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Re: JoeLahr post# 145573

Monday, 11/23/2015 6:15:04 PM

Monday, November 23, 2015 6:15:04 PM

Post# of 148335

Joe Flores called me about five months ago (twice). Made huge promises, and I'm a nobody. Nice guy, but scared to death of Kerry. Then disappeared. Joe! You reading this? What did I do? YOU called me.

How did he get your telephone number? What was Joe's role when he called you? Was he promoting the stock?

Did he say why he was supposedly afraid of Kerry Thacker?

Kerry and PVEC, now DSUS, have frequently tried to collect as much contact and personal information as possible about shareholders such as requiring extensive personal and contact information in order to be "verified" to receive the Series C Preferred Shares (claiming that the NOBO list they got from Broadstreet Financial was not reliable).

More recently DSUS claimed to be running a sweepstakes where the winner would receive a free drone. In order to enter the online contest, significant personal information including one's birth date was required. I never saw any indication of a winner and am surprised that no one ever mentioned it. I suspect that the drawing was a ruse and just another of the thinly-veiled attempts to gain contact information for less than legitimate reasons.

People who submitted contact information to the company (as PVEC oras DSUS) or to Kerry as IR for whatever reason (obtain Series C certificates, online sweepstakes, etc,), should beware that they may be contacted with various investment solicitations -- especially if they were seen to have been enthusiastic about or at least trusting of the many false and misleading claims. People who gave contact information that included their birth date should be especially careful about investment solicitations or even the possibility of identity theft.

As I have previously warned on this forum when Kerry and Jason first started suggesting the people send their contact information, verified contact information of penny stock investors is valuable to promoters and can be sold as they are much more fertile than cold-calling and spam blasts.

Verified contact information of people seen as susceptible to investment scams is especially valuable to those who perpetrate them. Unfortunately, some people are prone to fall for multiple scams or to continue to invest in a scheme that is clearly questionable or fraudulent.