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Jayyy

07/29/17 7:16 AM

#10116 RE: old biohf guy #10115

wrong ...again. Marks Beware if this organized group of fraudsters. MARKS TAKE NOTE. ADD THIS to the list of phony, lying press releases! It over a year a a half since this lie was made to try and gin up stock sales. Glad the SEC has been notified
WARNING-The website for this fraud. www.pharmaroth.com has BEEN shut down.
http://www.marketwired.com/press-release/pharmaroth-labs-announces-new-sales-agreement-in-india-otc-pink-roth-2069188.htm

Add it to this list of lies

In addition to the FDA DENIAL and the disastrous financials this scam uses phony press releases to try and gin up stock sales and fleece hapless Marks.. Here are just some of the LIES for this fraudulent scheme. All by Mike Irving and his band of fraudsters
ALL FACTS....... AND LIES
AND LIES
http://www.pharmaroth.com/PR_Fero_Industries_Signs_New_Distribution_Agreement_to_Expand_Sucanon_Distribution_in_the_Middle_East.asp

ihttp://www.pharmaroth.com/PR_Fero_Industries_Signs_First_Sucanon_Distribution_Agreement_for_the_Middle_East.asp

http://www.feroindustries.com/PR_Fero_%20Industries_Expands_Sucanon_Distribution_in_Mexico.asp

http://www.pharmaroth.com/PR_PharmaRoth_Labs_Inc_Announces_New_Distribution_Agreement_in_China.asp

Jayyy

07/29/17 8:28 AM

#10117 RE: old biohf guy #10115

Some of the dishonest tricks that you may encounter with this notorious fraud include:

Misleading information: Whether through a free e-mail newsletter, press releases, or a comment on a message board, these shady promoters know that they don’t need to trick everyone, just a few unwary investors is enough. They may stretch the truth, or flat out lie, to make a penny stocks company look extremely compelling.

Focusing on (ridiculous) potential: Instead of talking about how a company is almost bankrupt, or generates no revenues, the promoters focus on how its product — an engine that runs on gravity, a cure for that major disease — could change the world (even if it borders on the ridiculous). Inexperienced investors may fall for the promotion and think that the shares are a great investment.

Pump-and-dump schemes: A common practice with penny stocks, pump-and-dump schemes involve dishonest promoters who buy inexpensive shares in nearly nonoperational companies. The promoters talk up the shares and generate buying interest in the stock. That demand can drive the prices higher, until the characters behind the scheme sell all their shares and take their profits. Without the promotion, the stock collapses back toward the real value, usually near zero.