL OUR COMPUTER TRADING SYSTEM DISHONEST & ALL SCREWED UP GARBAGE GARBAGE OUT????
Meanwhile, the naked short sellers began their attack on Lehman Brothers. On March 18, Lehman's stock had begun to increase sharply, so somebody unleashed more than 1.5 MILLION PHANTOM shares. Those failed to deliver on March 20. For the next three days, there were failures to deliver of between 400.000 and 800.000 shares — far exceeding the daily "threshold." That helped the share price to fall sharply, but on day five, there were no failures, so Lehman didn't appear on the threshold list of companies victimized by naked short selling.
On April 1, another round of naked short selling commenced, coinciding with a wave of false rumors about Lehman's liquidity. That continued until April 3, when SEC Chairman Christopher Cox, for the first time, told a Senate committee hearing that naked short selling was a big problem. Using the words "phantom stock," he said many companies had been affected and vowed to crack down.
For a few weeks after that, there was not much new naked short selling.
Then, on May 21, short-seller David Einhorn gave his famous speech accusing Lehman's executives of cooking their books. Though Lehman, like most banks, was guilty of participating in the dodgy business of securitized debt, it was not cooking its books. It had, however, failed to mark some of its assets down to levels prescribed by Einhorn, who waved the CMBX index as the proper barometer of commercial mortgages.
The CMBX comes from a company called Markit Group, which is owned by four HEDGE FUNDS funds, the names of which the Markit Group will not disclose. I don't know if the managers of those hedge funds are friends of David Einhorn, but the Wall Street Journal's Lingling Wei published a story in February noting that the CMBX "doesn't make sense." It grossly undervalues commercial property, implying default rates, for example, that are four-times higher than they are in reality.
Nonetheless, the "FRIENDLY MEDIA YAHOOS" including the Wall Street Journal, trumpeted Einhorn's analysis, which was distorted in many other ways – .
For now, it is enough to know that coinciding with Einhorn's speech, somebody naked shorted more than 200,000 shares (the settlement date for that sale was May 27, three business days after the speech, owing to a holiday weekend). Thus began a five day stretch of failures to deliver (ranging from 120,000 to 450,000 shares). On day six, as usual, there were few failures to deliver, so Lehman did not appear on the threshold list.
After a pause of a few days, somebody circulated the falsehood that Lehman had gone to the Fed for a handout. Coinciding with that rumor, hedge funds naked shorted close to 1.5 million shares. Those shares failed to deliver three days later, on June 9. The next day, there were 650,000 failures. The day after that, 263,000 failures. On day four, there were 510,000 failures. On day five, there were 623,000 failures. Time for Lehman to appear on the threshold list. But, on day six, of course, the failures to deliver stopped. No list – no flashing red light at the SEC.
Throughout this time, Einhorn continued to appear on CNBC and in the major newspapers, doing his best to make Lehman's problems (which were real, but probably, at this stage, manageable) appear to be both catastrophic and criminal. From May 21, the day of Einhorn's speech, to June 15, the stock lost almost half its value.
For reasons that I cannot fathom, Lehman then opted for a strategy of appeasement. Rather than challenge Einhorn's assumptions, Lehman aimed to silence him and his media yahoos by doing what they asked. It "reduced its exposure" to mortgages, primarily by marking them down to levels dictated by Einhorn's bogus index – the CMBX. This is the main reason why it booked a 2.8 billion loss in the second quarter.
When Lehman announced its quarterly results, on June 16, there was another blast of naked short selling, with failures to deliver at threshold levels from June 19 to June 24. Exactly five days. Then the failures stopped. No threshold list. No flashing red light.
I look forward to the day (in a few months) when the SEC will release data covering July to September. But I can tell you right now what happened next.
On June 30, somebody floated the false rumor that Barclays was going to buy Lehman at 15 dollars a share (it was then trading at 20). Simultaneously, hedge funds no doubt naked shorted large blocks of shares. It's a safe bet that the data will show failures to deliver lasting precisely five days.
On July 10, somebody (SAC Capital?) circulated the false rumor that SAC Capital was pulling its money out of Lehman. Hours later, there was another false rumor — that PIMCO was pulling out its money. Quite certainly, these rumors were accompanied by naked short selling, with failures to deliver beginning three days later, and probably continuing at threshold levels for precisely five days. Lehman's stock lost almost 50% of its value in the four weeks leading to July 15..
At this point, the SEC FINALLY WAS FORCED to realize what was happening to Lehman. It realized that similar madness had destroyed Bear Stearns. It realized that AIG, Citigroup, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bank of America and fifty other financial companies were getting clobbered in exactly the same fashion.
Clearly, CRIMINAL NAKED SHORT SELLING WAS A CURRENT & PRESENT real DANGER to the stability of the financial system. So the SEC issued an emergency order forcing hedge funds to borrow real stock before they sold it. No more saying "Yeah, my cousin Louie has the stock in a drawer somewhere." No more naked short selling.
This order protected only 19 big financial institutions – which is as far as the SEC thought it could go and still retain friendly relations with its short-selling paramours – but it was something. During the three weeks that the emergency order was enforced, Lehman's stock price increased by around 50 percent. The other companies that had been under attack enjoyed similar rebounds.
The short-sellers, of course, fumed. Some of those fumes wafted to The SHORT SELLER FRIENDLY Wall Street Journal and other prestigious publications, which lambasted the SEC for issuing the emergency order. They published all manner of mumbo-jumbo about the emergency order wrecking "market efficiency" – though the only evidence of this was an utterly dubious report circulated by the short seller lobby (see here for the details), and it was hard to comprehend what could possibly have been "efficient" about a market getting smothered with false information and fake supply.
Of course, the SEC, captured by the short-sellers, and ever mindful of the media, decided to let its emergency order expire, and announced no new initiatives to stop naked short selling..
The day after the emergency order expired, Lehman's stock nosedived. So did a lot of other stocks that had enjoyed a temporary reprieve.
Mark my words, the data for August and September will show that soon after the order was lifted, rampant naked short selling began anew.
It will show a sustained attack on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, with failures to deliver exceeding one million shares, until the day the two companies were nationalized. It will show Lehman getting hammered (blast-pause-blast) until its stock was so low that there was no way it could raise capital. And it will show that in Lehman's final days, hedge funds sold unprecedented amounts of phantom stock, knowing that the stock would never, ever have to be delivered.
Two days after Lehman was vaporized, AIG watched its stock fall to as low as one dollar. The data through June shows that AIG was repeatedly blasted with phantom stock, often in stretches of eight days (three + five), with peak failures to deliver reaching 2 million shares. It's a safe bet that the data will show that these attacks continued, and grew in magnitude, until a price of one buck per share resulted in paralysis, and AIG had to be nationalized. But the company never appeared on the SEC's threshold list.
After AIG, the rumor was that Citigroup would go down next. The data through June shows that Citigroup was bombarded – blast, pause, blast – with massive amounts of phantom stock. Failures to deliver peaked at 8 million shares. No doubt, the blasts continued and grew in magnitude in the days leading up to September 16, when Citigroup's stock went into a death spiral.
On September 17, the SEC rushed out new rules governing naked short selling. The new rules seemed a lot like the old rules. Hedge funds would not have to actually possess stock before selling it. Instead, they would merely have to "locate" the stock. The SEC would have no way of knowing whether hedge funds had "located" stock, but if they lied and told their broker, "Yeah, I located the stock, I got it somewhere, push the sell button," then that would be "fraud." Presumably, the BROKERS, who depend on the hedge funds for most of their income, and are COMPLICIT in their NAKED SHORT SELLING, would line up to inform the SEC that their clients were telling them lies.
Meanwhile, the hedge funds would still have three days to deliver stock, with no strong penalties for failing to do so, and no mechanism for determining whether a hedge fund had delivered real stock, as opposed to new phantom stock that it had received from a friendly broker. As for the "threshold" of five consecutive days before a company could get on the list that sets off the flashing red lights that the SEC ignores – that would remain the same.
When these rules were announced, the short-seller lobby cheered loudly. The media transcribed the lobby's cheerful press releases, and then the naked short sellers eliminated Merrill Lynch. After that, they turned on Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, at which point both stocks went into death spirals and the companies' CEOs treated us to the spectacle of calling the SEC to complain that Morgan and Goldman (ie., the companies that housed the brokerages that invented and profited the most from naked short selling) were now getting mauled by their own monstrous creations.
http://www.deepcapture.com/
To all:
This is a must read! This is also a must distribute to everyone in your email list with instructions to send this to everyone in their email lists. Please send this to all Congressman, Senators, Federal agencies, state legislators, state agencies, unions, national media outlets, your local media outlets, the AARP, national and local Chambers of Commerce, and anyone else you can think of.
Below is a link to the publicly shared file that can be posted on financial chat boards for download by the reader; every company on every board.
http://www.mediafire.com/?nov34hjnbrr
Let's get this into a the hands of a million citizens, regulators, legislators, and media before the day is out! Let's make sure every Congressman and Senator's inbox receives this at least 100 times!
I'm only a messenger. Dispute the facts if you must! Where are our regulators and who are they protecting?
Godspeed!
Masterflash.. the USXP spike you are referring to had nothing to do with the shorters or naked shorters covering . It was a corner strategy whereby a group of investors decided to buy the total outstanding share count .
the reverse split PR was intentionaly done to stop buyers from lifting the price ..There seems to be an accumulation strategy which is what we are seeing right now .
Levi , the shorters will continue to sell shares , the buyers not aware they are buying phony stock ..simple .
Santini needs to exit U.S markets their rigged
Dear Queen of Darkness, The absolute defense against charges of libel is the Truth
Statement
The latest effort from the SEC to distract us from the real issues at hand – the unauthorized liquidation and improper valuations by a conflicted receiver-agent for the SEC, simply is a cover-up of their naked shorting, fails to deliver and counterfeiting scandal.
All of the CEO’s jewelry purchases for his wife were properly obtained and properly sold, to be utilized to continue the fight for our rights.
All of the CEO’s compensation has been detailed and documented during the 17 years of the Company’s filings.
Now hours, after our filed Appeal, which will expose the SEC for all of their hasty and ill-thought-out improper actions, may reverse everything that has occurred, the SEC simply wants to change the focus of our thoughts and actions.
Mr. Altomare is owed and has personally signed, guaranteed and utilized his own credit cards on behalf of the Company for more than seven times these distracting sums.
Continued character attacks by an agency which acts like the bashers of companies, in league with the counterfeiters they failed to stop, sadly continues.
Surprising enough the exact same writers, who coincidentally have a history of "siding" with the SEC in destroying companies, will write this non-news event and ignore what has really happened to our Company.
Nothing was seized. The SEC simply stole the jewelry, through intimidation and strong-arm tactics, from a perfectly proper sale, which was legal and long completed.
Mr. Altomare’s integrity remains above reproach, and no fraudulent action ever took place.
The only fraud attempted to be created under the guise of governmental action, has been their predictable character assassination of our executives, rather than to deal with who caused the shareholders to be delisted, who caused the shredding of documents and who sold our assets for pennies, if they should have been sold at all.
When the Appeal is upheld, the Court of Claims, not unauthorized seizures will shed light on this SEC mistake.
best, Bud Burrell
Bud Burrell is a corporate finance generalist specializing in development stage companies. He has extensive experience in sales, trading, and marketing of development stage companies on a global scale
sorry , i meant intel.
Intel in 1974 traded for 1/64th of a dollar.
the odds on winning a lottery are 1 in 14 million
the odds on a stock beating the shorters is much better than that ..how many stock trade OTCBB and pink sheets combined 3-5000 ??
not bad 1 in 3000
the odds would be much better if the SEC enforced the 3 day settlement rule
http://www.stopphantomshortselling.org/UpcomingEvents.html
Microsoft traded on OTCBB at 1/64th of a dollar
which is about 1.5 cents ..
the serious investors avoided it .... too bad for them .
who was the smarter investor ??
Non US parties are not required to comply with 13D,or filings as control persons
Someone pointed out that "Granted, it is difficult to find anything on the 13D, but it is very easy to find info on Form 4. Form 4 is required to be filed by anyone (no exclusions mentioned in any info about this form), who owns 10% or more of a company's stock (that includes individuals or organizations). Once that entity owns 10%, any trades (buys or sells) that affects that entity's holdings must be reported using a Form 4, at least until the entity's holdings falls below the 10% threshold."
The structure used by large holders is to break up their holdings into many, many names, thereby circumventing Form 4 issues.
This is a very common structure for major offshore investors, multiple jurisdicitons, in multiple forms of holding structures, sometimes with multiple different beneficial interest holders. It depends on their countries' tax rules, and the advise they get from their lawyers, executors and trustees.
It is a form of diversification of sovereign risk, and is conservative financially.
Mighty Mezz ..
are you trying to confuse investors ?
you and i both know that, Non US parties are not required to comply with 13D, or filings as control persons. The offshore hedge funds committed numerous such rule breaches on both the long and short sides between 2000 and now.
as you already know KING Abdullah is an foreign party .
King Abdullah owns more shares than the outstanding
Statement
Mr. Altomare, we are sure, can adequately defend every false statement made by this receiver in her latest report, and will do so in court. To respond to this SEC’s agent, who still is incapable of admitting that she alone not the Company’s management hurt and destroyed a growing and vibrant company, is futile.
In a brief response to the receiver’s recent attempts to alienate the solidarity of the shareholders, the Company’s supporters will list her key accusations with brief responses:
1. Judgments: We stand behind the statements on collection. As indicated in the Company’s filed reports and press releases, both juries did hear testimony and proof by the Company on naked shorting during a specified period exceeding 11 times the Company’s then outstanding shares and 76 times its daily average treading prior to the attack by the naked shorters.
2. Jackson Collection: The receiver was obviously unable in any way to grasp the past and future potentials for this valuable collection.
3. Subsidiary sales and liquidation: We vehemently disagree with all of the receiver’s myopic comments. These subsidiaries were growing rapidly and revenues were quadrupling each quarter for the last four years as the Company’s filed quarterly and annual reports will show. Also, recent acquisitions by the Company during the last two years on the luggage movement business were growing rapidly. The receiver, as a lawyer, has obviously never run an operating company, made payroll for 14 years and never protected the families of more than 85 current employees put out of work by her close-down mentality as the SEC’s agent. “She protests too much".
4. The Company’s Operations: The Company’s operations were state of the art, which the Company alone created for its various businesses. A Wall Street Journal article written when the Luggage Express business was only starting rated that business as number one among its competitors. The receivers self-justification for closing down a perfecting viable, growing developing company are belied by the statistics contained in the Company’s quarterly and annual reports filed for over 14 years without challenge.
5. The Company’s Marketing: The Company’s marketing and advertising was excellent, geared to the large audiences viewing sporting events, including NASCAR and geared to increasing the substantial growth of all of the Company’s businesses.
6. Despite the receivers statements, the Company’s current lawsuits were very valuable for the Company and its shareholders and proceeding well. Over $600 Miliion for the Company was involved as indicated in the Company’s filed reports and press releases. In one case alone referred to by the receiver, the claim against the Company was only $20,000, but the Company’s counterclaims was for $750,000 due to the Company. The receiver did not handle these valuable cases, but like her actions with respect to the Company’s businesses, merely shut the cases down. All of the cases. She is so wrong on so all of these cases. The receiver was not a builder only a corporate liquidator, interested in only which close downs "pays her" first.
7. All of Mr. Altomare's counterclaims and salary were appropriate and will be made more understandable in front of a jury, not before a one woman wrecking crew with an SEC agenda.
8. The use of private planes were for business purposes. The Company had a long partnership relationship with Universal Jet for over six years, looking toward the ultimate acquisition of Universal Jet as the Company’s quarterly and annual reports show. The receiver’s statements are incomplete and misleading and she was grossly incorrect into believing that she understands inter-company transfers and the actual cost of those operations. The acquisition of Universal Jet was just weeks away when the SEC through its agent receiver shut the Company down. The Company’s filed reports show, that acquisition would have added $20 Million dollars to the Company’s assets.
9. Considering the payables in the receiver’s account, reliable sources show that many of the largest payables were disputed by the Company and the Company owed less than 20% of the overstated payables she listed. This incorrect listing is obviously designed to justify closing down a Company which for 14 years, as its annual and quarterly reports will show, paid all of its bills and covered all of the payrolls of its employees. It boggles believe to think after 14 years of this outstanding record by this developing Company, the receiver arrived and found, in her SEC biased opinion, that the Company could not continue its 14 years of continuous and progressive growth.
The receiver’s 15 minutes of fame in destroying a viable Comp[any and the investments of its thousands of loyal shareholder for over a decade are undeserving of further comment or response, but the rest of us must remember the naked short selling issue and that NO TRIAL has yet taken place, nor was there any testimony or hearing on the appointment of a receiver at the insistent of the SEC trying to silence the this prominent Company whistleblower on the naked shorting scandal that has ruined thousand of smaller public companies, in a ten year cover-up by of the SEC of the naked shorting scandal in which it is complicit along with powerful Wall Street interests
So the Company’s CEO is now accused by the receiver of no arab contracts, no collectibility of the judgment, although millions have been collected and scheduled to be collected, private planes and no oil and gasoline businesses. It is a shame that this receiver was underqualified and possessed predetermined suppositions or instructions to close up the company first, liquidate improperly and then justify her seizure and silencing program to continue the SEC's abuse of power entitlement over a public company's rights.
Every press release, every announcement, every interview on behalf of the Company was the truth,
These false statements and claims by the receiver will never survive the light of a court test. Did the Company’s supporters shred any documents? Do they represent naked short sellers? Does anyone other than the SEC benefit if this SEC agent can silence us?
During this stage of the legal exercise, the SEC through their appointee, tries to misinform. We can choose to drink their kool-aid or remember what we had before with our viable and growing through good, farsighted management, instead of the staged pro-SEC news articles, fines, receiver liquidation and delisting.
The fact is the Huns overran Camelot and they are tryng to re-educate those of us who remember this Company’s great potential, excitement and enthusiastic branding, ongoing. History can always be re-written. It doesn't have to be believed.
Ink a deal
Sign a revenue-generating deal. It's that simple. Sign it, announce it, book the revenue, and the critics go away. And no the $300 fertilizer sale doesn't qualify as significant revenue for a company with over 3 billion shares out.
sure they can ..
the shorters can do whatever they want .they dont have to locate it or borrow it .
A lot has changed here, but some just stubbornly refuse to acknowledge it. Just a year ago most information still came by way of canada (and all that entailed, including a price-rise beyond $0.40 ps). Now information flows from russia directly thru recently-hired consultant/contractors; including a new TA. The recently completed divy distribution was quite different from the past. And the scheduling of the upcoming shareholder meeting is a first; and the proxy should illustrate how different from the past it may be.
im trying to convince the IR french chick for coffee ..maybe she knows what going on
you wrong ...they did prove it and was awarded 700 mill PLUS INTEREST .
the SEC wants this money . usxp located 183 mill its frozen in europe .this money belongs to the shareholders .
KING Abdullah owns the float , he bought it during the spike of 2006 , shortly thereafter the Naked Shorters got scares and offered RA 1 cent a share to take the company private ..at the time there were 8 billion shares , so they offered 80 million dollars ..RA told them "go F*&K yourself"
al long as this baby trades there exists an open short position of over 200 billion shares .LOL
the shorters NEED the SEC to bail them out of this one or they will be broke .
problem is the SEC is conflicted , they owe us money too ..
there are over 200 billion shares sold short .
"Here is Bud posting under Magicre on SI. Even though Bud told the flock on CFRN in an show with Debi that he does not post online the opposite seems "
your wrong !!!!!!
Bud said that he did post online on SILICONINVESTOR .
he did so when he was working with the FBI to catch the naked shorters ...
your buddy Anthony is is jail because of Buds work
LMFAO
39 bill have been sold legally according to the bankruptcy law which supercedes the SEC ..but ..but also 200 -300 billion have been sold illegally by the naked shorters ..
There are so many shares of USXP out there its crazy . KING ABDULLAH owns over 40 billion himself ..in other words if a shareholder isnt holding certificates there is no guarantee he is holding a legitimate shares ,certs are the only way to find out .
Jane Moscowitz knows if these shares are to be bought in the open market the squeeze will kill the brokers/hedgefunds ..she was sent here to destroy the company at all costs ,because if word got out that the SEC knew about this for 9 years they are guilty as hell .
thats why you have so many bashers on this board bashing a stock that trades at 0.000nothing ,,there afraid of this naked short position being EXPOSED .
RA is completely innocent , he did nothing wrong .
the SEC sued him IN RETALIATION ..because he sued he crap out of the SEC ..then they erred when they sued him for issuing 500 million shares (big deal)
The NAKED SHORTERS will have to find out a different way to steal money from the shareholders ..this scam is out of the bag .
there will be no naked shorting on this exchange . unlike the U.S markets
No Naked Short Selling
No Counterfeit Long Positions
No Excess Proxies
No Fails to Deliver
No Dividends in Lieu
Instantaneous Delivery Versus Payment
No Conflicts of Interest
and also NO BASHERS trying to protect the miscreants
This will go to the Court of Appeals, two rounds, and if the result isn't appropriate, then it will go to the Supreme Court.
. They really don't care about the shareholders' rights, any more than they have in countless other cases.
This is all about the Jury trial judgments that the Company obtained in Dade County Court for Naked Short Selling and related manipulations. It is also about the enormous size of the judgments, which the SEC absolutely wants to preclude other victims from getting. They are terrified of Jury Trial. Any competent counsel would be able to use the SEC's own contradictory public statements against it at any trial. It would be a "were you lying then or are you lying now?" issue.
A receiver can try anything, but he is still liable to the BK court for his actions, even if he is not liable to the Company's shareholders.
The SEC threw in the kitchen sink in the August 31 pleading, ignoring of course the fact that they agreed in writing to a jury trial. The Judge and the Company's counsel have the email.
the SEC is scared of USXP .
the bashers are working overtime
the naked shorters are afraid they will have to cover a enormous naked short position
the Judge and receiver are both in cahoots with wall street .
off with their heads
USXP should have been on the Threshold list from inception.
It and many others were excluded for political reasons.
Over 120 US NYSE companies have more shares in the hands of
institutions than they have legally outstanding.
Without a professional third party Stock Transfer Ledger
reconciliation, which the Receiver will never pay for, no one will
ever know the size of the short position.
It isn't cheap, but I recommended this to the Company, including a
vendor.
I never saw an investor fail to get delivery, indeed the majority
(over 51%) of the legally outstanding shares are owned by non-US
holders in UK and EU accounts with mandatory 3 day settlement, which
I had something to do with in both markets.
Norris is hardly the most credible critic, a shill for Gary Weiss.
I have communicated with him personally, and it was a waste.
The trade records all the way back to 1998 and the original complaint
regularly show 20 times the outstanding trading per month. In
January and February, 2007, on 6 B out, about 39+ Billion traded to
move the stock to $ .04, the buying hitting a Wall of naked
shorting. In 1998, in the original complaint to the SEC, on 3
Million out, 54 Million traded in one month. That is pretty much the
end of any argument about illegal shorting having occurred. The
latter number is in the original complaint to the SEC, which I have
personally reviewed. The SEC told USXP's Gunderson to work it out
with the criminals, and to otherwise fuck off.
Regards, Bud.