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Re: CharlesNet post# 4185

Thursday, 09/29/2011 11:26:30 PM

Thursday, September 29, 2011 11:26:30 PM

Post# of 5961
Incorrect, Charles.


BUYINS.NET affiliates, officers,
directors and employees have not
bought shares of stock discussed in
this opinion but BUYINS.NET has
been paid $1,116 per month by
QPSA



A Buyins.net pump is a sign to shorts to short more. You'll see!


It's not news that Ronk has a regulatory history a mile long, or that he is in the business of helping crappy penny stock companies lure investors--as I described in this item in 2007--but Sharesleuth provides an interesting description of Ronk's pedigree.
Ronk was a stock broker in Southern California before running afoul of regulators.

In 1999, he was fined $50,000 and suspended for 30 days by the NASD. Without admitting or denying the allegations against him, Ronk consented to the entry of findings that he participated in private securities transactions without providing prior written notification to his firm, describing the proposed deals or his role in them.

Ronk's securities registration was later revoked for failure to pay the fine.

Ronk now is proprietor of several web sites, including BuyIns.net and SqueezeTrigger.com, that purport to identify stocks that have been the subject of heavy shorting and are poised to rise in price as traders cover their positions.

Ronk has been one of the most vocal proponents of a theory that a shadowy network of hedge funds and other investors have been driving down the stock prices of U.S. companies through so-called "naked shorting'' of their shares.

Two of the companies that complained most loudly about the issue - Universal Express Inc. and Pegasus Wireless Corp. - later became the subject of SEC cases alleging that they improperly dumped vast amounts of stock on the market, undercutting their own share prices.

True, but Ronk is even more closely tied in to stock scams than that. His Buyins.net suckers in hapless small investors looking for "short squeezes" in crappy penny stocks, including the Utah pump-and-dump Cyberkey Solutions, whose CEO, James E. Plant, was indicted for lying to the SEC about a pump and dump scheme involving his company. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 97 months in prison for promoting his bogus "homeland security" company, witness tampering and obstructing the SEC probe. (What's interesting about the latter charge is that he obstructed the SEC investigation far less blatantly than some other people I know.)

As I said, Abbott has lost his freaking mind.