1. They announced a joint venture for a fake gold mine, the description of which they cut and pasted from another company's website.
2. They announced a fake buyout offer from a Haitian fast food cook living in China which was written on a fake letterhead using a fake address and a fake company name with no contact number.
3. The signatures on the joint venture agreement letter and the fake buyout proposal were forged fakes.
4. They announced all was contingent on a fake Ni 43-101 they would upload to their website. When they finally uploaded it, it was discovered to be an altered version of a Ni 43-101 that a geologist had written on a different set of properties. The Geologist has now reported the sordid affair to the proper Canadian authorities.
5. The stock is crashing because all of the offshore paper they issued to a couple of mobbed up tax shelter corporations located in the Bahamas and Belize is being dumped faster than newbies can be found to buy it.
6. The CEO thanks everyone who buys because he is in a legal morass ever since he stole the signal from Direct TV and fraudulently sold it to household customers in Mesa Arizona and has had to live on the Welfare payments his wife receives in the state of Arizona. To say he is desperate for money is an understatement.
7. The filing at pink sheets supposedly shows a financing offer coming from this same fake company in China that was used to make the phony buyout offer, but there is one problem. The offer was faxed from Canada and the BTDG scammers forgot to whiteout the fax number on the paper before they scanned it and uploaded it.