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Re: sneak post# 27701

Sunday, 10/29/2006 4:25:11 PM

Sunday, October 29, 2006 4:25:11 PM

Post# of 37776
SNEAK, Any thoughts on what would get faith back into buyers?
Though many of my shares are in the .004's I added all the way down to .0008's (or there abouts) Now really in the hole looking for daylight.

I followed Muller for a bit knowing that I had divvies on the way and bought some as well but I did not like Muller linked to these guys (stockster) and the 10,000,000 shares that stockster somehow acquired and sold. After that I found the old article from 2004 (posted below) involving Kenneth Eade, president of Soleil Film (now IREI). Maybe nothing but sure raised an eyebrow to the stockster/muller thing.

http://www.antandsons.com/therealdeal/secchargesthestockster_080306/

I agree with you that this company should be MUCH higher and has A LOT to offer but the shareholders are not to blame for the current price. If you were around when the first RS was announced and the shareholder were pissed and bashing with the landslide (many bought in the .004’s +). James was asked on Subpenny Radio about calling off the RS and his answer was that if the RS was called off they would not be able to reinstate the RS in the near future and that would be illegal to buyers jumping back in on that news. So...the wording was RS would not be implemented at this time. Key words...at this time. Guess that wording gave them the OK to call off split and the go ahead again. Which was thought very unethical by many shareholders...this is the way I remembered anyway.

IMO..fix the company and we go to the moon. Otherwise where do we go from here?
SNEAK, do you think this was fairness played out to the shareholders? Just wondering what some other thoughts are and why everyone bailed.

And can anyone explain why we needed muller media when IPEI already owned Whiskers? (PR from 2/7/06 in the ABOUT section showed Whiskers as part of IPRE already)

Investorstockalert.com Announces Profile Launch of Imperia Entertainment, Inc.
WELLINGTON, Fla., Feb. 7, 2006 (PRIMEZONE) -- Ken Weiner, Publisher of Investorstockalert.com, today announced profile coverage of Imperia Entertainment, Inc. (Pink Sheets:IPRE). The Profile is a comprehensive look at the company's growth initiative. You can view the complete profile at http://www.investorstockalert.com/investor-stock/profiles/ipre/index.php
ABOUT IMPERIA ENTERTAINMENT
Imperia Entertainment, Inc. (www.imperiaentertainment.com) is a company which has emerged as a player in the area of independent film production and distribution, once monopolized by the major film studios. In conjunction with its distribution subsidiary, Imperia International Distribution, the company engages in investing in and producing and distributing full-length feature films. Along with its equity interest in "All That I Need" (www.allthatineed.net), released in theaters last month, and which will go into DVD release February 18, 2006, its feature film in production, "Say It In Russian," written by Larry Gross ("True Crime," "48 Hours," "Another 48 Hours"), directed by Jeff Celentano ("Primary Suspect," "Gunshy") and edited by David Rawlins ("Saturday Night Fever"), and "Whiskers," the family movie about an intelligent seal, produced by Jordan Klein ("Flipper," "Jaws," "Splash"), the Company has amassed an impressive media library, including the award-winning "Autograph" television series (www.autograph.tv), which airs on the Colours Television Network, and the newly acquired "Faces and Names" television series.



Phony Faxes Are the Latest Stock Scam

Mon Dec 27 2004, 1:39 PM ET Business - AP

WASHINGTON - 'Tis the season to be giving. But when it comes to purported stock tips ending up on your fax machine, you better keep your cash in your stockings.

First came the e-mails. Then there were the voicemails. Now, the new danger lurking for unsuspecting investors are faxes. The scheme always works the same way: You're the unintended recipient of a hot stock tip about an unknown company about to be discovered.

Earlier in December, handwritten faxes addressed to a "Dr. Mitchel" have began arriving on fax machines across the nation, begging the doctor to turn on his cell phone so that he can place a trade in a stock that's about to triple in price. The fax appears to have been sent by "Chris," who according to the body of the fax is Mitchel's financial planner. There is no other identification on the page. A telephone number listed at the bottom to call if the fax was received in error is not functioning.

Enough investors who received such faxes recently believed they had inadvertently stumbled onto a great stock tip, particularly since a postscript to the scrawled note says, "You'd better be good to me this Christmas. No other stock broker has given you back-to-back wins four times in a row."

In the days after the faxes were sent, the stock prices of the companies mentioned in the different versions of the fax took off on heavy volume, indeed showing strong gains.

The only problem, according to regulators: Though the stock symbols are real, there is no Dr. Mitchel, no Chris, and the fax reeks of a classic pump-and-dump scam run by someone seeking to push up the stock prices for their own gain.

Boca Raton, Fla., securities attorney Richard Stephens was one of the recipients of the Soleil Film fax on Dec. 17. He said initially his wife believed they had mistakenly received a stock tip intended for someone else, but Stephens, who represents investors who have been wronged by their stockbrokers, knew that the fax was a scam.

When he showed it to relatives without experience in the securities industry, they told him it looked like a tip that they would want to act upon.

"People who are not sophisticated will see it and take it at face value," he said.

Regulators said they have seen a pattern of similar faxes since mid-December, but declined to comment on whether all were generated by the same scam artists or whether the companies identified in the faxes were aware of the scam.

So far, there appears to be at least three versions of the same fax circulating with the ticker symbols of Infinium Labs Inc., AVL Global Inc. and Soleil Film Inc.

All are dated Dec. 15.

Infinium Labs' stock, for example, finished over-the-counter Bulletin Board trading last week at 74 cents a share, more than triple its late price of 20 cents on Dec. 14.

Over the same time frame, Soleil Film's stock jumped about 43 percent to 60 cents in OTC trading.

AVL Global's stock was at $3 in late OTC trading on Dec. 14 and traded as much as 18 percent higher at $3.55 on Dec. 20. However, the stock has since slipped back to levels around $2.85 a share.

Kenneth Eade, president of Soleil Film, a Santa Barbara, Calif., film production company, said he wasn't aware of any scam involving his company's stock, nor had he been contacted by regulators. He said Soleil's stock, which underwent a 30-to-1 reverse split earlier this year, has shown a steady increase in price as "awareness of the company and its projects have increased."

Soleil Film, whose most recent movie project cast Eade's wife and former company president Agata Gotova in a role, stopped filing SEC forms in October after it lost its quotation on Nasdaq's Over The Counter Bulletin Board. Eade said Soleil is working to apply to go back on the OTCBB.

AVL Global, a manufacturer of products to track vehicles, said the company was unaware of the fax. "We never authorized anything like this," said AVL Global's Chief Executive Officer Tyler Fisher.

Kevin Bachus, President and Chief Operating Officer of Infinium Labs, a Sarasota, Fla.-based game company, said the company "was in no way involved in, and certainly does not condone the use of misleading information in faxes or any other media."

This summer, the SEC took the unusual step to alert investors about a similar scam, which it dubbed "Vicemails." In that case, a caller pretending to have misdialed a friend's telephone number left "hot" stock tips about several companies on voicemails all over the country.

"These kind of faxes are absolutely suspicious. Investors should treat them like they would a flyer under their windshield wiper and throw them away as fast as possible," said John Reed Stark, chief of the SEC's Office of Internet Enforcement.

Stark said that whoever sent these faxes to boost up stock prices was committing securities fraud. "There is a trading trail, an electronic trail and a money trail. We're going to catch up with them," he predicted.