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duffys

08/17/06 12:50 PM

#3157 RE: sbc357 #3156

Those are very good questions SBC. Maybe Kobi and Dan Fisher, The former CEO of the MIDL scam who absconded with the assets of the shell, And went to the Bahamas where there are no extradition treaties with the U.S. are sitting on the same beach smoking Cuban cigars and sipping pina colada's. People involved with MIDL were also involved with CBQI now CHDT. Could Howard have taken an extended holiday(not allowed to use the other nasty word) with them? Only time will tell I guess.

duffys

08/17/06 11:52 PM

#3158 RE: sbc357 #3156

Here is another good article to read. These clowns were selling products to the US Government. I hope Howie is on the up & up. He supposedly sold shares into his own PR pump and I do believe that the SEC frowns on that kind of behavior. More than once I have seen the SEC halt trading in an issue while it did an investigation on it.
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/suspensions.shtml

Former executives of US body armor firm arrested
Thu Aug 17, 12:55 PM ET



U.S. authorities arrested two former top executives of a major body armor supplier to the U.S. military and law enforcement agencies on Thursday and charged them with criminal securities fraud and insider trading.

Federal prosecutors alleged former Chief Financial Officer Dawn Schlegel and former Chief Operating Officer Sandra Hatfield manipulated DHB Industries Inc.'s books "to reap millions of dollars of profits through insider trading."

The lawsuit was a fresh blow to DHB. The U.S. military last year recalled thousands of protective vests sold by DHB's Point Blank Body Armor Inc. unit on quality concerns.

The company was recently delisted from the American Stock Exchange. Last month it placed Chief Executive David Brooks on indefinite leave pending the outcome of investigations.

Shares in Pompano Beach, Florida,-based DHB were down 2.6 percent at $3.00 each at midday in Pink Sheets trading.

Prosecutors on Thursday accused Schlegel and Hatfield of inflating DHB's earnings and profit margins between 2003 and 2005 to meet Wall Street expectations.

The two former executives also sold thousands of DHB shares "based on inside information, netting a profit of over $8 million," prosecutors charged.

U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York Roslynn Mauskopf said, "As a result of the fraud scheme, the investing public lost millions of dollars while the defendants lined their own pockets with a fortune in ill-gotten gains."

Attorneys for the two former DHB executives could not immediately be reached for comment.

The charges in the criminal indictment carry maximum sentences of up to 25 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Prosecutors said they are also seeking forfeiture of $8 million in assets belonging to the defendants.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said it also charged the two former executives with civil securities fraud.

The SEC said Schlegel and Hatfield "routinely overstated the value of the company's inventory and directed the booking of numerous fraudulent journal entries in order to reduce the company's cost of goods sold."

"By manipulating DHB's gross profit margin, Schlegel and Hatfield knew that investors would be given a false portrait of DHB's operating results," said SEC Enforcement Division Director Linda Thomsen in a statement.

The SEC said its investigation is continuing.