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janice shell

09/16/10 6:54 PM

#317069 RE: Investorman #317067

How about this?

...a shareholders appreciation party was planned to be celebrated in Las Vegas, Nevada to thank the shareholders, to give them an opportunity to meet company personnel, and to announce an agreed-upon merger, with another public company, U.S. CANADIAN MINERALS INC. On the eve of the party celebration, Defendants GLASSMAN, ATKINS, and CAMPOS, inter alia, had an order placed on CMKM preventing any public disclosure of anticipated mergers or other development information.

Really? As I recall, an announcement was indeed expected. I don't remember whether people thought it would be about a merger with USCA, but that seems likely.

However, I know of no such "order". The order in question was the trading suspension of USCA, which in no way "prevented" any public disclosure.
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janice shell

09/16/10 7:06 PM

#317071 RE: Investorman #317067

And when, exactly, did Chris Cox ever say anything at all about CMKX? Does Krazy Al just consider anything the Xers tell him to be fact?
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TSXminer

09/16/10 7:07 PM

#317072 RE: Investorman #317067

More lies exposed in Krazy Al's phoney writ:

- According to Saskatchewan Energy and Resources files, CMKX never owned a single claim in Saskatchewan.

- No sale of Fort-a-la-Corne claims have ever been recorded to "a Chinese company".

- And of course, there never was a "sting". Krazy Al's revised complaint was supposed to supply some evidence. There is none presented in his latest version.
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dia duit

09/16/10 9:58 PM

#317113 RE: Investorman #317067

That complaint is filled with false information and "facts" that we know are incorrect.

Like Roger Glenn being the drafter of Sarbannes-Oxley which he wasn't.

And Al alleges that CMKX owned the race car which they didn't


The irony is Christopher Cox was still a member of congress when Sarbanes–Oxley Act was passed. Cox knows a thing or two about writing legislation. Al is suing the folks who know all about Sarbanes–Oxley, including who drafted the Act.

Not only that, but the SEC/DOJ both took depositions and fully investigated what transpired with CMKX. So they know what CMKX owned and what they didn't.

If I were a plaintiff in a lawsuit and my attorney was unable to get simple facts like these correct, I would be extremely pissed.


http://www.sec.gov/about/commissioner/cox.htm

SEC Biography:
Chairman Christopher Cox


For 10 of his 17 years in Congress, Chairman Cox served in the Majority Leadership of the U.S. House of Representatives. He was Chairman of the House Policy Committee; Chairman of the Committee on Homeland Security; Chairman of the Select Committee on U.S. National Security; Chairman of the Select Committee on Homeland Security (the predecessor to the permanent House Committee); Chairman of the Task Force on Capital Markets; and Chairman of the Task Force on Budget Process Reform.

In addition, he served in a leadership capacity as a senior Member of every committee with jurisdiction over investor protection and U.S. capital markets, including the House Energy and Commerce Committee (as Vice Chairman of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee); the Financial Services Committee; the Government Reform Committee (as Vice Chairman of the full Committee); the Joint Economic Committee; and the Budget Committee.

Among the significant laws he authored were the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, which protects investors from fraudulent lawsuits, and the Internet Tax Freedom Act, which protects Internet users from multiple and discriminatory taxation. His legislative efforts to eliminate the double tax on shareholder dividends — the subject of a thesis he authored at Harvard University in 1977 — led to the enactment in May 2003 of legislation that cut the double tax by more than half.

Chairman Cox also served as Co-Chairman of the Bipartisan Study Group on Enhancing Multilateral Export Controls, which published a unanimous report in 2001. In 1994 he was appointed by President Clinton to the Bipartisan Commission on Entitlement and Tax Reform, which published its unanimous report in 1995.