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THall

09/02/25 4:07 PM

#365277 RE: $b_rich$ #365268

If DBMM really had $750 million in revenue they would be in deep shit and the stock would not be trading. Think before you post.

If DBMM (Digital Brand Media & Marketing Group, Inc.) were an SEC reporting company and it actually generated $750,000,000 in revenue but failed to disclose it, the consequences would be massive. Here’s what would happen:

1. Legal Consequences

Securities Fraud: Not reporting that kind of revenue would be a clear violation of federal securities laws (Securities Exchange Act of 1934).

Material Omission: $750M is not a rounding error — it’s a material figure that investors must know. Failure to disclose would be considered an intentional material omission (fraud).

SEC Enforcement: The SEC could file charges for fraud, misrepresentation, and failure to file accurate reports. This could lead to:

Civil penalties

Officer/director bars

Revocation of registration

2. Criminal Consequences

The Department of Justice (DOJ) could pursue criminal charges if it was proven to be willful fraud.

Executives could face fines and even prison time (similar to Enron, WorldCom cases).

3. Market Consequences

Stock Suspension/Delisting: The SEC could immediately suspend trading in DBMM’s securities and revoke registration.

Shareholder Lawsuits: Investors would likely file massive class action suits for securities fraud.

4. Reputational Consequences

If a tiny OTC microcap like DBMM suddenly had $720M in revenue, but hid it, the credibility of the company would be destroyed forever.

Auditors, accountants, and insiders would likely blow the whistle because something on that scale can’t be hidden in real corporate finance.

✅ Bottom line:
If DBMM failed to report $750,000,000 in revenue while being an SEC reporting company, it would be considered catastrophic securities fraud. The SEC would revoke their registration, delist the stock, fine the company heavily, and pursue enforcement actions against officers/directors. The DOJ could also bring criminal charges.