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AENY: The Dirty Truth behind the Pretty Coal Stock

by Melissa Davis - 1/19/2010 7:49:31 AM

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Last fall, around the same time that British Columbian regulators issued a cease-trading order for Americas Energy Company (AENY.OB) stock, U.S. investors began fielding bullish emails urging them to buy the company’s shares.

The Intelligent Investor Report, a promotional newsletter published by Jarret Wollstein, highlighted AENY (then trading under the ticker symbol TRET) as his top coal pick of 2009 and predicted that the company would be producing more than $100 million worth of coal annually by the end of next year. He portrayed AENY – a shell company with limited operations -- as a likely “10-bagger” for fast-acting investors willing to buy the shares early and then hold onto them for the long term.

If investors read the report closely, however, they would have learned that it was nothing more than a paid advertisement financed by an obscure firm (calling itself Bistro Ltd.) with 1 million shares of AENY stock that could be “publicly traded (sold) at any time.” They would have also seen that Wollstein himself personally collected $10,000 for writing the bullish report.

Since then, Wollstein has followed up with yet another – even rosier – AENY report financed by the mysterious Bistro. This time, Bistro paid a whopping $700,000 for distribution of the newsletter. In the new report, Wollstein abandoned his previous $11 price target for AENY’s stock and replaced it with a $20 projection that he characterized as conservative in nature.

At one point, in fact, Wollstein claimed that AENY could be sitting on coal resources worth more than an eye-popping $700 a share.

“Even aggressively discounting that by 90%, that still puts $70.37 of coal into every share of AENY,” Wollstein proclaimed. “Even if you have to pay $5 a share for AENY, you’re getting a bargain of a buy with huge remaining profit potential.

“Buy AENY immediately,” he concluded, because “the sooner you load up on AENY, the better.”

Wollstein did not respond to a request seeking an interview for this story.

AENY did clear the $5 mark after Wollstein’s latest report, peaking at $5.59 earlier this month. The stock has since taken a hit, however, and now trades for $4.50 a share.

Still, that price looks incredibly generous to some. Based on the company’s latest regulatory filings, which show 20.5 million shares outstanding, AENY currently sports a market value of $90 million. Yet based on a paid analyst report featured on the company’s own website – which pegs the total share count at both 32 million and 37 million – AENY actually boasts a market value of $140 million or $160 million instead.

Either way, skeptics say, AENY enjoys a remarkably high valuation for a Vancouver shell company with no money in the bank and a dismal track record of success.

Shell Game?

To be fair, investors have assigned that value to another company (also named Americas Energy) that AENY has promised to acquire.

That privately held company, headquartered in Knoxville, portrays itself as an operating coal-mining venture led by a man named Christopher Headrick. Before joining AENY in late 2008, Headrick reportedly ran another Tennessee-based coal-mining operation called PPG, Inc. Those initials stand for Patriot Products Group, government records indicate, a corporation dissolved by Tennessee officials just days before AENY inked its formal merger deal.

Headrick failed to answer a list of emailed questions for this story.

Meanwhile, last week, Dow Jones noted that Headrick’s background appears to be in real estate rather than coal mining. It also identified Headrick’s sidekick, Vice President Jimmy Dunn, as a former mortgage broker who pleaded guilty last year to tax evasion and could face prison time and hefty fines for his crimes.

From the start, AENY investors have nevertheless seemed thrilled by the prospect of purchasing Headrick’s company. AENY (formerly known as Trend Technology) began working on the deal in mid-2009, around the same time that Wollstein first “discovered” the stock, and has already adopted the Americas Energy name as its own. Despite that name change, however, AENY has yet to officially close the deal.

Originally, AENY said that it would complete the merger after raising $1 million to finance the company’s future mining activities. Once AENY raised the necessary capital, however, the company announced a new fundraising target – requiring another $8 million – that must be achieved for the deal to close instead.

Meanwhile, in press releases issued under the shell company’s stock symbol but touting the private company’s operations, AENY keeps mentioning that unfinished merger as a potential risk factor. Critics believe that those news releases have misled investors by tricking them into purchasing stock in a shell company when they think they are buying shares in a legitimate mining operation instead.

Losing Record

Without the merger, AENY itself appears to be worth little. On its own, regulatory filings show, AENY has never achieved any real measure of success.

In its latest quarterly report, AENY lists only three significant “milestones” recorded by the company since its inception. It raised $160,000 in capital, including $60,000 generated through a private placement carried out more than four years ago. It completed two phases of an exploration project that was later abandoned due to lack of successful results. And it finished one phase of another exploration project that has since been deserted for similar reasons.

A major AENY shareholder, Vancouver securities attorney Gerald Tuskey, gave up on the company shortly before it began pursuing its big merger deal. In June, Tuskey sold all 6 million of his AENY shares – a stake representing more than one-fourth of the entire company – for a fraction of a penny apiece. He pocketed just $40,000 for his stock, which would now be worth $27 million at today's lofty prices.

“The securities were acquired for investment purposes,” a regulatory filing explains. And “Mr. Tuskey wishes to employ this capital elsewhere.”

AENY’s current CEO, Leonard MacMillan, had spent more than two years running the company by the time that giant shareholder fled. MacMillan also served as an officer and director at Lexaria (LXRP.OB), a former $6 stock that now fetches just 12 cents a share, until his sudden resignation from the company last year. He has managed corporate communications for Max Resource (MXROF.OB), yet another low-priced penny stock, as well.

Based on his official bio, MacMillan appears to have no formal experience in the energy industry. Although he technically serves as co-CEO of AENY, sharing his duties with Headrick, MacMillan alone still signs off on the company’s official regulatory filings.

TheStreetSweeper could not locate MacMillan to ask him questions for this story.

With MacMillan formally in charge, regulatory filings show, AENY managed to raise $850,000 of the $1 million required to complete its merger (with the funds coming from an unnamed third party) by the end of November. As previously noted, the company has since gone on to raise the entire $1 million but still failed to close the deal.

Flying Jayhawk

Nevertheless, in his bullish reports, Wollstein has treated the promised merger almost like finished business. Meanwhile, he has been busy promoting another speculative energy stock as well.

Jayhawk Energy (JYHW.OB) first became a favorite pick for stock promoters, pocketing six-figure payments for their services, after the company shifted its focus from jewelry to energy back in 2007. Lifted by those touts, JYHW rapidly soared to a record high of $2.75 a share.

The following spring, however, Dow Jones took direct aim at JYHW and those promoting its stock. It questioned the true value of JYHW and noted that one of the promoters touting the shares had previously been sanctioned by securities regulators for issuing misleading information about other companies.

Although JYHW held its ground for a while, it began a steady dive in mid-2008 that finally ended last March with the stock bottoming out at just 15 cents a share. With JYHW hovering around that low, Wollstein suddenly burst forward with a bullish report on the stock. That time, an outfit calling itself Focus Financial Group – and holding 500,000 JYHW shares that could be sold at any time – paid $33,000 to finance the newsletter.

When investors began discussing Wollstein’s recommendation on Internet message boards, JYHW took an interesting step to distance itself from paid stock promoters. In mid-July, JYHW issued a cautious (if vague) warning to investors about relying on third-party analyst reports that may contain inaccurate information about the company. JYHW directed investors to focus instead on its own regulatory filings, which would later reveal that the company had lacked the funds necessary to pursue any new energy projects over the course of the previous fiscal year.

By then, however, Wollstein had already published another bullish report on JYHW and its projected stock performance. In a newsletter fielded by investors around Christmastime – just before JYHW filed an annual report showing that the company had less than $6,000 left in the bank – Wollstein cheerfully predicted that JYHW could soar by as much as 1,200% over the course of the next two years. At current prices, he insisted, JYHW posed “little foreseeable downside risk” and should in fact see “nothing but upside” ahead.

This time, Focus Capital Group paid $100,000 – three times more than it had previously spent – to finance Wollstein’s favorable report. The investment apparently paid off, since JYHW has nearly tripled since that time. The stock currently fetches $1.83 a share, giving the company a market value of $82.6 million despite its limited resources.

Happy Hype

JYHW’s remarkable gains could prove fleeting, however, if the stock follows the same pattern as some other favorite Wollstein picks.

In the fall of 2007, for example, Wollstein identified EnviroResolutions (ENVI.PK) as his favorite green energy stock of the year. Red Tree Ventures – a firm holding 1 million shares of ENVI stock -- paid $87,000 to finance that report, which predicted a swift 345% jump in the company’s share price.

“In a year or two, the companies I find could be worth fortunes and – like ENVI – carve out a solid share of America’s multibillion-dollar green energy market,” Wollstein declared. “Remember, should ENVI take off like I think it will, you heard it first from me!”

ENVI did in fact climb higher after that report, peaking in the spring of 2008 around $3 a share. By then, however, Wollstein was reportedly predicting that ENVI could soar to $38 a share and beyond.

At that point, David Baines – an accomplished penny-stock reporter at The Vancouver Sun -- decided to take a close look at ENVI and Wollstein’s bullish claims about the company. Baines even called the company’s CEO, James Blair, and invited him to dismiss Wollstein’s rosy hype.

“Initially, Blair wondered why he would do that,” Baines reported. “Then, realizing I would be writing about this matter, (he) decided it would be a good idea.”

Two days before Baines published his story, ENVI issued a lukewarm warning to investors about outside reports that had not been sanctioned by the company. The stock, still fetching almost $2 a share at that time, now trades on the lowly Pink Sheets for just 5 cents a share.

Dressed to Kill

Around the same time that Wollstein began promoting ENVI, he apparently started touting Dussualt Apparel (DUSS.OB) as well. In this case, at least, the company immediately tried to distance itself from Wollstein and the claims made in his newsletter. Identifying the Intelligent Investor Report by name, DUSS issued a press release warning about the newsletter and disavowing the “junk email promotion.”

Undeterred, Wollstein followed up with another bullish tout of DUSS less than two months later. In that report, financed with $250,000 from an outfit known as Northern Tiget Investments, Wollstein named DUSS as his top retail pick for the coming year and even suggested that the stock could represent the best investment opportunity of the decade.

“DUSS has ALL of its upside in front of it,” he assured. “Act now before Wall Street’s big money drives DUSS through the roof, or you may regret it for the rest of your life.”

DUSS shares, which commanded around $1 at the time, now sell for less than 3 cents apiece.

For now, at least, investors still have high hopes for Wollstein’s latest stock picks. AENY continues to boast a generous share price, hovering comfortably above $4, despite mounting concerns about the company. And if management gets its way, that stock will remain a winner.

In fact, when the stock started to fall from its record high earlier this month, one of AENY’s CEOs reportedly warned Internet chat-room critics against taking actions that could hurt the company or its share price.

“We are NOT a pump-and-dump company,” vowed an online message attributed to Headrick. So “if you are here only to disparage our company and cause us financial harm, be prepared for the consequences.”

The message adopted a lighter tone after that threat, ending with a strong hint that good news would soon be on its way. Specifically, it promised an update on the British Columbian cease-trading order – sparking rumors that it could soon end – by the following afternoon.

That update never came. AENY has yet to see the order lifted almost two weeks later, just as the company has yet to close the celebrated merger – despite its fundraising activities – that has provided so much fuel for its runaway share price.

* Editor's Note: TheStreetSweeper hired an independent fact checker to verify the accuracy of this story. Whenever possible, it has also included links to the actual documents used during the course of its research. To contact Melissa Davis, the author of this story, please send an email to editor@thestreetsweeper.org.

Tradeshow, Skymark Kicked off the Stage

Canadian regulators aren’t buying the story that Tradeshow Marketing (OTC: TSHO.PK) and Skymark Research – a paid promoter led by the son of TSHO’s founder – tried so hard to sell.

The Alberta Securities Commission has issued a cease-trading order for TSHO’s stock, while banning Skymark from trading or recommending any securities, after uncovering tell-tale signs of a classic pump-and-dump scheme. When explaining its move on Monday, the ASC cited concerns originally raised by TheStreetSweeper in a detailed investigative report almost six months ago. (Click here for the original story, complete with links to backup documents.)

Specifically, the ASC claimed that TSHO had soared on bullish Skymark forecasts secretly generated by relatives connected to the company. The ASC also noted that John Kirk, the sole director of Skymark and the son of TSHO’s founder, “held a significant number of shares” in the company – as did TSHO founder Bruce Kirk himself – at the time of the stock-boosting promotions. It pointed out that Ben Kirk, another son of the founder, worked for Skymark during the publicity campaign as well.

more...



Liqiudmetal: Keeping Mum about Apple and Far More

This year, Liquidmetal Technologies (OTC: LQMT.PK) has kept some telling – and arguably material – secrets from its investors.

Take LQMT’s recent deal with Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) as an obvious example. In a cryptic 8-K filing on Aug. 9, LQMT suddenly announced a contract with Apple that – on the surface – seemed to warrant a full-blown press release. Specifically, LQMT revealed that it had signed a “master transaction agreement” that would allow Apple to commercialize its technology for future use in its consumer electronics products.

LQMT never disclosed the terms of that licensing contract, however, allowing hopeful speculation to fuel the company’s shares instead. LQMT’s stock, which fetched just 13 cents a share a month ago, rocketed to a multiyear highof $1.76 last week before swiftly crashing on the lack of details associated with that high-profile deal. The stock, down another 10.6% on Wednesday, has now lost most of its Apple-related gains and currently trades for just 76 cents a share.

This spring, in the months leading up to that dramatic deal, LQMT kept quiet about another important development as well. In an even shorter 8-K filing on March 8, LQMT quietly disclosed that longtime Chairman John Kang had left the company without giving any reason for his departure. One week earlier, Kang was convicted at trial on fraud charges – carrying a potential five-year prison sentence – for inflating the financial results of another company he had previously led.

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Local.com Rolls the Dice on Another Troubling Deal

Local.com (Nasdaq: LOCM) better hope that investors don’t start using Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), its far more powerful rival, to search for information about the last company it acquired.

Last month, Local agreed to pay $5 million -- plus another $5.9 million in potential earn-out bonuses -- for a startup technology company that provides “domain-based local advertising solutions” to small business customers. When announcing that transaction, which looks rather extravagant for a company that’s recorded net losses for the past five years, Local identified its buyout target as Octane360 and the firm’s leader as Adam Rioux. Local only later revealed in an official 8-K filing that it had actually purchased Simply Static, doing business as Octane360, a company co-founded by Rioux and a second man by the name of Mark Roah.

Local may have buried this information for a reason. In 2003, Roah agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges for artificially inflating the revenue at L90 – an Internet firm where he served as senior vice president of business development – and another web-based company called Homestore.com. According to Internet records, Roah received a one-year prison sentence, followed by three years of supervised release, as punishment for those crimes. A man with the same name and age as Roah served time in federal prison, an official database shows, regaining his freedom less than three years ago.

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Has Local.com Moved into a Bad Neighborhood?

Local.com. (Nasdaq: LOCM) investors might want to take a closer look at corporate insiders and the recent deals they’ve inked in order to boost the company’s growth.

CEO Heath Clarke has issued bullish projections, lifted by aggressive acquisitions of website customers, and thendumped almost half of his stock in the company. CFO Brenda Agius has been placed in charge of finances even though her past experience at that post, racked up at former Internet highflier FindWhat.com, ended in disaster for investors. Moreover, one of the company’s directors has worked as an investment banker at several firms – including two with connections to a shady penny-stock outfit known as SpongeTech (SPNG.PK) – that have left stains on his record as well.

Meanwhile, in an effort to expand beyond its core Internet search-engine business, Local has been acquiring customers from companies with some black marks of their own. Local purchased most of those subscribers from LaRoss Partners, a firm that appears to be led by a past target of securities regulators with links to two Internet businesses accused of billing customers for website hosting services they never ordered. It has acquired the rest of its subscribers from LiveDeal (Nasdaq: LIVE), a company with an “F” rating by the Better Business Bureau due to massive customer complaints.

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TheStreetSweeper Helps Investors Escape Massive Losses

As a former investigative reporter for TheStreet.com, a popular financial news site founded by Jim Cramer of “Mad Money” fame, I am keenly aware of the risks involved with keeping score when it comes to stock-related calls.

Cramer raked in millions during his past life as a hedge fund manager, but he has still made mistakes – and suffered withering criticism – as a celebrity stock picker willing to make his calls in public. He cannot avoid offering at least some bad tips, given the unpredictable nature of the stock market, and he cannot avoid taking some real heat when that inevitably happens.

With this in mind, I was initially hesitant to track the performance of stocks we cover here at TheStreetSweeper. We focus on exposing risky stocks that look poised for massive losses, after all, in a broader market that typically delivers consistent gains instead. To me, it seemed, we would be working without gravity – or even luck – on our side.

That was nine months ago. Remarkably, as the official "Stock Report" to the right shows, we have gone on to achieve a near-perfect track record since that time. (At the end of last week, Suntech -- which rebounded this month from a steep decline – stood out as the sole gainer in the pack.) Even better, we have helped our readers escape more than $2 billion worth of stock-related losses along the way.

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AIG and Goldman Sachs: The Deceptive Blame Game

* Editor's Note: This story has been republished with permission from TheFinancialInvestigator.com. To access the original article, complete with links to backup documents, click here

The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission’s document release last week offered no answer to a question that has received little play since AIG’s (NYSE: AIG) collapse almost two years ago. 

The question is this: “How did AIG really collapse?” It is not: “How did the company get in trouble?” Nor is it this: “Who is to blame?”

Rather, the curious still want to know: What led a firm with a AA rating, around $160 billion in market value and $14 billion in profits – with real cash-generation capacity to boot – in fiscal 2006 to effectively go out of business two years later? The answer is not Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS).

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Ecosphere: A Clean Energy Company with a Dirty CEO?

Either Ecosphere Technology (OTC: ESPH.OBCEO Dennis E. McGuire simply shares a lot in common with a twice-convicted drug felon – a coincidence of remarkable proportions – or he is the former jailbird himself.

Based on public records and news stories gathered by TheStreetSweeper, supplemented with a 63-page personal background report, the CEO and the ex-con look very much the same.  The names and birth dates match. The names of multiple relatives come up as matches, too. Other key identifying traits – including addresses, business ties and even partial social security numbers – correspond as well.

McGuire’s original corporate bio, published in regulatory filings, hints at further parallels. That bio begins when McGuire graduated from community college in 1974 and, following a long and unexplained hole, picks up in detail when he invented his first cleaning technology (armed with a mere associate’s degree) more than 15 years later. The mysterious gap in between corresponds with the very period when the convicted McGuire operated a drug business, news reports show, and twice served time in jail.

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DLR: Reading between the Lines for Signs of Risk

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished with permission from thefinancialinvestigator.com. To access the original story, complete with links to numerous backup documents, click here.

After the high tides of the dot-com era receded, revealing that many companies – from a corporate governance standpoint – had been “swimming naked,” the mantra among corporate general counsels has been “full disclosure.” 

As corporate bromides go, this is a palatable one. Among other things, it provides that investors be given all available information on the relationships between a corporation’s officers and directors and the companies they do business with. But that is not to say it’s perfect.

For example, an investor reading Fannie Mae’s 2003 proxy statement would, around page 30, discover this: Ken Duberstein, a board member and Republican political arm twister, had spent the previous 11 years providing “consulting services” to the company, with his most recent fees totaling $375,000. Yet, when the deluge came in 2004, investors seemed totally caught off guard.

This brings to mind Digital Realty Trust (NYSE: DLR), a San Francisco company that has been a darling of Wall Street for some time now.

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PennyStockChaser Fails to Outrun the SEC

PennyStockChaser, a promotional website that caught the attention of TheStreetSweeper seven months ago with its breathless recommendations of dubious microcap companies, cannot run away from government authorities any more.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission cracked down on PennyStockChaser this week, filing charges against the website, its two owners – Carol McKeown and Dan Ryan – and two investment firms under their control. In its formal complaint, the SEC accused the defendants of “clandestinely selling millions of shares” in the same stocks that it was urging investors to buy. All told, the SEC estimates, the defendants pocketed at least $2.4 million from their so-called stock-scalping scheme.

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Houston American: How Slick Can This Oil Company Be?

* Editor's Note: This story has been partially republished with permission from Sharesleuth.com. To access the full article, complete with links to backup documents, click here.

Both of the oil companies that John F. Terwilliger ran before he became founder, chairman and chief executive of Houston American Energy Corp. (Nasdaq: HUSA) wound up in bankruptcy.

An oilfield services company headed by one of Houston American's directors, John P. Boylan, also went under, in part because he took hundreds of thousands of dollars in loans from the business without the knowledge or consent of his partners.

A third member of Houston American's five-person board, Edwin C. Broun III, was described in court documents last year as suffering from alcohol-related brain damage that could affect his ability to "process information and make sound decisions." The filing, submitted in his defense, characterized him as a recluse who slept all day, drank all night and hadn't opened his mail in two years.

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Why Can't Ecosphere Score a Deal with BP?

Maybe Ecosphere Technologies (OTC: ESPH.OB) should have added Kevin Costner, the celebrity backer of a competing water-treatment device, to its star-studded team.

Despite ringing endorsements from its own superstars – including a big-name environmentalist and two retired professional athletes – ESPH has so far failed to secure an order from BP (NYSE: BP) for machines that, it says, can effectively address the company’s massive oil spill. Costner’s company, Ocean Therapy Solutions, fielded an order from BP for 32 of its machines almost two full weeks ago. ESPH is still waiting on an order, however, even though the company claims that it offers a superior device.

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CGA and CSKI: Lost in Translation?

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished with permission from thefinancialinvestigator.com. To access the original article, complete with links to numerous backup documents, click here.

In ancient tales, a royal court’s scientific elite could conjure “The Elixir of Life,” a potion made from white gold, a few drops of which could restore youth eternally. You could be forgiven for thinking that society’s command of inorganic chemistry has progressed somewhat, consigning such stories to the dusty realms of explanatory myth.

Not so fast.

The continued prominence of a pair of Chinese reverse-merger companies, China Green Agriculture (NYSE: CGA) and China Sky One Medical (Nasdaq: CSKI), is evidence that investment returns can be had from thin air.
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Dick Fuld: From Wall Street Highs to Penny Stock Lows

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished with permission from Thefinancialinvestigator.com. To access the original article, complete with links to numerous backup documents, click here.

When he was CEO of Lehman Brothers, Dick Fuld oversaw a host of capital markets staff that underwrote stock and bond sales for the likes of Wal-Mart and General Electric. Bankers advised municipalities on interest-rate exposure, corporations on mergers and foreign governments on divestment. Entire divisions serviced the business and capital-raising needs of hedge-fund and private-equity clients. Legions of sales and trading staff talked hourly to every major investor in the world from the firm’s cavernous trading floors at 745 Seventh Ave.

There were benefits to this beyond the likely $500 million in compensation Fuld booked between 2000-2007 (although that did help in acquiring some trophies). All agree that he wore his reputation like a glove.

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Suntech Power Still Seeking Shelter from the Storm

Last week, Suntech Power (NYSE: STP) tried – but failed – to please the market by presenting its latest results in the best possible light.

Yes, Suntech beat revenue expectations for the first quarter and even raised its production outlook for the rest of the year. But the company also encountered multiple headwinds that left investors in a rather dark mood.

As expected, Suntech suffered a big hit from the falling Euro that triggered a rare earnings miss. Even worse, the company reported glitches with the breakthrough technology that’s supposed to fuel its future sales. Meanwhile, the company still hasn’t collected the cash for deals inked by the Global Solar Fund (GSF) – a mysterious firm that it largely controls – more than a year ago. 

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SpongeTech: The Dirty Mess It Left Behind

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished with permission from Thefinancialinvestigator.com. To access the original story, complete with links to numerous backup documents, click here.

As a reporter who investigated the archipelago of lies, deceptions and frauds that was the world of a preposterous little venture called SpongeTech Delivery Systems, I felt it reasonable to conclude that after May 5, when the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission filed criminal and civil charges against the company’s management, there wouldn’t be much more to report on what was by all lights a classic penny-stock fraud.

That conclusion really needs to be revisited.

SpongeTech was no ordinary pump-and-dump penny-stock scheme; it was, to play off Churchill’s famous definition of Russia, a fraud wrapped in a stock-market rig inside a money-laundering conspiracy.

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Junior Mining Companies and the 'Temple of Doom'

Ever since AmeriLithium (OTC: AMEL.OB) purchased some mining assets from GeoXplor -- a Vancouver outfit led by the so-called “Indiana Jones” of the lithium trade -- the company has taken investors on a wild and, at times, thrilling ride. If history repeats itself, however, AMEL investors better not count on a happy ending to their journey.

After all, GeoXplor has sold mineral claims to several other microcap companies that met with rather ugly fates. Even worse, government records show, GeoXplor founder Clive Ashworth has been previously banned from the securities industry for an alleged scam – which resulted in criminal convictions for two stock promoters – involving yet another resource company.

Nevertheless, Ashworth continues to win over junior mining companies and those who promote their risky stocks alike.

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Suntech Deals Cast Dark Cloud over Company

For a giant solar company, Suntech (NYSE: STP) sure seems to be keeping its own investors in the dark about some shady-looking deals.

Take Suntech’s massive sales to its majority-owned Global Solar Fund (GSF), for example, which have hung over the company like a dark cloud for almost a year. Thanks to those transactions, which accounted for almost one-third of Suntech’s quarterly revenue at the time, the Chinese company managed to satisfy Wall Street growth expectations and follow up with a secondary stock offering that prevented a potential liquidity crisis. Based on extensive research byTheStreetSweeper, however, Suntech apparently sold those solar products to itself and is still awaiting payment on 95% of the resulting revenue that it booked to this day.

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Untangling the Intricate Web Woven by InterOil's CEO

* Editor’s Note: This article has been republished with the permission of iBusiness Reporting. Click here for access to the original story, complete with graphics of back-up documents, and similar investigative reports.

Since Interoil Corp.’s (NYSE: IOC) inception in 1997, CEO Phil Mulacek has made a habit out of doing business with family members and leaving many of the relationships undisclosed.

For instance, during a three-year period ending in 2005, InterOil paid Direct Employment Services Corp. (DESC) nearly $1.8 million for unspecified "services" provided by "executive officers and senior management." InterOil disclosed that 50% of DESC was owned by Christian Vinson, who was serving at the time as InterOil’s COO and a director of the company. 

But InterOil didn't reveal other related-party facts. For starters, Vinson is Mulacek's brother-in-law. Vinson, who has been with InterOil from the beginning, now serves as InterOil’s executive vice president of corporate development and government affairs, a role that places him in charge of dealing with Papua New Guinea's corrupt government.

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Putting Together the Puzzle at Big Bear Mining

If Big Bear Mining (OTC: BGBR.OB) would risk hiring a bankrupt CEO with a checkered past to serve as the “public face” of the company – and essentially give him $30 million worth of stock for the favor – then investors might want to search for even darker secrets that the junior gold miner is still trying to keep.

They could start by examining BGBR’s original address. That address, listed in past BGBR regulatory filings as 1728 Yew St. in Vancouver, shows up in filings for several other penny stock outfits as well. Those companies share at least one glaring trait: They count Shane Whittle, a busy Vancouver stock promoter, among their top executives.

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Fearing Risks, Big Bear Promoter Tells Investors to Flee

Big Bear Mining (OTC: BGBR.OB) has scared off one of its most powerful fans.

James DiGeorgia, editor of the Gold and Energy Advisor newsletter, this week suddenly reversed his “strong buy” recommendation on BGBR and started urging his followers to sell the stock instead. His abrupt about-face came just one day after The Street Sweeper raised serious questions about BGBR’s true value and the paid promoters – including DiGeorgia himself – who have been touting the heavily traded stock.

“Based on new information I received in the last 24 hours that I was not presented with when I initially reviewed and recommended the stock, I believe it would be in the best interest of any investors holding shares in this company to sell them,” DiGeorgia stated in an official press release on Tuesday. “It doesn’t matter if you’ve made money or lost money holding BGBR.OB. Everyone who has based their purchase of shares on my recommendation should sell their shares.”

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Could Big Bear Mining Investors Get Caught in a Trap?

Four years ago, regulatory filings show, Aaron Hall – the founder and largest stockholder of Big Bear Mining (OTC:BGBR.OB) – worked as a security guard at a Vancouver nightclub while dabbling in mineral claims on the side. When BGBR’s stock soared this month on paid promotions, however, the young Canadian suddenly found himself worth $175 million before the company found a single ounce of gold.

If Hall sold his 72-percent stake in BGBR, still valued at $121 million despite a hit to the stock last week, the 33-year-old Canadian could afford to retire right now as a very rich man whether the company ever strikes gold or not. According to BGBR, however, Hall has agreed to walk away from that fortune instead. (BGBR refused to provide Hall’s phone number, so The Street Sweeper could not call him about his decision.)

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Are Medifast and Pre-Paid Legal up to the Same Tricks?

Editor's Note: This report was originally published by the Fraud Discovery Institute, which can be accessed at www.frauddiscovery.net

With Pre-Paid Legal Services (NYSE: PPD) receiving yet another subpoena from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last week, the Fraud Discovery Institute (FDI) reveals the points of similarity existing in the compensation plans of both Pre-Paid Legal and Medifast (NYSE: MED). 

How long until Medifast receives similar law enforcement scrutiny for a business model built upon a pyramid scheme? 

"Sixty-one percent of Medifast’s total revenue is derived from Take Shape for Life, the company’s multi-level marketing division,” says Barry Minkow, co-founder of FDI. “Since both Pre-Paid Legal and Medifast must rely heavily on their multilevel marketing pie-in-the-sky compensation structure in order to lure in new recruits, it is critical for Wall Street investors and analysts to factor in what legal issues Medifast might be facing. And these similarities are striking." 
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MSEH: The Secrets behind Pataki's Favorite Penny Stock

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished, in part, with the permission of Sharesleuth.com. Click here to access the entire story and similar investigative reports on other publicly traded companies.

Mesa Energy Inc. was already a publicly traded company when it did a reverse merger with a second one, a shell that began life as Mesquite Mining Inc. 

The unusual deal last August moved Dallas-based Mesa from the Pink Sheets to the Over-the-Counter market and brought it the financing it needed to buy a promising natural gas prospect in western New York, CEO Randy M. Griffin said. 

It also put 14 million cheap -- and free trading -- shares of the combined company, Mesa Energy Holdings Inc.(OTCBB: MSEH.OB), into the hands of four stockholders from the Mesquite Mining side of the transaction. ASharesleuth investigation found that one of them was a limited partnership linked to a convicted felon -- an ex-stockbroker barred from the securities industry for his role in a fraud and manipulation scheme that cost investors more than $100 million. 
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Does the NanoLogix Rally Make Any Sense?

The NanoLogix (OTC: NNLX.PK) stock chart featured on a YouTube video – set to the catchy “Money Song” tune from Monty Python – looks rather outdated following this spring’s incredible, if inexplicable, spike in the company’s share price.

When that video first surfaced in the fall of 2007, NNLX was still focused on increasing hydrogen production with the help of grape juice while allowing Nutra Pharma (OTC: NPHC.OB) – the company’s former partner – to pursuebreakthroughs in its current business of diagnostic technology. (NPHC’s own volatile rally, staged late last year, has already come to an end.) Back then, NNLX’s stock had almost doubled in a month but still fetched only 15 cents a share. Since moving into the medical arena and converting a barn-like structure into a “clean room” for producing diagnostic testing kits (with the construction project captured in yet another YouTube video), however, NNLX has seen its stock rocket more than 200% in recent weeks to pass $1 a share.

Even Bret Barnhizer – NanoLogix’s own CEO – cannot explain that move.

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With China Tel, Has Tobin Smith Been 'Outfoxed' Again?

Tobin Smith, co-star of Fox News Channel’s popular “Bulls & Bears” investment show, recently declared a challenging new “mission in life.” In an upbeat message to his 2,700-plus followers on Twitter last week, Smith promised to helpChina Tel Group (OTC: CHTL.OB) – a penny stock company he has been touting for months – secure the financing it needs in order to survive.

To be sure, CHTL could use some assistance. More than a year ago, CHTL agreed to pay $195 million for a 49% stake in Chinacomm – an Asian broadband wireless company that ranks as its primary asset – but it still lacks the money required to actually pay for that deal. Although CHTL has inked plenty of financing agreements in the meantime, most recently with two mysterious firms known as Excel Era and the Isaac Organization, the company never seems to collect promised cash from those backers in the end.

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Storm of Controversy Continues to Brew over InterOil

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished with the permission of iBusiness Reporting. Click here for access to the original story and similar investigative reports.

The controversy over what the future holds for InterOil (NYSE: IOC) has heated up in recent days, with news surfacingof the bad-faith bankruptcy filed by a company controlled by InterOil CEO Phil Mulacek; wild allegations revealed in a massive fraud lawsuit against Mulacek, InterOil and other companies he controls; published claims that InterOil may be one giant fraud; and a story Monday alleging an InterOil geologist had told his peers the prospects for an InterOil gas discovery in Papua New Guinea were much dimmer than what the company had boasted to Wall Street.

 

One fact that InterOil fans and skeptics can agree on is this: Mulacek's integrity and business history are critical factors in assessing the company's future success.  more...



InterOil Case Packed with Explosive Bombshells

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished with the permission of iBusiness Reporting. Click here for the original story, complete with excerpts from backup documents, and similar investigative reports.

CONROE, TEXAS -- In the Montgomery County courthouse here, the five-year-old civil fraud case against InterOil Corp. (NYSE: IOC) CEO Phil Mulacek and the companies he controls has generated thousands of pages of legal documents that have been stuffed into three large cardboard boxes.


And sifting through the papers in the Todd Peters et al. v. Phil Mulacek et al. lawsuit, one gets a better sense of why Mulacek attempted a legal Hail Mary three months ago and had one of the companies he controls file for bankruptcy protection, a move Mulacek's attorneys said was calculated to get the Peters' litigation swept into federal bankruptcy court and derail a potentially massive judgment. (See iBusiness Reporting’s original story here.)

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Has Atlantic Wind and Solar Been Fueled by Hot Air?

Atlantic Wind and Solar (OTC: AWSL.PK) is suspected of blowing a lot of hot air in an effort to inflate the company’s stock price.

A year ago, AWSL supposedly acquired a 47.5% stake in Hybridyne Power Systems – later touting Hybridyne’s “best-in-class” technology and its access to an expansive research team – for $2 million worth of its own stock. After publicizing a string of stock-boosting projects secured by Hybridyne, however, AWSL suddenly announced this month that it had canceled its acquisition of the company due to an “unfortunate default by the vendor” that rendered the transaction “null and void.”  

Notably, Hybridyne itself now claims that the acquisition never took place at all.

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InterOil CEO Slapped for 'Bad Faith' Bankruptcy Filing

* Editor's Note: This article has been republished with permission from iBusiness Reporting. For the original story (including easy access to backup documents) and similar investigative reports, simply click on this link

A company controlled by Phil Mulacek, chief executive officer of InterOil Corp. (NYSE: IOC), filed a "bad-faith" federal bankruptcy in December in an attempt to derail a potentially massive civil judgment in a fraud case against him and companies he controls, according to court documents filed in Houston. 

Less than a month after the filing, federal Judge Marvin Isgur in Houston ruled that Nikiski Partners -- a corporation whose $2 million investment in a used oil refinery gave birth to InterOil -- had filed the bankruptcy in "bad faith." (Read transcript here.) 
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Can the Batteries Last on Overcharged Lithium Stocks?

Lithium Corporation (OTC: LTUM.OB) sure looks a whole lot prettier in paid tout sheets than it does in its regulatory filings.

In recent months, stock promoters have treated LTUM – a company with no revenue and just $855 in the bank – like a surefire winner that’s poised to supply giant automakers with the lithium they will need to power tomorrow’s battery-operated cars. The promoters offer similar reasons for their incredible confidence, led by soaring demand for lithium and LTUM’s ready access to lithium mines, while carefully excluding their compensation for touting the stock from its list of key attractions.

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Look Again: CSKI Appears to Be Deteriorating Fast

Following a swift decline in sales, China Sky One Medical (Nasdaq: CSKI) is no longer the picture of health that it once seemed to be. 

If CSKI's fourth-quarter results looked weak based on traditional year-over-year comparisons, those numbers look downright painful when examined on a sequential basis. During the last three months of 2009 -- a period when Chinese officials reportedly identified eight CSKI treatments as "counterfeit" drugs and began prohibiting their sale -- the company saw revenue decline, often precipitously, in every one of its product categories.
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With a Rare Earnings Miss, CSKI Is Looking Rather Sick

China Sky One Medical (Nasdaq: CSKI) looks like it could use a miracle cure. 

The Chinese pharmaceutical company -- long known for its blowout quarters -- fell well short of Wall Street targets for the latest period and issued disappointing guidance for the upcoming year. The big earnings miss represents the latest in a series of a recent challenges for the company, which has been accused of selling "counterfeit" drugs in China and filing inaccurate financial statements here in the U.S. 
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Toreador: The Story behind the Stock's Wild Bull Run

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Shortly before New York Times reporter Zachery Kouwe resigned for plagiarizing the work of others, he wrote a speculative column about Toreador Resources (Nasdaq: TRGL) that – in an ironic twist -- spawned copycat reports by competing journalists. Those stories, suggesting an imminent buyout of Toreador that failed to materialize, raised some eyebrows even before Kouwe’s public fall from grace.

At the time that Kouwe penned his Jan. 20 “DealBook” column, Toreador desperately needed to raise money for looming debt obligations that could trigger massive payments later on this year. As a small resource company with ambitious plans, Toreador also needed cash to finance an expensive drilling program in Paris – home to its controversial new vice chairman – in order to reinvent itself as a major energy player on the international stage. more...



With Yuhe Losing its Auditor, Could CSKI Be Next?

* Editor's Note: This report has been republished with the permission of its author, Manuel Asensio, an accomplished investor with a track record for spotting possible fraud long before the market itself. Click here to read more of Asensio's research on CSKI and other companies.

Last week, Yuhe International (NASDAQ: YUII) announced in a special 8-K filing that Grant Thornton was "resigning as the company's independent registered public accounting firm effective immediately." Yuhe's stock suffered a one-day plunge of 18% on the news. 

Yuhe is the product of a reverse merger between a private Chinese company and a U.S. shell company completed in March 2008. Yuhe has been listed on the Nasdaq since October, regulatory filings show, with company leaders tapped to ring Nasdaq's opening bell late last year. 

Research published by asensio.com has focused on two other Chinese reverse mergers: China Sky One Medical(Nasdaq: CSKI) and American Oriental Bioengineering (NYSE: AOB). Moreover, asensio.com has also published reports on regulatory deficiencies surrounding U.S. listings of questionable Chinese companies -- particularly those that trade on the Nasdaq exchange
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CSKI Auditor Accused of Blessing Fuzzy Math

* Editor's Note: This report has been republished with the permission of its author, Manuel Asensio, an accomplished investor with a track record for spotting possible fraud long before the market itself. Click here to read more of Asensio's research on CSKI and other companies.

A private investor has filed a lawsuit against the auditor of China Sky One Medical (NASDAQ: CSKI), alleging "fraudulent misconduct" and violation of securities laws for failing to correct CSKI's "materially false" financial statements.

The complaint states: "MSPC became aware of the fact that the CSKI financial statements were materially false and misleading and its unqualified opinion with respect to them was baseless. Despite becoming aware of these problems, and despite having a duty to correct the information that it knew to be false which had been disseminated into the market via the 10-K, MSPC failed to issue corrected statements or withdraw its support from the CSKI financial statements." more...



Is IMGG's CEO Pulling the Plug on His Company?

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To some, Imaging3 (OTC: IMGG.OB) CEO Dean Janes appears to be giving up on his own company.

On Feb. 11, exactly one month after IMGG announced the latest in a series of regulatory setbacks, Janes reportedly began pitching a new investment opportunity to his 1,000-plus “friends” on Facebook. In his biggest insider transaction on record, Janes then sold 2.6 million shares of IMGG stock the very next day. more...



Tradeshow Marketing Knows How to Sell Its Stock

Give Tradeshow Marketing (OTC: TSHO.PK) some credit. For a company riddled with so many ugly conflicts, TSHO sure knows how to put on a pretty face for investors.

TSHO can thank SkyMark Research – a promotional firm operated by the apparent son of TSHO’s own founder – for reshaping its public image. For years, TSHO looked like a failed business with limited appeal to even speculative investors willing to place bets on high-risk penny stocks. After SkyMark launched favorable coverage of TSHO late last year, however, the company saw interest in its long-overlooked stock suddenly skyrocket. more...



CSKI Linked to 'Counterfeit' Drugs in China

* Editor's Note: This report has been republished with the permission of its author, Manuel Asensio, an accomplished investor with a track record for spotting possible fraud long before the market itself. Click here to read more of Ansensio's research on CSKI and other companies.

Eight products manufactured by China Sky One Medical (NASDAQ: CSKI) appear in a Chinese government notice of "counterfeit drug products," which states that pharmacies should "immediately stop the sale" of these products.

The government document is titled "Notice of the Ministry of Health of the People's Republic of China," dated November 5, 2009, and is available on the China State Food and Drug Administration website. Click here for the full notice, and click here for a translation. more...



If Genoptix Is So Healthy, Why Are Insiders Selling?

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Genoptix (Nasdaq: GXDX) CEO Tina Nova keeps sending mixed – and potentially troubling – signals about the value of her company’s stock.

Take Nova’s latest insider sale, for example. On Feb. 3, Nova pocketed more than $500,000 by exercising cheap stock options years before they were formally set to expire. She sold that stock for $31.13 a share – near a four-month low – even though analysts were forecasting a $10 rise in the company’s share price. more...



AENY: Look What's Hiding beneath that Former Shell

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Americas Energy Company (AENY.OB) exposed some ugly flaws when it emerged from its corporate shell.

Following its heavily hyped reverse merger, AENY now counts CEO Christopher Headrick – a longtime dealmaker with a history of failure – as its sole officer, director and member of its staff. Although AENY has announced plans to expand its senior management team, the company aims to do so by hiring leaders who have benefited handsomely from a series of generous related-party deals. One of those potential executives, already identified as a company vice president in the past, has agreed to plead guilty to felony tax evasion charges and could face up to five years in prison for his crime. more...



AENY: The Plot, the Players and the Shadowy Past

* Click here to start/join a discussion of this article of send tips for future news stories.

Americas Energy Company (AENY.OB) has managed to reinvent itself with backing from a network of long-connected players in the murky world of penny stocks and offshore financing.

Last week, AENY suddenly announced that it had completed a merger that would transform the company into a legitimate coal-mining operation. The move came as a surprise to many, since AENY had delayed the merger – pending an additional $8 million in financing – just a few weeks earlier. With skeptics portraying AENY as an overvalued corporate shell, however, the company abruptly finalized the deal after raising less than half of the $8 million called for under its new financing arrangement. more...



Jayhawk, No Longer a Highflier, Crashes to Earth

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Following a swift plunge that cut its stock price by almost half, Jayhawk Energy (JYHW.OB) stepped forward this week to blame the recent volatility on outside promotions followed by aggressive profit-taking – a classic, if softened, description of a “pump-and-dump” scheme – with no connection to the company’s actual operations. JYHW insisted that the company itself played no role in the stock’s short-lived rally, even though its top officer profited from the stock’s big run-up before its subsequent crash. more...



IMGG Fails to Paint a Pretty Picture for Investors

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The picture at Imaging3 (IMGG.OB) just got a whole lot uglier.

IMGG dropped a bombshell on investors this week, when it revealed a major setback in its lengthy battle to secure regulatory approval of its Dominion 3-D scanning device. For months, IMGG has indicated that the company simply needed to resolve one minor issue – involving the Dominion’s label – in order to satisfy reviewers at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. During a conference call with shareholders on Tuesday, however, IMGG reported that it has now fielded more than a dozen questions from FDA staffers who are evaluating the company’s device. more...



IMGG Investors Grow Tired of Holding Their Breath

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Imaging3 (IMGG.OB) suffered another major setback this week, triggering a massive selloff in its stock, as the company fielded additional questions from federal regulators about its Dominion scanning device.

By now, IMGG investors have waited years for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to clear the company’s Dominion scanner for sale under a 510(k) process that normally takes just a few short months to complete. More than 900 days after IMGG first submitted its 3-D scanner for review, however, the company is still waiting for the FDA to bless its breakthrough device. more...



For NXTH Investors, 2010 Could Be Hard to Swallow

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NXT Nutritionals (NXTH.OB) shareholders who trust the company’s sweet outlook for 2010 could wind up with a bitter taste in their mouths.

The company’s rosy forecast included plenty of hype about its SUSTA-brand sweetener but none of the actual financial projections that normally dominate official guidance. It also failed to mention a looming threat – massive dilution – that could soon hammer its generous share price. more...



NXTH and The Shaq: A Sweet-and-Sour Deal?

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When NXT Nutritionals (NXTH.OB) recently announced that basketball legend Shaquille “Shaq” O’Neal had agreed to endorse the company’s sweetener, investors rushed to celebrate their good fortune. That blessing could turn into a curse, however, if history serves as any guide. more...



Talk Is Getting Cheap at Imaging3

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Imaging3 (IMGG.OB) is learning an important, if painful, lesson: A picture really is worth a thousand words.

IMGG has been trying for years to secure regulatory clearance for a new device that, it says, can produce real-time 3D images that will revolutionize the practice of medicine. Now that yet another projected date for approval of the device has passed without results, however, investors are starting to ask a very basic question. Specifically, they want to know why IMGG has failed to share the remarkable images that its device is supposed to be capable of delivering. more...



AWSL Chairman Has Some Skeletons in His Closet

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Gilles Trahan, the chairman of both Atlantic Wind & Solar (AWSL.PK) and MSE Enviro-Tech (MEVT.PK), better hope that investors don’t start judging him by the company he keeps.

After all, Trahan has ties to Basil Meecham – a past target of securities regulators – that date back at least eight years. The two men remained connected as Facebook friends as recently as last month, although they have since taken steps to block visitor access to their personal information. The Street Sweeper captured evidence of that Facebook friendship weeks ago, however, in anticipation of such changes. more...



The Picture Gets Even Fuzzier at Imaging3

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Imaging3 (IMGG) is now fielding questions from two regulatory agencies.

More than two years after submitting its Dominion 3-D scanner for clearance by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, IMGG is still trying to address concerns raised by the agency about its breakthrough medical device. Meanwhile, the company is now attempting to overcome issues raised by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission – which derailed its annual shareholder meeting -- as well. more...



NXTH & CLRH: Connected Like Siamese Twins

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Investors blinded by the pretty stock prices for NXT Nutritionals (OTC.BB:NXTH) and Clear-Lite Holdings (OTC.BB:CLRH) might want to take a closer look at other – less attractive – traits shared by these two companies.

After going public through reverse mergers with shell companies earlier this year, both NXTH and CLRH promptly hired the same part-time CFO to keep their books in order. They also retained the same auditing firm in Boca Raton – a region viewed by regulators as a hotbed for securities-related fraud – to bless their financial statements. They even chose the same tainted public relations firm to attract potential investors. (That firm failed to answer questions about the companies for this story.) more...



IMGG Investors Still Waiting for Judgment Day

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The story at Imaging3 (OTC.BB:IMGG) is following the same familiar plotline made famous by the popular movie “Groundhog Day.”

Every morning, IMGG investors wake up with high hopes that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will finally clear the company’s Dominion 3-D scanning device for sale. Every night, they return to bed with a sense of disappointment lightened only by the chance that tomorrow will somehow be different and bring the good news they so crave. more...



Are Those Dark Spots on That X-Ray of Imaging3?

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Based on comments made in a spring episode of “Health This Week with Don Baillargeon” – a program hosted by a repeat target of securities regulators – Imaging3 CEO Dean Janes has been waiting six months for an urgent phone call from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that he will probably never receive.

Janes appeared on the show in May with high hopes that the FDA was finally nearing approval of IMGG’s Dominion 3-D imaging device. Although two years had passed since IMGG first submitted the Dominion for FDA review, using a speedy 510(k) process that often takes just months to complete, Janes acted as though the agency’s long-awaited blessing might come at any moment. more...



The Truth Behind the New 'Salt-Free' Diet at AWSL

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When Atlantic Wind & Solar (AWSL) issued its latest investor update, the company buried a potential bombshell – disclosing plans to abandon a celebrated project with Morton Salt – beneath announcements about a revised business strategy and a new corporate headquarters.

Just two months ago, AWSL claimed that it had landed a contract with Morton to carry out a feasibility study for the generation of renewable power at the company’s big salt-producing facility in the Bahamas. Back then, at least, AWSL seemed excited by the deal and the opportunities it might bring. more...



Surgeon Seeks to Cut Influence of Device Industry

Charles Rosen is a soft-spoken spine surgeon who has earned the kind of reputation that’s normally assigned to a hard-nosed cop.

He first blew the whistle on a giant healthcare company a decade ago, when a hospital owned by Tenet – the second-largest publicly traded hospital chain in the country – failed to inform him that its operating-room sterilizer had not been working properly for months. As the hospital’s chief of surgery, Rosen was asked to minimize the problem during an upcoming inspection by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. Instead, Rosen sounded an alarm during JCAHO’s annual visit and promptly resigned in protest when the agency – which counted one of the hospital’s directors among its own board members – ignored his concerns. more...



Force Protection Gives Management Royal Treatment

Last month, as Force Protection (FRPT) prepared to slash its workforce in an effort to save money, the company quietly adopted a new policy that could expand the bonus awarded to its well-paid CEO.

Michael Moody, who earned seven figures as Force Protection’s brand-new CEO in 2008, could score even more this year despite plummeting orders for the company’s military vehicles. Originally, Force Protection guaranteed Moody a salary of at least $540,000 – and a bonus that could equal up to 75% of that amount – under his formal contract with the company. With a recent amendment to that agreement, however, Force Protection essentially removed any limits on Moody’s 2009 cash bonus.


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