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There is no way Dan Montano can repay $2,500,000.
Again, contact Grant Gordon. It has the patent information in the presentation. From memory I think it is now 12 and counting. Also, I think there is something in order of 40 pending patents. A stark comparison of Montano's 0,000,000,000 patents*
*Dan Montano is the only person in pharma/biotech who believes you don't need patents.
My PDF copy is way out of date. Email Grant Gordon on ggordon@venturistherapeutics.com & he can give you an up to date version (I think)
Good to see you on the board again, Slalom. I've missed your laser guided posts. As a matter of interest have you heard anything about an influx of cash into our company?
If you don't want to post it you can email me at the usual address.
The new IP is, IMHO, blockbuster stuff.
Setting the record straight.
1. VT's affiliate has a $2m+ judgement against Blubberman aka Daniel C. Montano. This is significantly more that the arbitrator's award (which I believe VT is appealing the award in any event). So Blubberman Montano will get ZILCH.
2. Even if the arbitrator's decision stands he stated that VT could pay when it fitted with it's cash flow and after all clinical trial costs and normal day to day expenditures.
CONMAN DAN UPON HEARING HE GETS DIDDLY SQUAT FROM VT
Like Slalom, I can share some excellent news with you.
"Venturis lost a long legal case resulting in a 7-figure adverse judgement in binding arbitration. Unless some third parties step up and invest, this insolvent, illiquid, zombie company is either going to be liquidated or will declare bankruptcy to temporarily halt the liquidation."
1. VT's affiliate has a $2m+ judgement against the Blubberman aka Daniel C. Montano. This is significantly more that the arbitrator's award (which I believe VT is appealing the award in any event). So Blubberman Montano will get ZILCH.
2. Even if the arbitrator's decision stands he stated that VT could pay when it fitted with it's cash flow and after all clinical trial costs and normal day to day expenditures.
I watched the video that Slalom recorded. I agree it was very funny. Our ex-CEO, affectionately known as Danny F@T BSTARD Montano didn't even make it onto the video. He was audio only. Maybe they didn't have a wide angled lens...LOL
I have to say that Danny Boy used to be decent at presenting but he's now at 78 years old. Decent has turned into DESCENT (Decent into oblivion). It's sad to see. Facobs looks like he's been through the wringer over the past few years. Perhaps sharing a home with Danny Boy's nephew wasn't all it was cracked up to be.
BEWARE (part 2):
Daniel C. Montano is an undischarged bankrupt for the past 7 years.
Daniel C. Montano tried unsuccessfully to steal the assets of VT.
Daniel C. Montano arranged with his mail order bride to finance an involuntary bankruptcy case against VT. It was thrown out by Judge Spraker. Judge Spraker is in the process of deciding how much damages to award Venturis Therapeutics. This will no doubt force the protagonists into personal bankruptcy. Financing a nuisance bankruptcy is a crime. It is referred to as champerty. This means that both Daniel C. Montano & his mail order bride, Victorya Montano, are facing jail time for their federal crime.
Daniel C. Montano keeps spewing nonsense about VT’s present CEO. The case he keeps harking on about ad nauseum is currently being mediated to a close at the request of the creditor, Gloria’s Ranch.
Daniel C. Montano has a history of fraud & bankrupting companies.
For more information refer to the following video listing his fraudulent activity.
Daniel C. Montano's Fraudulent Activities
BEWARE: Someone's apparently trying to dump their anti Venturis Therapeutics BS onto unsuspecting investors, and given the reference to "DCM" it may well be Daniel C. Montano. DCM is an insolvent, illiquid, failed zombie ex-CEO that is facing imminent liquidation after having lost a 7-figure judgement to an affiliate of VT. I believe anyone who purchases stock in his company, SHITTYA, through a private stock transaction is going to lose 100% of their investment, and in near-record time. SHITTYA tries to chisel nickels & dimes out of unsuspecting senior citizens. Officers of SHITTYA, namely, Daniel C. Montano is a serial failure (around 20 bankrupted companies in 30 years).
We managed to get a mugshot of the perp, DCM, after one of his shows in Vegas. See below.
You are very welcome, D** M******.
Of course a $1.25bn company quoted on the NYSE who have a specialist unit performing valuations for companies & the courts aren't up to Dan Montano's high standards.
The inconvenient truth for Butterball is that a top 20 bank in the world has also been through the valuation & agreed the valuation. OOOOPPPS
THAT'S ALL FOLKS
I asked my friend at VT about the valuation. He wouldn’t confirm nor deny the $21 share price. I did ask him if there we’re a valuation at this level would it surprise him. His answer:
“It wouldn’t surprise me that there could be a valuation over $7,000,000,000.
2 deals alone substantiate it. Avexys was bought by Novartis for $8.7 billion. They have 1 patent in what is now becoming a crowded market. Their treatment which has a total patient population of less than 10,000 people each year and has a $2m per patient price tag.
More recently The Medicine Co was also bought by Novartis. The price tag was $9.7 billion. They have 2 patents, 2 phase 1 trials and 2 phase 3 trials. They have no FDA approved products. Their drug is a better version of a statin – statins are now generic!”
So, $7 billion for VT seems reasonable. Apparently, the valuation doesn’t include the new VT303 molecule or recent IP.
BTW, I also received these emails from Gordon.
EMAIL 1
EMAIL 2
FOUR HUNDRED AND TWENTY MILLION DOLLARS
POOR OL' BUTTERBALL, POOR OL' JON SLAUB AND HACK FACOBS
BUTTERBALL, SLAUB AND FACOBS
I viewed a copy of the independent valuation that was put together by a USA based valuation company. The headline is VT as a public company it is valued at $21 per share. The price as a private company is $17.
YAHOOOOOOO!!!!
Interesting observation.
Guess what the following people have in common?
I'll offer the board a clue - they are referred to as autodidacts which is exactly what Grant Gordon & Calvin Wallen are.
Engineers and inventors
Leonardo da Vinci was an Italian polymath: painter, sculptor, architect, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, botanist, and writer. However, Leonardo was not autodidactic in his study of the arts, as he was trained through the Guild system, just as other Renaissance artists had been.
John Smeaton, who was the first civil engineer.
James Watt, the mechanical engineer who improved the steam engine, was "largely self taught."
Oliver Evans trained as a millwright, inventor of the high pressure steam engine (independently of Richard Trevithick and with a more practical engine). Evans developed and patented the first known automated materials handling system.
Thomas Alva Edison was an American inventor and businessman, who has been described as America's greatest inventor. He developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world, including the phonograph, the motion picture camera, and the long-lasting, practical electric light bulb.
Nikola Tesla, electrical engineer and inventor best known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current (AC) electricity supply system never graduated from university.[36]
The Wright Brothers, especially Wilbur Wright. Neither brother graduated high school. Wilbur in fact had completed all the course requirements, but his family moved to Ohio in 1885 before graduation. Both brothers were mechanically inclined, with Orville running his own printing press in his teens. They entered the bicycle business as a team in 1892, selling existing models and creating their own brand, the Van Cleve, named after a relative. Wilbur made the first inroads in seriously studying aeronautics and the development of the world's first successful airplane.
John Harrison, a carpenter by education, built the first marine chronometers enabling navigators to determine a ship's longitudinal position.
R. G. LeTourneau, prolific inventor of earthmoving machinery.
Granville T. Woods, an inventor in electrical and mechanical engineering with more than 50 patents, only went to school until he was ten years old. Learning on the job, he began as a blacksmith's apprentice and continued as a machinist, an electrician, a railroad fireman, a locomotive and steamship engineer. In his free time, he kept reading, especially on the subjects of electricity and mechanics. During the 1860s and 1870s, because he was black, he was not allowed to borrow books from the local libraries so he would ask white friends to borrow them for him. Every time he saw a new piece of technology, he would ask questions about it. Years later, in an 1886 cross-examination for a patent dispute, he said that he was self-taught.[37][38]
Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky, a Russian and Soviet rocket scientist and pioneer of the astronautic theory, who is considered to be one of the founding fathers of rocketry and astronautics. He was not admitted to elementary schools because of his hearing problem, so he was self-taught.
Yuri Kondratyuk, a Ukrainian and Soviet engineer, pioneer of space exploration, rocketry and astronautics. He did not receive formal education because of persecution by Bolsheviks, forcing him to permanently change his identity to protect himself.
Henry Ford, billionaire founder of Ford Motor Company. Did not attend college.[39]
Susan Fowler, American writer and software engineer who was home-schooled at a young age and subsequently taught herself mathematics and physics before being accepted into a university.[40]
Oliver Heaviside who was an electrical engineer, mathematician, and physicist, developed mathematical techniques to solve differential equations, expressed Maxwell's equations in vector notation, and made significant contributions to transmission line theory. He had no formal education beyond his sixteenth year.
Alicia Boole Stott, was an Irish-English mathematician. Despite never holding an academic position, she made a number of valuable contributions to the mathematical field, receiving an honorary doctorate from the University of Groningen
Scientists, historians, and educators[edit]
Melanie Klein, the founding mother of children's psychology
Francis Edgeworth, was a self-taught economist.
Charles Darwin was an English naturalist and geologist, best known for his contributions to evolutionary theory.
Blaise Pascal, was a mathematician, philosopher, physicist and inventor who was home-schooled.[41]
Nathaniel Bowditch, a colonial period American mathematician who wrote the American Practical Navigator.
Paul-Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran, chemist, discoverer of several elements, pioneer in the field of spectroscopy
Galileo Galilei, astronomer, engineer, mathematician and physicist. Dropped out of college.
Michael Faraday, the chemist and physicist. Although Faraday received little formal education and knew little of higher mathematics, such as calculus, he was one of the most influential scientists in history. Some historians[42] of science refer to him as the best experimentalist in the history of science.
Physicist and Judo expert Moshe Feldenkrais developed an autodidactic method of self-improvement based on his own experience with self-directed learning in physiology and neurology. He was motivated by his own crippling knee injury.[citation needed]
George Boole was a largely self-taught mathematician, philosopher and logician, most of whose short career was spent as the first professor of mathematics at Queen's College, Cork in Ireland. He worked in the fields of differential equations and algebraic logic, and is best known as the author of The Laws of Thought (1854) which contains Boolean algebra. Boolean logic is credited with laying the foundations for the information age.
Mary Everest Boole known for introducing mathematics as fun for children. Mother of Alicia Boole Stott.
André-Marie Ampère was a physicist and mathematician who was one of the founders of the science of classical electromagnetism, which he referred to as "electrodynamics". He is also the inventor of numerous applications, such as the solenoid (a term coined by him) and the electrical telegraph.
Benjamin Franklin
Buckminster Fuller, a self-proclaimed comprehensive anticipatory design scientist, was twice expelled from Harvard and, after a life-altering experience while on the edge of suicide, dedicated his life to working in the service of humanity and thinking for himself. In the process he created many new terms such as "ephemeralization", "dymaxion", and "Spaceship Earth".
"Darwin's Bulldog" Thomas Henry Huxley, a 19th-century British scientist.
Jane Jacobs wrote books about city planning, economics, and sociology with only a high school degree and training in journalism and stenography, plus courses at Columbia University's extension school.
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, a cloth merchant, built the most powerful microscopes of his time and used them to make biological discoveries.
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was a mathematical autodidact.
Artemas Martin editor of the Mathematical Visitor in 1877 and of the Mathematical Magazine in 1882.
Karl Marx, the German communist philosopher, was self-taught in economics, during his study in London, at the British Library.
American historian, sociologist, philosopher of technology, and literary critic, Lewis Mumford studied at the City College of New York and The New School for Social Research, but became ill with tuberculosis and never finished his degree.
Scientist and inventor Stanford R. Ovshinsky had no college education.
The cognitive scientist Walter Pitts was an autodidact. He taught himself mathematical logic, psychology, and neuroscience. He was one of the scientists who laid the foundations of cognitive sciences, artificial intelligence, and cybernetics.[citation needed]
Mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan was largely self-taught in mathematics. Ramanujan is notable as an autodidact for having developed thousands of new mathematical theorems despite having no formal education in mathematics, contributing substantially to the analytical theory of numbers, elliptic functions, continued fractions, and infinite series.[43]
Vincent J. Schaefer, who discovered the principle of cloud seeding, was schooled to 10th grade when asked by parents to help with family income. He continued his informal education by reading, participation in free lectures by scientists and exploring nature through year-round outdoor activity.
Heinrich Schliemann, German businessman and archeologist.
The social philosopher Herbert Spencer, a 19th-century British scientist.[citation needed]
The natural historians Alfred Russel Wallace (co-discoverer of natural selection) and Henry Walter Bates both 19th-century British scientists.
Gerda Alexander, Heinrich Jacoby, and a number of other 20th-century European innovators worked out methods of self-development that stressed intelligent sensitivity and awareness.[citation needed]
Eliezer Yudkowsky, artificial intelligence researcher
Eric Hoffer, recipient of the National Medal of Freedom by President Reagan
William Kamkwamba, inventor
George Green, mathematician and physicist
Robert Franklin Stroud, ornithologist while imprisoned
James Marcus Bach, software testing expert
Steve Irwin, Australian herpetologist, conservationist, TV personality and general animal expert, never went to college and primarily learned everything he knew about biology and zoology from teaching himself and from his father.
Joseph Needham was originally schooled as a biochemist, but later in life became an autodidact sinologist. He edited and contributed to the enormous body of work known as Science and Civilisation in China.
Vasily Vladimirovich Petrov, Russian scientist
Clyde Tombaugh, American astronomer who discovered the Kuiper belt.
Benjamin West, American astronomer, mathematician, professor at Rhode Island College, and publisher of several series of North American almanacs.
Mary Anning, an amateur palaeontologist. Her findings contributed to important changes in scientific thinking about prehistoric life and the history of the Earth.
Caroline Herschel was an astronomer who discovered many comets.
Amos Tversky was a mathematical psychologist with no formal schooling in mathematics.
James Croll, FRS, 19th-century Scottish scientist.
George Smith Assyriologist who discovered and deciphered the Gilgamesh epic in 1872, without any university or other higher education.
Alan Watts, lecturer and writer in philosophy and religion at various colleges and institutes.
Great to see the bankrupted, ex-CEO, has joined Weight Watchers!!
Butterball Montano (the slimmed down version)
The shareholders voted to kick out the "Drunkard" back in 2013. I thought that you as an expert on VT would have realized that minor detail
That's great Johnny. I guess you'll be posting some evidence to back up your assertions
2020 is definitely going to be the year of Venturis Therapeutics.
Patent portfolio increasing exponentially, new therapies, clinical trials kicking off again. It's non-stop.
"Montano & his cronies - $1.8bn down to $40m
Wallen, Flaa & Gordon - $40m to $6bn
The rescue trio are rockstars!! "
Clown Car Special
I tried to get a copy of the valuation that was done by an independent 3rd party, but it was a no go. It may be made public shortly I've been told. If the share price came out at $20 per share & there is over 300m shares in issue then VT has been valued at over $6 billion. WOW!!
No wonder Dan is pissed. When VT was rescued by Wallen, Gordon & Flaa it was valued at around $40m. Now it's $6bn & Montano has nada. OUCH!!!!!
It shows how corrupt markets can be. I know you are correct, Slalom, the stuff on here is childs play in comparison. Our ex-CEO is small potatoes compared to what AveXis faced. I just realized that no one has ever pointed out any errors in the video that circulated on here.
History of Dan Montano
Soon, very soon.
Great news. Shittya is closing its doors. Dan (STILL A BANKRUPT) Montano has been ordered to close the doors of SHITTYA.
His cronies are being forced into personal bankruptcy by the Judge's damages order against them. OUCH, OUCH, OUCH!!!!!!!
Does anyone have any feedback from the meetings they had at the JP Morgan conference in San Francisco? I think it finished yesterday.
Just to let you know I call one of the directors every few weeks & never get an answer BUT always get a callback. It's Grant Gordon who is the founder & a director of Venturis. I think we should refer to it as VT from now on. Half the letters of the old abbreviated name but 3 times the company!!
I just checked the last presentation I saw. It's from October 2019. It says that CVBT/Venturis had 4 patents & 27 pending. So in the last quarter they have added 3 patents & have an extra 4 pending. They are on fire. This is exactly what big pharma looks for blockbuster therapies with patent protection. In the email I got a few days ago announcing the new name they pointed out that AveXis & The Medicines Co each had 1 patent & were bought out by Novartis for a combined value of almost $18bn!!
Incredible.
Investmentcrazy - I haven't seen a Venturis presentation yet. Where did you get it?
Can you post a link to it? I thought Venturis had 5 patents. 7 is great. The last conversation I had with my "friend" was that they were about to announce a deal with a entity overseas which will add yet another patent to the portfolio and at the same time be a game changer for Venturis. What do you think, Walhall? 7 or 8 patents with 31 pending is major in biotech, isn't it.
All opinions/news welcome but especially from you, Walhall?
I PREDICT THAT 2020 WILL BE A BLOCKBUSTER FOR CVBT
Thanks John. Keep up the good work
I had heard
That there could be a decision in the next few weeks. I am pretty sure that most of the people named were ex-employees that were still waving the old flag. Sad that they could still be led astray, they really believed in the old guard. I believe however, that they all hold shares, at least they can go after their shareholding for damages.
I know most will think they deserve what is coming but I for one would just like to leave the past in the past, and see the company succeed for all of us. If the old guard could just let it go...
True Opportunity for CVBT
This is why we invested in CVBT! True science and potential treatment to help people, with unlimited upside potential!
Go! CVBT!!
Bridge Completed Towards End of the Year With IPO in 1st or 2nd Quarter 2020
From my sources, I hear that the target is the bridge financing to prime the trials should be done by year end 2019. With the IPO soon to follow in 1st or 2nd quarter 2020!
No it is not North Korea! Bunk info!
RELIABLE SOURCES
I think it is important to have reliable sources. I know for a fact that some stories are completely false!! Where do they get their information from?
I speak weekly to a close source to the company and know for a fact that the funding is not coming from Korea. Is there only one investment and private bank in all of Asia? I think not.
Calvin and other board members have years of relationships working with banks around the world. A benefit of being in Oil and Gas! I guess if a New York real estate developer can become President, than it could be possible for a Texas Oil Man to successfully run a US Biotech. Guess we will see. With the level of talent he has put in place, I take the bet. Besides what do us old investors have to loose? Oh, that is right. Nothing!
However, to each there own but some may have missed their calling and their imagination might be better spent on writing a television series for Netflix.
This does not surprise me, Thanks for the Full Story
I have business experience like this as well. I wish it wasn't so but we live a litigious society where everyone wants to get their pound of flesh.
I do not think it is unreasonable to file Chapter 11 to reorganize. Many businesses do it every year. I also think it is interesting that Calvin or Tauren transferred the money years prior to the trouble with that group.
It sound very scrupulous the way it is being described on here. But as with everything there are always two sides to every story.
Looks like things are looking up for CVBT!
It is Very Well Done!
Yes, I have seen it and it is very well done. I had also heard that the Phase 2 Wound Healing trial is complete with 100% closure! That is incredible and will help many people and should be extremely profitable! I wonder if Merck would be a potential partner during or after this?
They are supposed to be preparing to move to Phase 3 after the IPO. I keep watching [url][/url][tag]https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?recrs=ab&cond=&term=FGF1&cntry=&state=&city=&dist=[/tag]
Appreciate Reading About AveXis!!
I had heard about other successful biotech buyouts, but not about AveXis! Thank you! Once I read this I went and did further research, very interesting!
I wonder who could possibly look at CVBT for this type of opportunity? I only speak for myself but this is another reason I invested into CVBT. I figured the further along they get the more possibility of just this type transaction.
Let Hope!!
Why CVBT is NOT headed for Liquidation
For some reason my comment disputing claims on here keep being deleted. I thought this message board was open for discussions about facts. I will have to reach out to Investor Hub admin because I feel that certain moderators are trying to control the narrative on this board.
A message on the board keeps talking about “fraud”. Yet refuses to answer the basic question of “do you understand what Fraudulent Transfer means?”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraudulent_conveyance I hope this helps educate you.
Take the time to read up on the case. It is being grossly misinterpreted on this board. The case referred to that a poster on this board keeps referring to has been extended by the petitioner (the trustee) who isn’t an independent party but is the same party as the creditor. Judge Hale, a graduate of LSU, appointed the creditor, also a LSU graduate, as the trustee. More than highly unusual and certainly not independent.
There has been no “forensic accountant” appointed by the trustee/creditor. This is more misinformation. The background of the case is that Mr. Wallen who owned 100% of Tauren transferred assets from the company which he owns 100% of approximately 2 and a half years prior to the bankruptcy and that’s what the creditor is trying to claw back. The reason for the continual extensions is that the creditor and Wallen are negotiating a settlement between them.
That is what happens with a fraudulent conveyance case. I hope this helps educate certain people about what is going on.
Reread CVBTECH’s posts that explain things succinctly but the anti-Wallen person keeps conveniently ignoring time after time.
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=150474761
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=150474667
The information above comes from talking to people who are close to CVBT and then doing due diligence to prove it out.
Thank you for your Input!!
I had heard similar things. I have a contact who is close to the company which I how I get most of my data. Until the company is public again, that is what we have to rely on.
Please post if you have new info and I will do the same.
LETS UNDERSTAND WHAT FRAUDULENT TRANSFER MEANS
as referred by another poster but chooses not to discuss.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraudulent_conveyance I hope this helps educate you.
Please take the time to read up on the case. It has been grossly misinterpreted for this board. The case referred to that a poster on this board keeps referring to has been extended by the petitioner (the trustee) who isn’t an independent party but is the same party as the creditor.
Judge Hale, a graduate of LSU, appointed the creditor, also a LSU graduate, as the trustee. More than highly unusual and certainly not independent. There has been no “forensic accountant” appointed by the trustee/creditor. This is more misinformation.
The background of the case is that Mr. Wallen who owned 100% of Tauren transferred assets from the company which he owns 100% of approximately 2 and a half years prior to the bankruptcy and that’s what the creditor is trying to claw back.
The reason for the continual extensions is that the creditor and Wallen are negotiating a settlement between them. That is what happens with a fraudulent conveyance case. I hope this helps educate certain people about what is going on.
Reread CVBTECH’s posts that explain things succinctly but the anti-Wallen person keeps conveniently ignoring time after time.
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=150474761
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=150474667
The information above comes from talking to people who are close to CVBT and then doing due diligence to prove it out.