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Wednesday, 11/08/2006 12:06:24 PM

Wednesday, November 08, 2006 12:06:24 PM

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=DJ Joint US-Canada Settlement In Stock-Fraud Case >GRYF
. . By Judith Burns . Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES .

WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--U.S. and provincial authorities in Canada on Wednesday announced simultaneous settlements with two Canadians who allegedly bilked investors in Greyfield Capital Inc. (GRYF), a U.S. firm that claimed to have acquired a Kamloops, British Columbia, car dealership.

Mervin Fiessel, 61 years old, and Robert Doherty, 42, both residents of Kamloops, settled with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the British Columbia Securities Commission without admitting or denying regulators' allegations of fraud and market manipulation. Fiessel was Greyfield's majority shareholder and Doherty purported to be the firm's president.

According to regulators, in the spring of 2005, the men hijacked Greyfield, a Nevada shell company, reincorporated it in Oregon, and issued hundreds of millions of new shares in the firm, which traded over the counter in the Pink Sheets. Regulators said Fiessel sold his own shares in Greyfield while issuing press releases touting its purchase of Autorama, described as fast becoming western Canada's largest car dealership. Regulators said Autorama wasn't even the largest dealership in Kamloops at the time and that Greyfield hadn't paid for Autorama and had no written agreement to purchase it.

When Greyfield's original owners complained to the SEC in July, 2005, U.S. regulators alerted authorities in Canada and suspended trading in Greyfield stock a week later, citing questions about the company's reorganization and the identity of its officers and directors. In a "particularly troubling" response, the SEC said Fiessel and Doherty reacted to the trading halt by issuing more false information to investors.

Joshua Felker, an assistant director with the SEC's enforcement division in Washington, D.C., said the investigation "is very much ongoing with respect to others."

Under the settlement with the SEC, Fiessel and Doherty will be barred from the penny-stock business and from serving as public company officers or directors. Fiessel will return more than $150,000 of allegedly ill-gotten gains and interest, and Doherty will return about $26,000 but will not pay any interest or penalty due to his inability to make the payments, the SEC said. Under the settlement with authorities in British Columbia, Fiessel will pay a fine of C$144,445 and be subject to a market ban.

Attorneys for Fiessel and Doherty couldn't be reached immediately for comment.

- By Judith Burns, Dow Jones Newswires, 202-862-6692; Judith.Burns@dowjones.com .

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

November 08, 2006 12:01 ET (17:01 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 12 01 PM ES

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