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Re: eliaman post# 7668

Thursday, 07/05/2007 11:54:59 AM

Thursday, July 05, 2007 11:54:59 AM

Post# of 18151
Buyinns.net wroked fine for Cyberkey Solutions.

BUYINS.NET Identifies Short Selling of 102 Million Shares of CyberKey Solutions Stock
Market Wire, October, 2006

CyberKey Solutions, Inc. (PINKSHEETS: CKYS) wishes to inform its shareholders and the public that BUYINS.NET has determined that the total aggregate number of CyberKey shares shorted from January 2005 to October 2006 is approximately 102 million with an estimated dollar value of $2.3 million.

The SqueezeTrigger price of $0.0227 is the volume-weighted average short price of all short selling in CKYS over that period. A short squeeze began when shares of CKYS closed above $0.0227 and short sellers started losing money. To access SqueezeTrigger prices ahead of potential short squeezes visit http://www.buyins.net . This information is valuable in determining the precise point at which short sellers go out-of-the-money and start losing on their short and naked short trades.

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Grand Jury Criminally Indicts Cyberkey CEO for Stock Fraud and Cover-Up


U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Litigation Release No. 20171 / June 29, 2007
SEC v. Cyberkey Solutions, Inc. and James E. Plant, Civ. Action No. 07 1084 (CMR) (E.D. Pa, filed March 20, 2007); Crim no. 07-375
Grand Jury Criminally Indicts Cyberkey CEO for Stock Fraud and Cover-Up
The Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") today announced that a Pennsylvania federal grand jury criminally indicted James E. Plant, the CEO of CyberKey Solutions, Inc. ("CyberKey"), on charges of securities fraud and lying to the SEC during its probe of a scheme Plant orchestrated to pump up the price of Cyberkey's shares. Plant is alleged to have given false testimony to the Commission about Cyberkey's purported business dealings with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security ("DHS"), the receipt of payments under a DHS contract, and a purported business relationship with an intermediary company.

The two-count indictment charges Plant with orchestrating a fraud scheme in which he personally made in excess of one million dollars selling Cyberkey shares at inflated prices while lying to the public about Cyberkey's business prospects and management.

According to the indictment, Plant was responsible for disseminating, in an effort artificially to inflate the price of Cyberkey's shares, numerous false and misleading press releases between December 8, 2005 and March 15, 2007. These press releases contained materially false and misleading statements concerning 1) a fictitious $24.5 million purchase order that CyberKey supposedly received from DHS, when as Plant knew, that DHS purchase order did not exist; 2) revenues and profits that CyberKey had supposedly realized from the fictitious DHS purchase order, when as Plant knew, CyberKey did not receive, and did not expect to receive, any revenues or profits from the fictitious DHS purchase order; 3) Plant's false representations that Cyberkey's financial statements were in the process of being audited and would be released in the near future, when as Plant knew, CyberKey did not expect to release audited financial statements in that time period; and/or 4) Plant's false representations that the failure of the company to realize revenues from the DHS contract was the result of both improper accounting practices used by a company officer, and a third-party's actions to circumvent CyberKey as the middleman of the DHS purchase order, when as Plant knew, the lack of revenues from the DHS purchase order resulted because there was no such purchase order with DHS.

The Commission's civil fraud complaint against Cyberkey and Plant covering the scheme, filed on March 20, 2007, further alleged that CyberKey had no business relationship at all, either directly or indirectly, with DHS, and generated no revenues whatsoever from any such relationship.

Today's criminal indictment charges Plant with securities fraud, in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b), 78ff; and making a false statement to the Commission, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001.

Plant was arrested on March 13, 2007, in St. George, Utah, by agents of the FBI's Philadelphia Economic Crimes Squad and the United States Postal Inspection Service on charges of securities fraud and aiding and abetting securities fraud. One week later, the Commission filed its civil case against Cyberkey and Plant for engaging in an ongoing unregistered offering of Cyberkey shares while promoting the bogus DHS purchase order.

For more information, see Litigation Release No. 20049



http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/2007/lr20171.htm


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