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Sandan

08/28/07 11:15 AM

#66263 RE: Leonardo1974 #66260

Leo you have perfectly described FM business practice...Go get him..... The current management has been straight forward so far...

Find any pumping posts yet that you accused me of remember what you say can come back and bite you when you make false accusations!!!

Sandan
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learningasitgoes

08/28/07 12:33 PM

#66280 RE: Leonardo1974 #66260

I believe that within the next 12 - 18 months this company will turn around the status FM and BA left it in a year ago. I am not happy with the status of the pps currently, but am smart enough to understand the efforts being made by the company to become a viable stock.

You seem to feel the company was better off with FM in charge and watching your money being siphoned off to one of his other holdings. Is this true?
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lippy

08/28/07 10:14 PM

#66371 RE: Leonardo1974 #66260

Slander is spoken, Libel is printed.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Journalist, reporter, editor, news presenter, photo journalist, Columnist, visual journalist

v • d • e
"Slander" and "Libel" redirect here. For other uses, see Slander (disambiguation) and Libel (disambiguation).
For "liable", see Liability.

In law, defamation is the communication of a statement that makes a false claim, expressly stated or implied to be factual, that may harm the reputation of an individual, business, product, group, government or nation. Most jurisdictions allow legal actions, civil and/or criminal, to deter various kinds of defamation and retaliate against criticism.

The common law origins of defamation lie in the torts of slander (harmful statement in a transitory form, especially speech) and libel (harmful statement in a fixed medium, especially writing but also a picture, sign, or electronic broadcast), each of which gives a common law right of action.

"Defamation" is the general term used internationally, and is used in this article where it is not necessary to distinguish between "slander" and "libel". Libel and slander both require publication. The fundamental distinction between libel and slander lies solely in the form in which the defamatory matter is published. If the offending material is published in some fleeting form, as by spoken words or sounds, sign language, gestures and the like, then this is slander. If it is published in more durable form, for example in written words, film, compact disc (CD), DVD, internet blogging and the like, then it is considered libel.

A Libel, within the context of admiralty law, is the equivalent of a lawsult, and the "libellant" (or libalent) is the equivalent of a plaintiff in an action at law.