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Re: Slojab post# 12425

Monday, 06/17/2013 4:08:11 AM

Monday, June 17, 2013 4:08:11 AM

Post# of 82136
I would strongly suggest that this one sided version of the story be removed as a sticky and be replaced with both sides of the story including the SEC report that shows the IFUS CEO Marc Walthers was not the bad guy as your links suggest, but in fact he was the one that turned them all into the SEC for fraud and felony crimes that they were convicted of.

Does any one else think that is a good, fair way to list this DD in a sticky note here?

Then IFUS IHUB readers here could read the entire story in one sticky note.

If you agree, I suggest you rewrite your post and describe both sides of the story with ALL the links to the story, and let readers here decide for themselves how this affects their desire to hold or not hold IFUS shares?

I am holding my shares, and buying more!!



Information posted on the boards that clearly stated that Mr. Walther, now the IFUS CEO, was the whistleblower.... the end result is seen in the following PRESS RELEASE FOUND ON THE SEC SITE...

IFUS CEO Marc Walther's efforts lead to 10 people being sanctioned, fined and banned, some of them life time bans... re public companies..

Bravo to him.. Obviously his efforts were probably too late for those shareholders.. but who better to have on our team than someone who recognizes and reports illegal activities... Bravo !!! Click on the link to the OFFCIAL SEC SITE AND READ THEIR LITIGATTION RELEASE.. THESE PEOPLE WERE INVOLVED IN one company that IS GONE AND one APPEARS TO BE ON THE WAY OUT..

http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2012/2012-82.htm




SEC Charges Florida Stock Scheme Mastermind and 10 Cohorts

Quote:FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2012-82

Washington, D.C., May 2, 2012 — The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a Florida man and 10 cohorts involved in two separate schemes to illegally sell stock, including one that sought to capitalize on circumstances in Haiti following the earthquake that destroyed much of the country's infrastructure in January 2010.

The SEC alleges that Kevin Sepe of Miami masterminded the schemes involving two microcap companies — Recycle Tech and HydroGenetics — with the help of three licensed attorneys and several others who collectively reaped illegal profits of more than $3.5 million. Aventura, Fla.-based attorney Ronny Halperin assisted Sepe in both schemes. The Recycle Tech scheme involved a promotional campaign to pump the price and volume of the purported home container building company's stock in the wake of the Haiti earthquake. The HydroGenetics scheme took millions of unregistered shares of the company — purportedly in the business of acquiring emerging alternative energy companies — and improperly converted its debt into free-trading shares that were dumped on the investing public.

Six of the 11 individuals involved have agreed to settlements ordering them and companies they own to collectively pay more than $3.2 million.

"Sepe, Halperin, and others chose to ignore the laws governing stock sales and play by their own set of rules," said Eric I. Bustillo, Director of the SEC's Miami Regional Office. "Some of these individuals were attorneys and corporate officers who should have known better, and we will continue to crack down on any such gatekeepers who put investors at risk with their harmful activities to manipulate the markets."........

READ ON....


Ambition with out knowledge is like ship in dry dock. Going nowhere fast!