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we can't see the bid and ask were on the grey market like CMKX
Were not done yet, it's still trading!
By: mike777
07 Apr 2005, 09:57 AM EDT
Msg. 889871 of 890190
Jump to msg. #
The most important CMKX post you will ever read! For all...
Dear Investors:
I just got off the the phone with Sterling after a very
lengthy conversation (about 35 minutes) today on the 7th,
of April.
There are many issues that we haven't thought about in what's coming!!!
And therefore I must outline for you and all investors
how important it is that we all band behind the lawyer
Frizzle who intends to help represent us. Prior to this
I had thought the idea to be very bad. But after much
discussion I found out a few extremely disturbing facts
that shows me ... a few things.
1) If a deal isn't already in the works, and we go to
trial, this could be extremely bad for many investors.
If a deal is done (ie. Citigroup)and approved by the SEC (and yes they have to approve it), then we are okay.
2) If at the trial we get revoked not just as a company listing, but all our shares REVOKED.. (gone -- and finito), then only those who hold CIM and othe divvys are okay. Everyone else who bought after the fact will lose out and lose their monies.
3) This judge being used is paid by the SEC, a Federal Judge
with a record of EVERY TIME REVOKING.
4) We cannot rely solely on the auspices of our own legal
team... why? Because CMKX's legal team may be confined to
solely address the legal issue of filing mistakenly with
more than 300 shareholders. Can or would the SEC revoke
us simply on something as insignificant as a traffic ticket?
Yes.. and you know all the reasons why. They want us to
go away. Easiest way to handle the huge short position.
The SHORT will not be brought up by our CMKX lawyers.. and even if Urbie is on the stand and tries to, the opposing lawyers will confine the arguement solely to this issue.
HOWEVER -- with outside representation for the shareholders
in a public hearing.. we can have our own arguments presented.
We can present how revoking us would do more harm to investors than good. We can with Frizzle's documentation
and representation of shares show how there is a huge short position.. and the tons of money which shareholders have invested in this stock. And how it is not in the SEC's interests to hurt investors.. and how big we would be hurt. So the SEC would not accomplish anything by their punitive actions, and we could show how this stock has been held down by the MM's at a low price.
As Sterling described it, it's almost like buying car
insurance after you got the car. Well we've had the
car for months.. some for years. Get the insurance. It
will document your representation and position, and
lend support in Share NUMBERS to weild more power against
the SEC. It's why CMKX is saying.. good bring it on -- the support and Frizzle's Group. Because Frizzle group can
say and bring out things outside the issue addressed,
and then protect us. We could win... on our own merits,
but why risk it without Frizzle? If we have reinforcements and additional help, we are better suited towards winning.
Oh.. and by the way.. even if we tried to go to one of
Maheu's blank check firms.. we'd need an approval of the
SEC still... If we went private.. we'd still need an
approval. Get the picture ??? The SEC stands in the way
still ..
ALL IMO.
Do what you think is best but I would go for it at this
point. Here's the link below.. and no I do not get a cut
in this...
www.cmkxownersgroup.com
4/7/05 - Financialwire: StockGate: DATELINE NBC Cancelled And Attorney Accuses DTCC Of ‘Cheap Thuggery’
StockGate: DATELINE NBC Cancelled And Attorney Accuses DTCC Of ‘Cheap Thuggery’
April 7, 2005 (FinancialWire) It’s now zero days until the airing of the DATELINE NBC expose on illegal manipulative shortselling, which has suddenly been “indefinitely delayed” by the General Electric (NYSE: GE) network, and the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. has received a letter from Marshal Shichtman, Esq., warning the DTCC not to destroy or tamper with evidence relating to its alleged successful plot to interfere with the media.
On February 7, Investors Business Daily asked MarketWatch, then co-owned by Viacom (NYSE: VIAb) but now owned by Dow Jones (NYSE: DJ) to shut off its FinancialWire feed that it also re-propogated to Yahoo (NASDAQ: YHOO). Is it possible that now, NBC has also fallen victim to a halt-the-media conspiracy that has outgrown even FinancialWire?
No one is talking, but DATELINE is reportedly blaming the Pope’s death, the Prince Ranier death, and the Prince Charles wedding and other events as causing the delay.
However, a desk person at the network revealed that the story is actually being replaced by an Al Roker interview with Ruben Studdard of American Idol fame, and not by pieces on either the Pope or Ranier or Prince Charles. When asked how Studdard was more important than a major financial expose, she stuttered that “this is the answer I’ve been told to give.”
An investigation by FinancialWire revealed that the newsfeed was shut down at the request of an official of the DTCC, who had complained to Investors Business Daily that FinancialWire publishes “opinions and not news.” FinancialWire learned that this is contained in emails sent by Investors Business Daily to the Dow Jones publication.
Despite the purported efforts by the DTCC, however, FinancialWire has since been provided to another 300 outlets.
The producers of DATELINE NBC, which suddenly became unresponsive to FinancialWire inquiries after multiple communications over the past few months, is thought by some to have some possibly concerned reporters and producers.
On April 1, In what may or may not be a coordinated offensive to further disparage a competitor, a Dow Jones Newswire reporter published statements about FinancialWire’s coverage, claiming that facts were omitted in a series of FinancialWire articles about SEC filings related to Global Links (OTCBB: GLKCE) that were widely quoted in various media and cited by U.S. Senator Robert Bennett (R-UT) in an exchange with SEC Chair William Donaldson.
Not only were the facts and events cited by the Dow Jones Newswire as missing contained in the series, but FinancialWire had actually scooped the Dow Jones in publishing almost all of them by nearly a month, in follow-up articles March 12, 14, 18 and 21.
Since these articles were so readily available using the simple “Site Search” feature at FinancialWire (http://www.financialwire.net) or referencing them a hundreds of news portals under the Global Links stock symbol, it is not yet known if the effort by Dow Jones reporter Carol Remond was simply “sloppy journalism,” to borrow a phrase from the DTCC’s Thomson when he was referring to EuroMoney, published by Institutional Investor and presumably the then-upcoming DATELINE NBC expose, or if there was further collusion with the DTCC related to the February 7 events.
Informed legal sources have volunteered to FinancialWire that Remond published a court’s order related to Jag Media Holdings (OTC:JAGH) before it was available in the legal data system while claiming that was where she had obtained it, and that she is very close to short sellers, having used Anthony Elgindy as a source regularly before he was charged and convicted. Informed sources have also said that Remond, an avid biker, was seen laughing in the court room at the sight of Elgindy crying after he broke down, which was seen as odd given Elgindy had reportedly been a “trusted, informed source” for the Dow Jones Newswires. Thus it is not unreasonable to suspect murky motivations may have resulted in the factually erroneous article.
For hardened conspiracy buffs, there is also the fact that 47-year-old Floyd Schneider, a Fredon Township, NJ mortgage broker who dabbles in online message boards as “TheTruthseeker,” or as his protagonists call him, “TheGossipSeeker,” and a self-acknowledged source for the Dow Jones Newswires, has, with precipitous timing, suddenly undertaken an online crusade “revealing” that the CEO of FinancialWire’s parent company had once been the target of a lawsuit aimed at a Nasdaq company where Investrend’s CEO served as Chairman of the Board of Directors, and all of its officers and directors, including the partner of Ted Turner, who was then the major shareholder in Time Warner (NASDAQ: TWX), and who also was, perhaps ironically, former president of CBS and CNN.
The lawsuit had been summarily dismissed as lacking merit just over two years ago, but the timing of the posts by a purported Remond confidante, within a day of FinancialWire’s article about Remond’s erroneous column, was termed suspicious by more than one observer who forwarded the posts to FinancialWire.
Schneider is already under court orders barring him from posting “false or defamatory” statements on the internet, has by his own admission had to pay over $60,000 in court costs, and has been the subject of at least three suits, one for as much as $1 million. “TheTruthseeker” was featured in a book by John Emshwiller, national correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, “Scam Dogs and Mo-Mo Mamas.”
The ribbon on the conspiracy package is that court transcripts purportedly show that Schneider’s legal bills were eventually paid directly to his attorney by members of the Elgindy website. Elgindy was also one of those named in the EagleTech Communications (OTC: EATC) court proceedings as a major naked shortseller, along with Jonathan Curshen, who was charged by the SEC for fraud and corruption for a deal developed by Timothy Miles, the proprietor of the discredited Our-Street.com, and another participant in “bashing” FinancialWire, who court proceedings last week revealed has apparently fled to Slovenia ahead of the SEC trial. Curshen is also reportedly out of the country.
One observer said that from all the scrambling and disinformation by so many purportedly reputable and disreputable individuals under the same blanket, something momentous must be afoot.
In his letter to Larry E. Thompson, counsel for the DTCC, Shichtman told the organization that its actions and those of its potential co-conspirators are of “grave concern to my client in a myriad of aspects, including but not limited to, my client’s reputation, my client’s business relationshsips, and First Amendment Principles as your organization operates under the auspices of a Self Regulatory Organization, or a subsidiary thereof.”
The principal trustees for the DTCC are the New York Stock Exchange and the NASD, which owns Nasdaq (NASDAQ: NDAQ).
Shichtman demanded that the DTCC “preserve” all communications regarding the media’s disruption, since these are evidence that is “part of an ongoing investigation into the culpable conduct” related to the events.
“Lastly,” concluded Shichtman, “I am shocked and appalled that your organization, one of the cornerstones of an orderly market, that has done such tacit yeoman’s job, could engage in such cheap thuggery as utilizing strong-arm tactics more suitable to organized crime than an SRO. I would have thought that as a pre-eminent organization, and what should be a model to the world, the DTC would be above such acts.”
The DTCC has been accused by many of acting with impunity, and is hardly a role model for unconflicted governance. Its 21 directors include Bradley Abelow, Managing Director, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS); Jonathan E. Beyman, Chief Information Officer, Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH); and Frank J. Bisignano, Chief Administrative Officer and Senior Executive Vice President, Citigroup / Solomon Smith Barney's Corporate Investment Bank (NYSE: C).
The largely unregulated DTC has become something of a defacto Czar presiding over the entire U.S. markets system, wielding more day-to-day influence and control than the SEC, the NASD and NASDAQ combined. Transparency is not of the DTCC’s strong suits. In the past it has stonewalled all requests for full and complete trading records.
The DTCC’s two preferred shareholders are the New York Stock Exchange and the NASD, a regulatory agency that also owns the Nasdaq and until recently, the American Stock Exchange.
Eagletech was represented in a recent winning motion to require the DTCC to produce trading records by the law firms of Christian Smith & Jewell of Houston, Texas and Koerner Silberberg & Weiner, LLP, of New York City.
Eagletech is a plaintiff in a stock manipulation action pending in the state of Florida.
Attorney Wes Christian commented: "This is a significant victory in our on going battle to bring restitution to our clients for the brazen manipulations that were perpetrated against them. Our ability to obtain these records is essential. The judge's clear ruling takes us further down that road."
Other DTCC board members include Michael C. Bodson, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MWD); Gary Bullock, Global Head of Logistics, Infrastructure, UBS Investment Bank (NYSE: UBS); Stephen P. Casper, Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer, Fischer Francis Trees & Watts, Inc.; Jill M. Considine,Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC);
Also, Paul F. Costello, President, Business Services Group, Wachovia Securities (NYSE: WB); John W. Cummings, Senior Vice President & Head of Global Technology & Services, Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE: MER); Donald F. Donahue, Chief Operating Officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC); Norman Eaker, General Partner, Edward Jones; George Hrabovsky, President, Alliance Global Investors Service; Catherine R. Kinney, President and Co-Chief Operating Officer, New York Stock Exchange; Thomas J. McCrossan, Executive Vice President, State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT); Eileen K. Murray, Managing Director, Credit Suisse First Boston (NYSE: CSR); James P. Palermo, Vice Chairman, Mellon Financial Corporation (NYSE: MEL); Thomas J. Perna, Senior Executive Vice President, Financial Companies Services Sector of The Bank of New York (NYSE: BNY); Ronald Purpora, Chief Executive Officer, Garban LLC; Douglas Shulman, President, Regulatory Services and Operations, NASD; and Thompson M. Swayne, Executive Vice President, JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM).
In their comments to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission regarding Regulation SHO in January, the 50 state regulators, through their association, the North American Association of Securities Administrators (NASAA) issued what many consider to be a strong warning that if the DTCC is not dealt with in the final regulations, state regulators such as New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer may step to the plate.
In what many considered to have been explosive comments, Ralph Lambiase, NASAA president and Director of the Connecticut Division of Securities, warned "NASAA urges the Commission to reconsider its stance regarding the role of the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (the DTC). As a threshold matter, NASAA believes that the Commission should explicitly prohibit the DTC from lending more shares of a security than it actually holds. The ability of the overall proposed rule would be severely impared unless the Commission undertakes to implement such a prohibition.”
This is one of dozens of lawsuits filed by the same law firm. Many of the pleadings allege that the DTCC operates a “stock lending” program that aids and abets illegal naked short selling, and in doing so, admittedly takes in $1.67 million annually.
In a further rare display of transparency, however, while framing it in terms of a small percentage of daily transactions, Thompson has admitted in an interview posted at http://www.dtcc.com that some $4.9 billion, involving an estimated 20,000 daily transactions remain unresolved “fails to deliver and receive.”
“The markets check to see if the amount of fails to deliver is more than 1/2 of 1% of the total outstanding shares in that security,” said Thompson.
“If it is, then it goes on a ‘Threshold List.’ If it is then on the Threshold List for 13 consecutive settlement days, restrictions on short selling then apply. The “close-out” requirement forces a participant of a registered clearing agency to close out any “fail to deliver” position in a threshold security that has remained for 13 consecutive settlement days by purchasing securities of like kind and quantity. If the participant does not take action to close out the open fail to deliver position, the participant is prohibited from making further short sales in that security without first borrowing or arranging to borrow the security. Even market makers are not exempt from this requirement.”
In his questioning of SEC Chair Donaldson, Senator Bennett suggested, however, that a loophole in the regulation allows market makers to “pass along” these “fails to deliver” from one to the other, leaving them “unclosed out” indefinitely. A video of that exchange is posted at http://www.investrendinformation.com While in the overall scheme of the U.S. markets system, the fails to deliver of that magnitude represents the entire market caps of upwards of 500 smaller public companies every trading day, which if victimized in this admitted fashion, can find their survivals and the safety of the entire investments of their shareholders questionable indeed.
This comes hard on the heels of an ad in the New York Times (NYSE: NYT) from The Washington Legal Foundation, located at http://www.wlf.org, which has considerable clout in the Bush administration, with ten of its board members now serving in various capacities, including three, headed by U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, in the Bush cabinet. Its “In All Fairness” advertorial, “What’s Up With The SEC?” may be seen at http://www.wlf.org/upload/032805IAFSEC.pdf
The advertorial alleges that class action lawyers are colluding with short sellers “right under the noses of SEC investigators,” whose abuses cause “investors, employees, pensioners and companies” to “lose millions of dollars in stock value each year.”
The WLF said that the SEC has been “sitting on several complaints of misconduct” that it and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have filed that detail “examples of questionable stock manipulation by short sellers and class action attorneys.”
The group says that the SEC is “looking the other way while class action attorneys enjoy a free-for-all, reaping millions in windfall fees to the detriment of shareholders,” and asks “why isn’t the SEC taking legal and regulatory action to prevent stock manipulation and to protect investors from the looting by plaintiffs’ lawyers? Shouldn’t there be rules and oversight to deter these trial lawyer abuses?”
It concludes that “the SEC must show America that it can get tough with more sinister villains than Martha Stewart.” Stewart’s firm, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia (NYSE: MSO), ironically is one of those on the NYSE’s “Threshhold List.”
Recently also, Motley Fool lambasted regulators for letting what it called “71-year-old laws” against naked short selling go unenforced.
The article is at http://www.fool.com/news/commentary/2005/commentary05032407.htm?source=eptyholnk303100&logvisit=....
One thing is certain, said an observer, tongue-in-cheek: “Stockgate is getting interestinger and interestinger.”
For up-to-the-minute news, features and links click on http://www.financialwire.net
FinancialWire is an independent, proprietary news service of Investrend Information, a division of Investrend Communications, Inc. It is not a press release service and receives no compensation for its news or opinions. Other divisions of Investrend, however, provide shareholder empowerment platforms such as forums, independent research and webcasting. For more information or to receive the FirstAlert daily summary of news, commentary, research reports, webcasts, events and conference calls, click on http://www.investrend.com/contact.asp
The FinancialWire NewsFeed is now available in multiple formats to your site or desktop, free. Click on: http://www.investrend.com/XmlFeeds?level=268
http://www.investrend.com/articles/article.asp?analystId=0&id=14493&topicId=160&level=16....
Some of my stocks went up and some of them went down.
If I could sell at .0001 I would get out!! But you can't so were suck and I'm not going to sell below .0001!!
That's what I'm thinking, I've been watching this stock like a hawk and the MM are going to get burned on this one. I'm waiting for a buck a share!
I'm holding long on this one, I've been in since .001
100 to 1 is in mourning.
I bought at .0001 almost 2 years ago,I haven't sold a share yet until this SEC crap happens and now I can't get rid of the piece of shit,
You have no choice but to hold, you can't sell at .0001
"Out of court settlement between the S E C and CMKX." Are magic mushrooms in season,,LOL
As far as I know the company has years of reports to be filed with the SEC, same as CMKX. I think the filing is from the year 2000 til now, the old company president left this mess for the president they have now.
GLKCE is rocking today
This room smells like someone crank one in it!!!!!!
That would have been nice!!!!
Here ya go Rejectedbypez http://yazzi.com/cmkx/ listen to the interviews by melvin in the ARCHIVED INTERVIEWS :
GLKCE up 105.88% yesterday
StockGate: 5 Days To Dateline NBC; Dow Jones Newswire Reporter Finishes Out Of Money
April 5, 2005 (FinancialWire) It's now only 5
days until the airing of the Dateline NBC expose on illegal manipulative
shortselling, scheduled by the General Electric (NYSE: GE) network this coming
Sunday night, April 10, and Carol Remond, reporter for Dow Jones (NYSE: DJ)
Newswire, finished "out of the money" Friday and Monday when she posted
a scathing article that seems to have inexplicably vanished into the ether.
The article, "In The Money ' Global Links As 'Get Shorty' Poster Child,"
had inaccurately portrayed FinancialWire as failing to report aspects of the
StockGate story it broke that the newswire had in fact reported. Meanwhile, the
company at the center of the controversy, Global Links (OTCBB: GLKCE) exploded
105.88% on volume of 985,689, despite purported holdings of 100% of its stock by
Robert Simmons, CEO of Zann Corp. (OTCBB: ZANC), whose own shares rocketed
51.52% Monday.
The Dow Jones article suggested that FinancialWire was inaccurate, but not for
what it published. Instead it described "inaccuracy" as being what it
said FinancialWire had "failed" to publish, which observers say is an
odd criteria in journalism, if not an odd definition.
As it turns out, however, the "missing facts," such as that Simpson had
not taken "delivery of his Global Link shares," that the company's
business prospects consisted of questionable real estate properties, that
Simpson and Global Links CEO Frank Dobrucki had never been in contact, that
Simpson and Global Links shared professional representation, and that
FinancialWire did not identify Simpson as CEO of a company that was suspended
from research by a separate division of the parent company, were not missing at
all in the FinancialWire ongoing and continuing coverages of the Global Links
episode.
FinancialWire not only reported all of these matters, according to a "Site
Search" at the http://www.financialwire.net, but it had, as in several
previous instances, roundly "scooped" Dow Jones on just about every
point claimed.
The Dow Jones said Simpson "had no idea why (FinancialWire) wrote about his
purchase." A spokesperson for FinancialWire expressed amusement, saying the
news service wrote about it because it was an "interesting story," and
"we were once again in a position to scoop Dow Jones," apparently by a
month. "But we do appreciate the Dow Jones instructional journalism,"
the spokesperson laughed.
Dow Jones said that "FinancialWire didn't identify Simpson as CEO of Zann in
its March 4th article. FinancialWire also failed to note that ATNG Inc., the
previous corporate incarnation of Zann, became one of Investrend's corporate
clients in July 2002. Investrend articles about ATNG or Zann indicate that
coverage has been suspended because the company failed to provide access to
Investrend's analyst. It's unclear when the suspension occurred. According to
Zann's website, Simpson agreed to take over ATNG operations in October
2002."
The SEC filings did not identify Simpson's employment, and that appeared
irrelevant March 4. In its follow-up article, after Simpson's identify was
known, the record shows FinancialWire reported all the information that Dow
Jones erroneously stated it "failed to publish," and information as to
"when" a suspension occurred is readily available on its site to any
reporter who cared to look.
And, noted a FinancialWire spokesperson, "our articles didn't vanish into
thin air, as apparently did Remond's."
FinancialWire is a member of the Online News Association. A search of the
organization's rosters didn't show anyone representing Dow Jones or the Wall
Street Journal's online sites as members.
The Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. has also become defensive in advance of
the upcoming Dateline broadcast. It says that the recent EuroMoney's
comprehensive series on "naked short selling" is just "sloppy
journalism."
"We will not accept silently this type of sloppy, one-sided journalism
whether in print or broadcast," said DTCC Deputy Counsel Larry Thompson,
apparently in a warm-up to the expected onslaught of public opinion after the
upcoming Dateline NBC network telecast.
The DTCC, which is run under the joint authority of the New York Stock Exchange
and NASD, both government-sponsored SROs, may even have run afoul of serious
laws against interference with the press, according to attorney Marshal
Shichtman, Esq., who is investigating the organization's purported collusion
with Investors Business Daily in an attempt to censor or squelch further
distribution of FinancialWire.
This comes hard on the heels of an ad in the New York Times (NYSE: NYT) from The
Washington Legal Foundation, located at http://www.wlf.org, which has
considerable clout in the Bush administration, with ten of its board members now
serving in various capacities, including three, headed by U.S. Attorney General
John Ashcroft, in the Bush cabinet. Its "In All Fairness" advertorial,
"What's Up With The SEC?" may be seen at
http://www.wlf.org/upload/032805IAFSEC.pdf
The advertorial alleges that class action lawyers are colluding with short
sellers "right under the noses of SEC investigators," whose abuses cause
"investors, employees, pensioners and companies" to "lose millions
of dollars in stock value each year."
The WLF said that the SEC has been "sitting on several complaints of
misconduct" that it and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have filed that detail
"examples of questionable stock manipulation by short sellers and class
action attorneys."
The group says that the SEC is "looking the other way while class action
attorneys enjoy a free-for-all, reaping millions in windfall fees to the
detriment of shareholders," and asks "why isn't the SEC taking legal and
regulatory action to prevent stock manipulation and to protect investors from
the looting by plaintiffs' lawyers? Shouldn't there be rules and oversight to
deter these trial lawyer abuses?"
It concludes that "the SEC must show America that it can get tough with more
sinister villains thatn Martha Stewart."
For up-to-the-minute news, features and links click on
http://www.financialwire.net
FinancialWire is an independent, proprietary news service of Investrend
Information, a division of Investrend Communications, Inc. It is not a press
release service and receives no compensation for its news or opinions. Other
divisions of Investrend, however, provide shareholder empowerment platforms such
as forums, independent research and webcasting. For more information or to
receive the FirstAlert daily summary of news, commentary, research reports,
webcasts, events and conference calls, click on
http://www.investrend.com/contact.asp
The FinancialWire NewsFeed is now available in multiple formats to your site or
desktop, free. Click on: http://www.investrend.com/XmlFeeds?level=268
URL: http://www.financialwire.net
(C) 2005 financialwire.net, Inc. All rights reserved.
He's not a paid basher,,I said PUMPER, learn to read and reply to people messages correctly
He worked for the company as the IR person DUH
There is no link, Melvin worked as IR for the company, pumped it on Paltalk , CMKX forum, IBC radio, I guess you haven't been in this stock that long or your long term memory must be failing.
I've heard of some people getting filled at .00009 on IBC radio. I just figured there was no bid.
You ever here about a guy name MELVIN?
And my sell order hasn't been filled yet at .0001
GLKCE moving up
That would be nice,,,she's trying to move right now.
Confirming SB is "involved" with CMKX!
« Thread started on: Today at 1:46pm »
Guys, let me say that I have been in this stock for a year now and that I do not lie. I am not a frequent poster but I am on the boards everyday! I have been on probaords 32 since inception and before that was on the official CMKX board.
My investment bank arranged for its employees to have a Q&A session for personal finance with SB just two weeks ago. Since the rumors I decided to e-mail the two guys today and see if they knew anything about CMKX ...
Here is my mail and the response:
E-MAIL
Gentlemen,
I attended the Q&A session that you hosted 2 weeks ago at XXX in New Jersey. Thanks for your advice it was helpful. I am e-mailing for two reasons. I am based in London and am due to go back there in approximatley 3 months time. Do you have a contact in London that I may wish to contact?
Secondly, this a question more of interest. I have currently invested in a stock that is in the pinksheet market (so it is very risky) (ticker symbol CMKX). I heard that they were working with Smith Barney in some way. If this is something that you cannot talk about or do not know then I can appreciate that, just thought I would ask anyway.
Thanks in advance.
REPLY:
I know very little about the stock. You are correct that SB is involved in
the company, although in what capacity, I am unsure, but that involvement
prevents me from commenting.
We are in the process of setting up a London desk, when you return to
England, drop me a line if you are interested in meeting someone.
Let me know if I can be of further assistance.
0000 0000
http://cmkxdiamond.proboards32.com/index.cgi?board=general&action=display&num=1112640402
Anyone know the lastest share structure is?
I just wish I could get rid of my shares.
I have had the order in for months now.
I just placed my sell order of CMKX, I'm heading out.
OT: USCA almost double the 10 volume average.
I cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg. The phaonmeal pweor of the hmuan mnid Aoccdrnig to rscheearch taem at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoatnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the humn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe. such a cdonition is arppoiately cllaed
Typoglycemia
Amzanig huh? Yeah and yuo awlyas thought slpeling was ipmorantt..
Yes, you can send $25 anonymously to my paypal account
I wonder if the ATTORNEY would take CMKX shares for payment
My god man, do you get a share of CMKX for everytime you use the word CERTS"
Financial experts call CMKX "disposable income"
I'm going to get my girlfriend Diamond Implants
When CMKX goes gold I want one of these