That would be wise, however, that's not how securities law works.
It is illegal to lie about securities such as NNVC -- no matter how outlandish the lie. It's very difficult to prove, generally, that somebody "knowingly" lied vs. made a simple mistake or gave an opinion or simply shared an unverified rumor. However, in the rare event that the unbelievable moron actually types out a full, detailed confession -- it's an open and shut case.
The SEC and DOJ have busted plenty of rumor authors before. They are done all the time, most notably during the 2008 crisis false rumors were spread as bear raids. Sometimes all it takes is one phone call to get them started: "Blue horseshoe hates NNVC -- CEO just got arrested for child molestation."
Since he is 100% innocent of that knowingly false crime, it would be illegal to email somebody and give the knowingly false claim that NNVC's CEO committed child molestation -- or that he committed fraud in Europe.
No offense, but I can't believe I even have to explain this. The SEC is very useful and patient at answering investor questions -- call their hotline and ask them how they feel about investors emailing knowingly false info and if that is a major securities violation or not.
SEC Toll-Free Investor Information Service:
1-800-SEC-0330