Showing posts with label sec. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sec. Show all posts

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Francois Goelo indicted for securities fraud - I outed, reported this guy for many years to SEC, FBI

Francois Goelo is an infamous stock promoter who's been indicted for securities fraud by the SEC. Rumor has it he fled France in a sailboat and went to the Cayman Islands. I outed his touts and reported him to the SEC and FBI. He was a wanted man could still be.

Below are some articles about his crimes.

https://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/comp18088.htm

Francois Goelo and the others appealed the court ruling and lost

http://www.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/13a0094p-06.pdf

Francois Goelo was so vile that he once posted to me on RangingBull that he would slice part of my husband's body off slice by slice. He would make the most revolting threats safely in hiding in the Cayman Islands.

Around 2004 or so he tried to become a Cayman Island citizen. A friend in the Cayman Islands sent me the mandatory newspaper ad they had to post to become a citizen. Below are the three ads for Francois Goelo, his girlfriend Ana Belloso Canto and their daughter Anaick Goelo. All of us faxed letters stating why he should never become a citizen. We included his lengthy record for using the Caymans to commit crimes. He's still there so obviously the Cayman Islands like criminals.

Francois Goelo, George Town, Grand Cayman Island, sec, indicted, securities fraud, theft,

Red Bay Yacht Club 1300 South Sound Road Cayman Islands Map
Flag of Cayman Islands: Francois Goelo lives in Cayman Islands Cayman Islands 
345-947-1902 

fax 345-947-1140 
Box 10910 Grand Cayman Ky 1-1007 Map
Flag of Cayman Islands: Francois Goelo lives in Cayman Islands Cayman Islands 
345-949-8467

I found better scans of the newspaper article.


Francois Goelo, France, Caymans, boat, fish, stock, securities fraud, convicted criminal, crime, pump and dump, liar perjury, fraud





His daughter was a lawyer and now runs a fitness club.

Cayman Islands Law School
Queen’s University of Belfast Certificate in Cayman Law (with commendation)
2002 – 2003
Cayman Islands Law School
University of Liverpool Bachelor of Laws (Honours)
1999 – 2002

Associate
Charles Adams Ritchie & Duckworth
2005 – Present (11 years)
Anaick is an associate with particular experience in property law, including residential and commercial conveyancing. She regularly acts for clients selling, purchasing, financing or leasing real estate in the Cayman Islands. Anaick is a Notary Public and member of the Cayman Islands Law Society and the Caymanian Bar Association.

Francois' last SI post was 2002.

To: Anthony@Pacific who started this subject 7/21/2002 3:57:16 PM
From: Francois Goelo  Read Replies (1037)
79096
 of 120733

>>> Still Shorting OMC....

in spite of the fact I am vacationing in Europe for a few weeks and I sincerely hope that you are too, as I see $15.00 as a likely target in the medium term...

JMHO, F. Goelo + + +

How can the SEC say they don't know his birth date or where he lives? He owns two parcels of land in the Cayman Islands here.

FRANCOIS GOELO Block 24B Parcel 110 (CE12-0107) (CE) .

He didn't get a permit for construction. He's in the commercial fishing business.

3. 4 FRANCOIS GOELO Block 24B Parcel 110 (CE12-0107) (CE)
Illegal reconstruction of a concrete structure and a commercial fishing operation.
FACTS
Location Trophy Crescent Prospect
Zoning HDR
Parcel Size 0.2985 acres
Current Use As noted
BACKGROUND
Information received is that the structure will be a commercial ice house. An ice
machine will be placed on top of the structure to make the ice which is evident by
the rebar for the uprights and on the ground photographed.
Recommendation: Authorize the issuance of an Enforcement Notice in
accordance with Section 18 of the Development and Planning Law (2011
Revisions).
PLANNING DEPARTMENT ANALYSIS
As a result of checking the Department’s records it was discovered that no
planning permission had been sought for the re-construction of the concrete
structures and the commercial fishing operation, which is in breach of the
Development and Planning Law (2011 Revision).

http://www.planning.gov.ky/HTML_BODY/CP/CP_Library/CPA_Minutes/2012/Acpa1712.pdf

Seems Francois Goelo is also an inventor and has a patent.

Contact business owner: Frank (Francois) Goelo at frank@sea-gems.net
By phone: 925-4773.
Vessels location: 83 Trophy Crescent, Patrick's Island, Cayman Island.

https://www.google.com/maps/place/83+Trophy+Cres,+Patricks+Island,+Cayman+Islands/@19.2938515,-81.3295845,724m/data=!3m2!1e3!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x8f258897a22e1e7f:0xf24713730ceb6659

A yellow house on the opposite side of the canal from Harbour House marina.
Directions: Up Marina drive to last road on right (Bamboo drive),
Then 1st left on Omega drive and 1st left again on Trophy Crescent road to the yellow house with a blue concrete fence.

His website

http://sea-gems.net/about

He also sells used cars? He has a permit for that in the Caymans.

FRANCOIS GOELO T/A FRANKS GEMS TB1325R 857080/14 Used Cars Retail Retailer for a business with 800sq ft or less of selling area Block 13EH, 83HS, Unit # 5, 57 Bodden Road,
George Town, Grand Cayman.
13-May-2014 13-May-2015

There are photos of Francois Goelo online. How can the SEC say they don't know his age? His daughter was about 20 in 2000 so she was born about 1980. That means he was probably born 1950-1955. Per the SEC the girlfriend Ana Belloso Canto was also involved in his stock fraud. She held shares in her name. Based on data I believe Francois Goelo is from Paris, France. His girlfriend is from Alicante, Spain.

Francois Goelo, Anaick Goelo, Ana Goelo, cayman islands, securities fraud, criminal, stock market, scammer, stock promoter, pump and dump, evil, vile, sevu, ziasun, wanted, warrant, 

Francois Goelo, Anaick Goelo, Ana Goelo, cayman islands, securities fraud, criminal, stock market, scammer, stock promoter, pump and dump, evil, vile, sevu, ziasun, wanted, warrant, 

Francois Goelo, Anaick Goelo, Ana Goelo, cayman islands, securities fraud, criminal, stock market, scammer, stock promoter, pump and dump, evil, vile, sevu, ziasun, wanted, warrant, 

Francois Goelo, Anaick Goelo, Ana Goelo, cayman islands, securities fraud, criminal, stock market, scammer, stock promoter, pump and dump, evil, vile, sevu, ziasun, wanted, warrant, 

Francois Goelo, Anaick Goelo, Ana Goelo, cayman islands, securities fraud, criminal, stock market, scammer, stock promoter, pump and dump, evil, vile, sevu, ziasun, wanted, warrant, 


Dr. Dennis Jay and Mrs. Mary Jay v. Francois Goelo et al.
Mar 02 1994
Dr. Dennis Jay and Mrs. Mary Jay vs. Francois Goelo et al. - Grand Court of the Cayman Islands

Sector: Litigation
Jurisdiction: Cayman Islands
Mar 02 1994


Francois Goelo was represented by an attorney in the lawsuit and appeal. They know where he is. He's right in the middle of this pic next to his wife. The fishing business, home, law school education all paid by stolen dirty money. Francois Goelo is so revolting that he threatens to kill people for speaking the truth about scammy stocks. Such a lovely person.

Goelo represented himself in the answer to the complaint. That's pretty easy to do. I just pulled up Francois Goelo's deposition in the SEC lawsuit against him. They took his depo at the Cayman Islands in May 24, 2004.

http://marycummins.com/francois%20goelo%20deposition.pdf

He stated he is a citizen of France and the Cayman Islands. As of 2005 he lived in the Caymans 16 years. That means he'd lived in the Caymans since 1989.  He stated Ana Belloso Canto is his wife. His daughter was born 1983. He owns companies Xplorer and Unikay Ltd. He owns catamaran designs.

Goelo states his emails were hacked. He said he was stupid to post in his own name. It was a mistake. Goelo said he used holding company Xplorer to hold shares. He didn't want his name to show up as insider because shorters like Elgindy would short the companies to nothing.

He put shares in his girlfriend's name so he wouldn't go over 1,000,000 shares or 5%. He did it so his name would not show up. I think not filing a disclaimer is the main charge against him. He supposedly filed a complaint with NASDAQ who told him to get his trading account out of there. Goelo states he split his shares between two holding companies so his name would not show as a 5% + owner on SEC docs. It appears Goelo posted his "DD" on the stocks on the message boards.

He has a very selective memory. He doesn't remember what he did, what he wrote, what he bought or sold. He has no problem remembering what everyone else did in great detail ;-) He talks about losing $600,000 on one deal, making $250,000 on another. Why then does he run a used car retail store and fishing company in the Caymans? Cover?

Goelo states he doesn't know much about shells ;-) He also stated he didn't post anything on message boards about Blue Point. He thought it wouldn't be ethical as he owned so many shares. He said he just did the dd, sent it to others who posted it on message boards ;-)

Francois said he retired at age 31. He had a home remodeling business in Australia. He retired in 1977. His age would then be 1946. My guess of 1950 was close. After he retired he spent seven years sailing. He came to the Caymans October 1987 as a condo developer. He started trading in 1999. In 1968 he was in Tours University in France but didn't finish. He sued a company called TRIM for not delivering shares. He sued a guy in Texas for not returning his deposit on a boat. He said he was never charged with or convicted of any crime.

He was accused of not disclaiming how many shares he had. His "excuse" is he gave 200,000 to his girlfriend, wife. She didn't have a trading account so the shares were in his account ;-) He just knew in his mind they were his shares.

Francois Goelo lost. He was found guilty and forced to disgorge

GRANTS a disgorgement order against Goelo in the amount of $216,861.00 plus
$81,251.00 in prejudgment interest;

(1) GRANTS Summary Judgment against Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Yang, K & J
Consulting, Lou, M & M, and Goelo on Count I, liability for violating Section 5 of the
Securities Act;
(2) GRANTS Summary Judgment against Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Yang, K & J
Consulting, Lou, M & M , and Goelo on Count VIII, liability for violating Section
13(d)(1) and Rule 13d-1(a) thereunder;
(3) GRANTS Summary Judgment against Markow, Global Guarantee, Yang, K & J
Consulting, Lou, M & M , and Goelo on Count VIII, liability for violating Section
13(d)(2) and Rule 13d-2(a) thereunder;
(4) GRANTS Summary Judgment against Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Yang, K & J
Consulting, Lou, M & M , and Goelo on Count IX, liability for violating Section 16(a)
and Rule 16a-3 thereunder;
(12) GRANTS a permanent injunction against Markow, Global Guarantee, Yang, K & J
Consulting, and Goelo, permanently enjoining and restraining them and their officers,
agents, servants, employees, attorneys and all persons in active concert or participation
with him who receive actual notice of this Order by personal service or otherwise,
from violating, directly or indirectly, Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act [15
U.S.C. §§ 77e(a) and 77e(c)], Sections 13(d)(1), 13(d)(2), and 16(a) of the Exchange
Act [15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(d)(1), 78m(d)(2) and 78p(a)] and Rules 13d-1, 13d-2, and
16a-3 thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§ 240.13d-1(a), 240.13d-2(a), and 240.16a-3].
A date for trial on Counts II, III, IV, and VI (the Anti-Fraud Provision Claims), will be set by a
forthcoming scheduling order.

Goelo appealed and lost.

SEC then dismissed II, III and IV. Goelo had to instantly pay $300,000 which was $220,000 disgorgement of profit and interest on that amount. Slap on the wrist. At least the SEC didn't buy his silly "those are my girlfriend's shares" lie.

http://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/comp18088.htm



UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
EASTERN DIVISION


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UNITED STATES SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,

Plaintiff,

v.

SIERRA BROKERAGE SERVICES, INC.,
RICHARD GEIGER, JEFFREY A. RICHARDSON,
AARON TSAI, MICHAEL M. MARKOW,
GLOBAL GUARANTEE CORPORATION,
FRANCOIS GOELO, YONGZHI YANG,
K&J CONSULTING, LIMITED, KE LUO,
M&M MANAGEMENT, LIMITED,
JEROME B. ARMSTRONG,

Defendants.


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CIVIL ACTION
CASE NO.



COMPLAINT FOR PERMANENT INJUNCTION
AND OTHER EQUITABLE RELIEF

Plaintiff United States Securities & Exchange Commission ("Commission") alleges as follows:

SUMMARY

1. The Commission brings this civil action against eight individuals and four entities for their conduct between April 1999 and July 2000 relating to the price manipulation, unregistered sales, unreported stock ownership and touting of securities issued by BluePoint Linux Software Corporation ("BluePoint"), a U.S. corporation formerly named MAS Acquisition XI Corporation ("MAS").

2. Aaron Tsai ("Tsai") formed MAS as a shell corporation in 1996. From then through August 1999, Tsai purported to transfer ownership of many of MAS`s outstanding shares of common stock to approximately thirty shareholders. These transfers were shams; the shareholders were nominees, and Tsai retained control of the stock during all relevant times. Tsai`s intent was to create the appearance that the nominee shares could later be sold without limitation and without a registration statement in effect with the Commission.

3. From late 1999 through early 2000, Tsai, Michael Markow and his company, Global Guarantee Corporation (collectively, "Markow"), Francois Goelo ("Goelo"), and Yongzhi Yang and his company, K&J Consulting, Ltd. (collectively, "Yang"), arranged for MAS to acquire a Chinese company that purportedly had developed a Chinese version of the Linux computer operating system. Upon the acquisition in February 2000, the Chinese Linux company became a subsidiary of MAS, which changed its name to BluePoint.

4. Markow, Goelo, Yang, and Ke Luo, and his company, M&M Management, Ltd. (collectively, "Luo"), placed 3.75 million shares they bought from Tsai in their names, the names of entities they controlled, and the names of their relatives.

5. Sierra Brokerage Services, Inc. ("Sierra"), its president, Jeffrey Richardson ("Richardson") and its trader, Richard Geiger ("Geiger") (collectively, the "Broker-dealer

Defendants") participated in the scheme to manipulate the price of BluePoint shares.

6. At all relevant times, Markow, Goelo, Yang and Luo (collectively, the "Promoter Defendants") acted as a group and controlled a vast majority of the free-trading shares, or float, of BluePoint in order to manipulate the price of BluePoint shares. When BluePoint stock began trading publicly on March 6, 2000, the Broker-dealer Defendants facilitated the scheme by creating artificial trading activity in BluePoint stock that enabled the Promoter Defendants to complete the scheme. The Promoter Defendants and Broker-dealer Defendants engaged in trading of BluePoint shares at artificially high prices that were hundreds of times more than what the Promoter Defendants had paid for less than three weeks earlier.

7. Tsai made false filings with the Commission when he failed to disclose his true ownership of the shares and the subsequent sale of those shares to the Promoter Defendants. Although the Promoter Defendants had collectively acquired nearly 20% of BluePoint`s 20 million outstanding shares and over 90% of the publicly traded shares, they never reported their ownership to the Commission in any filing as required under the federal securities laws.

8. On March 6, 2000 and after, Jerome Armstrong ("Armstrong") promoted BluePoint on the Raging Bull internet site, which carried hundreds of posts about BluePoint. Armstrong received undisclosed compensation from Markow and Goelo in return for his posts.

9. In the weeks and months after BluePoint started trading, BluePoint`s price and volume steadily declined from its all-time high of $21. Nonetheless, the Promoter Defendants continued to sell at a profit, having paid Tsai only pennies for their shares. The Promoter Defendants never reported any changes in ownership when they sold their BluePoint shares in any filings with the Commission.

10. Tsai, directly and indirectly, has engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute violations of the registration provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically, Section 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act of 1933 ("Securities Act") [15 U.S.C. §§77e(a) and 77e(c)] and Sections 13(d)(1) and 16(a) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §§78m(d)(1) and 78p(a)] and Rules 13d-1(a) and 16a-3 [17 C.F.R. §240.16a-3] thereunder.

11. Markow, directly and indirectly, has engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute violations of the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically, Section 17(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)], Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act") [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)], and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] thereunder; or in the alternative, Markow has engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute aiding and abetting the other promoter`s violations of the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically, Section 17(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)], Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act") [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)], and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] thereunder.

12. Goelo, Yang, Luo, and the Broker-dealer Defendants, directly and indirectly, have engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute violations of the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically, Section 17(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)], Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act") [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)], and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] thereunder.

13. The Promoter Defendants, directly and indirectly, have engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute violations of the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically, Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)], and Sections 13(d)(1), 13(d)(2), and 16(a) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §§78j(b), 78m(d)(1), 78m(d)(2) and 78p(a)] and Rules 13d-1(a), 13d-2(a), and 16a-3 [17 C.F.R. §§240.10b-5, 240.13d-1(a), 240.13d-2(a), and 240.16a-3] thereunder.

14. Sierra, directly and indirectly, has engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute violations of the broker-dealer anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically Section 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)]. Geiger and Richardson, directly and indirectly, have engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute aiding and abetting violations of the broker-dealer anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically, Section 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)].

15. Armstrong, directly and indirectly, has engaged and, unless enjoined, will continue to engage in acts, practices and courses of business which constitute violations of the touting provisions of the federal securities laws, specifically, Section 17(b) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(b)].

JURISDICTION AND VENUE

16. The Court has jurisdiction over this action pursuant to Section 22(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77v(a)], Sections 21(e) and 27 of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §§78u(e) and 78aa] and 28 U.S.C. §1331. Venue is proper in this Court pursuant to Section 22(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77v(a)] and Section 27 of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78aa].

17. The transactions, acts, practices, and courses of business constituting the violations alleged herein occurred within the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio and elsewhere.

18. Defendants, directly and indirectly, made use of the means and instrumentalities of interstate commerce and of the mails in connection with the transactions, acts, practices, and courses of business alleged in this Complaint.

DEFENDANTS

19. Aaron Tsai, age 33, resides in Evansville, Indiana. Tsai formed MAS in October 1996. From October 1996 through at least February 2000, he was the chairman, president, and treasurer of MAS. During this same time period, Tsai formed nearly fifty "blank check" public shell corporations, including MAS. From 1998 through 2000, Tsai was also a registered representative for three securities firms.

Promoter Defendants

20. Michael Markow, age 56, resides in Westlake Village, California. At all relevant times, he controlled Global Guarantee Corporation as the president and chief executive officer of the company. He was employed as a registered representative for four different securities firms before 1993. In 1998, California issued "desist-and-refrain" orders against him for operating an unlicensed broker-dealer and for selling securities that had not been "qualified." Alabama issued a cease-and-desist order against him in 2000 for operating an unregistered broker-dealer.

21. Global Guarantee Corporation ("Global Guarantee") is a California corporation that Michael Markow formed in 1992 and controlled throughout the relevant times. Michael Markow used Global Guarantee to acquire and sell BluePoint stock. At all relevant times, acts of this entity were caused solely by Michael Markow.

22. Francois Goelo, age unknown, resides in the Cayman Islands. Goelo`s citizenship is unknown.

23. Yongzhi Yang, age 44, resides in Irvine, California. At all relevant times, he controlled K&J Consulting, Ltd. as the president of the company. He was born in China but is a U.S. citizen. From 1994 through 1999, he was a college professor in the U.S. Since then, he has been a self-employed business consultant. At all relevant times, he was a consultant for the Chinese Linux company, and then continued to be a consultant for MAS after it acquired the Chinese Linux company and changed its name to BluePoint.

24. K&J Consulting Ltd. ("K&J") is a British Virgin Islands entity organized and controlled by Yongzhi Yang. Yongzhi Yang formed K&J in January 2000. Yongzhi Yang used K&J to acquire and sell BluePoint stock. At all relevant times, acts of this entity were caused solely by Yongzhi Yang.

25. Ke Luo, age 44, resides in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. At all relevant times, he controlled M&M Management, Ltd. as the president of the company. He is a citizen of the People`s Republic of China. From 1992 through 1998, he was a student in the United States, and during 1998-99, he was employed as a research scientist at a university in Alabama.

26. M&M Management Ltd. ("M&M") is a British Virgin Islands entity organized and controlled by Ke Luo. Ke Luo formed M&M in February 1999. Ke Luo used M&M to acquire and sell BluePoint stock. At all relevant times, acts of this entity were caused solely by Ke Luo.

Broker-Dealer Defendants

27. Sierra is a broker-dealer located in Columbus, Ohio that has been registered with the Commission since 1994. Sierra is a small, one-office operation that conducted a general securities business in listed and over-the-counter securities and made a market in many bulletin board stocks. During all relevant times in the Complaint, Sierra was a market maker in BluePoint. On March 7, 2003, the NASD gave Sierra notice of its intention to expel the firm from membership for failure to pay a fine. Since November 2002, Sierra has not been operating for failure to meet net capital requirements under the federal securities laws. On October 8, 2002, the Commission instituted an unrelated administrative and cease-and-desist proceedings against Sierra`s Chairman, who was also CEO and part-owner, in a matter involving a fraudulent, unregistered offering of securities in an unregistered hedge fund. In 1998, 2000 and 2002, Sierra was censured and fined by the National Association of Securities Dealers ("NASD") three times for various violations of NASD regulations, including, failure to timely report transactions, failure to correctly memorialize the time of execution of transactions, failure to memorialize the time of entry and time of execution of transactions, and failure to establish, maintain and enforce written supervisory procedures regarding trading and market making activities.

28. Geiger, age 48, resides in Morton, Illinois. During the relevant time period, Geiger was employed as a registered representative and trader at Sierra. In July 2002, the NASD fined Geiger $10,000 and suspended him from association with any NASD member for twenty days for conducting transactions at Sierra as an equity trader without being registered. In January 1997, the NASD censured Geiger, fined him $10,000, suspended him for ten days, and barred him from acting as a securities firm principal for one year. Geiger had acted as an unregistered principal of a member firm, allowed another individual to work at the firm without the required registration, and failed to properly report transactions and prepare trade confirmations. Based on the NASD action, the state of Ohio refused to grant Geiger a securities sales license, and Geiger worked for Sierra out of his home in Illinois during the times alleged in the Complaint.

29. Richardson, age 44, resides in Columbus Ohio. Richardson is the president of Sierra, its head trader, and a part-owner of the firm. He supervised Geiger and authorized all of Geiger`s trades in BluePoint during all relevant times. In July 2002, the NASD censured Richardson and fined him $10,000 (jointly and severally with Sierra) for allowing Geiger and another Sierra employee to function as equity traders without being registered to do so. In June 2000, Richardson was fined $5,000 by the NASD for various violations at Sierra, including, its failure to timely report transactions, failure to correctly memorialize the time of execution of transactions, failure to memorialize the time of entry and time of execution of transactions, and failure to establish, maintain and enforce written supervisory procedures regarding trading and market making activities.

Touting Defendant

30. Armstrong, age 39, resides in Seaside, Oregon. Since early 2000, his only source of income has been from stock market investing.

OTHER RELEVANT NON-DEEFENDANT ENTITIES

31. MAS was formed by Tsai in 1996 as a blank check Indiana shell corporation. In April 1999, Tsai caused MAS to become a voluntary reporting company by registering its class of common stock under Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act by filing a Form 10-SB with the Commission. In February 2000, MAS acquired BluePoint Linux Software Company, and changed its name to BluePoint upon the acquisition.

32. BluePoint Linux Software Company was a Chinese entity that marketed a Chinese version of the Linux computer operating system, an alternative to Microsoft`s Windows program. As a result of being acquired by MAS, it became BluePoint Linux Software Corporation or BluePoint. Aside from a December 2000 Form S-8 involving common stock to be awarded to certain employees as part of an employee benefit plan, BluePoint has never filed a registration statement under the Securities Act. BluePoint stock currently trades on the OTC Bulletin Board around $0.10.

THE FRAUDULENT SCHEME

The Start of the Scheme

33. When Tsai formed MAS in October 1996, he was its chairman, president, and treasurer, and he caused MAS to issue him 8.5 million shares of common stock. MAS was a shell with minimal assets, and its express purpose was to merge with a private entity looking to establish a public trading market for its shares.

34. In several Commission filings made in 1999, Tsai falsely represented that he and MAS had transferred thousands of MAS shares to dozens of individuals during 1997 and 1998 in order to conceal his true ownership and control of the shares and to make it appear that the shares could be later sold without a registration statement in effect. More specifically, Tsai falsely reported in these filings that in January 1997 he gifted 50,000 of his own shares to each of five former directors, for a total of 250,000 shares, and that MAS issued a total of 500 shares in January 1997 and a total of 750 shares in September 1998 to former directors as compensation for services in 1997 and 1998. Tsai subsequently fabricated documents which showed that the former directors transferred most of their 250,000 shares supposedly gifted by Tsai in January 1997 to roughly thirty other individuals in August 1999.

35. The two January 1997 transfers and the September 1998 transfer were shams since the purported directors rendered no services for MAS and never knew they supposedly were directors. Tsai never told the purported directors they received shares in MAS from him or the company, or that the 250,000 shares they supposedly collectively received from Tsai in January 1997 were later transferred to others.

36. In fact, at all relevant times, the "directors" and other "shareholders" were nominees, and Tsai controlled the stock they supposedly owned. Tsai duped the nominees into signing one or more blank stock powers, which Tsai kept and later used to further the scheme.

The Promoter Defendants` Initial Involvement in the Scheme

37. On February 17, 2000, after MAS acquired the Chinese Linux company and changed its name to BluePoint, the total outstanding shares of BluePoint stood at 20 million shares. Of the 20 million shares, approximately 16 million shares were restricted. The Chinese Linux company`s founders held 15.5 million restricted shares, and Tsai held 450,000 restricted shares. This left roughly 4 million shares in the float. On the same day, the Promoter Defendants obtained 3.75 million shares, or over 90% of the supposed unrestricted shares, from Tsai. Tsai sold the nominees` shares to the Promoter Defendants through the stock powers he obtained earlier in 1997 and 1998, and he never told the nominees about the stock sale.

38. Markow facilitated the transfer of the 3.75 million BluePoint shares from Tsai to the other Promoter Defendants. Through Markow, the Promoter Defendants paid Tsai $250,000 for the shares while Markow paid the nominees each $100 to make it look like he and the other Promoter Defendants were buying from shareholders rather than Tsai. The Promoter Defendants never reported their acquisition of 90% of the free-trading shares of BluePoint, and Tsai never reported the sale of the nominees` shares which he effectively controlled to the Promoter Defendants.

Distribution of BluePoint Shares to the Promoter Defendants and
Preparation to Trade

39. Markow and Goelo knew that they were required to report their control of BluePoint stock in a Commission filing and actively took steps in an unsuccessful attempt to evade the reporting requirement. Markow was careful to cause the 3.75 million shares to be assigned to fourteen separate holders, with no single holder assigned more than 2.5% of BluePoint`s outstanding stock.

40. Out of the 20 million total shares of BluePoint outstanding, the promoters had collectively acquired 18.75% (3.75 million shares). They held or directly controlled 15.45% (3,090,000 shares), and Yang at least partially controlled an additional 3.3% (660,000 shares) held by him, K&J, his spouse and in-laws.

41. Of the 3.75 million shares controlled by the Promoter Defendants, Markow caused a total of 2.6 million BluePoint shares to be issued in the names of the Promoter Defendants and entities they controlled. Markow also caused another 590,000 shares to be placed in the names of the spouses of Yang (220,000 shares) and Luo (220,000 shares), and Luo`s minor child (150,000 shares). The remaining shares (560,000) were placed in the names of Yang`s mother, father-in-law, and mother-in-law. The shares initially assigned to Yang`s mother (120,000) were soon transferred to Yang, and he had at least partial control of the shares held by his in-laws and spouse. The shares assigned to Luo`s child were soon transferred to Luo, and he controlled the shares held by his spouse.

42. The Promoter Defendants concealed from the investing public that they controlled the float of BluePoint, that they planned to manipulate the BluePoint market, and that they had paid only pennies for their shares. In addition, Markow never reported the "desist-and-refrain" orders issued against him by the state of California in 1998 in any BluePoint filing with the Commission.

43. Around the time of the acquisition, Markow, Goelo, Yang, and Luo worked together as a group to arrange for BluePoint to trade publicly by lining up market makers for BluePoint shares, communicating frequently amongst each other, and transferring a majority of the BluePoint shares held by the Promoter Defendants to Sierra.

44. During this same time, Markow also recruited Sierra and other brokerage firms to act as market makers for BluePoint.

45. Three days before trading began in early March, Markow wrote to Yang and Goelo as follows: "WE CAN TRADE ON MONDAY. EVERYTHING IS FINE. LET`S HAVE A CONFERENCE CALL SHORTLY."

The Manipulative Trading Activity on March 6, 2000
Domination and Control of the BluePoint Market

46. By March 6, 2000, the Promoter Defendants had placed 2.43 million BluePoint shares in Sierra accounts they controlled. That day, BluePoint began trading on the OTC Bulletin Board.

47. On March 6, 2000, the Promoter Defendants and Broker-Dealer Defendants maintained control of BluePoint`s float and exercised domination and control of the market in BluePoint shares. The initial BluePoint trades all involved Sierra, Goelo, Yang, and Luo. Specifically, in the first eleven minutes of trading, the following transactions occurred:


Acting for Sierra`s account, Geiger bought 100,000 shares from Yang at $6 per share. Sierra reported the purchase to the Nasdaq system as four separate blocks of 25,000 shares each.

Geiger (on behalf of Sierra) sold 40,000 of the Yang shares for $6.02 per share to Goelo, who already owned nearly a million shares.

Geiger (on behalf of Sierra) bought one block of 50,000 shares each from Yang and Luo at $6.50 per share.
48. These transactions were artificially structured by the Promoter Defendants acting in concert and were executed at literally hundreds of times the price that the Promoter Defendants had paid just weeks earlier.

49. Geiger resold another 40,000 of the first 100,000 Yang shares to Geiger`s wife, his mother, Richardson, and John McCamey ("McCamey") of Sierra. Each buyer got 10,000 shares at $6.1275 per share.

50. At 9:58 a.m., sixteen minutes after the first trade, Sierra sold 5,000 shares of BluePoint at $7.1875 per share to a Sierra customer, who was advised by Markow to buy BluePoint. Markow arranged this trade in advance with Geiger.

51. At 10:22 a.m., forty minutes after the first trade, Geiger bought another 20,000 shares for Sierra from Luo at $15 per share. Sierra`s bid was then 200 shares at $11 per share.

52. By 10:28 a.m., BluePoint had traded at its high for the day, $21 per share.

53. After the first eleven minutes, Sierra began reselling the shares it bought from Yang and Luo to other broker-dealers. In just over half an hour between 9:54 a.m. and 10:31 a.m., Sierra sold 59,700 shares at prices starting at $7.125 per share and ending at $20 per share. By 1:00 p.m., Sierra had sold 103,700 shares at prices as high as $21 per share.

54. BluePoint`s total trading volume on March 6 was 1.15 million shares. Sierra`s trading accounted for 44% of the volume, and the market maker with the next highest volume had just 8%.

Price Leadership by Sierra

55. Throughout the day, the Broker-dealer Defendants demonstrated price leadership

of the BluePoint shares. During this sell-off, Sierra dominated other market makers. For much of the morning, only Sierra consistently offered BluePoint for sale. From the first trade at 9:42 a.m. until 10:06 a.m., Sierra was the only market maker quoting an ask. During that time, Geiger raised Sierra`s ask from $7 to $10.

56. From 10:06 a.m. until 10:17 a.m., only one other market maker quoted an ask.

57. From 10:17 a.m. through 11:18 a.m., other market makers frequently quoted a bid but no ask, while Sierra always quoted both prices.

58. Geiger also ensured the Sierra led the bid, although it bought little from other broker-dealers. Between the market open and 10:47 a.m., Sierra`s bid (entered by Geiger) went from $3 to $19. Yet Sierra did not buy BluePoint from another broker-dealer until 10:51 a.m.

59. Sierra`s bid leadership occurred when over half the float was in Sierra accounts and over 90% of it was held by the promoters or their relatives. For the day, Sierra had the exclusive high bid 59% of the time, and shared the high bid with one or more other broker-dealers 16% of the time. Sierra also raised its bid ten times to match or exceed the high bid. Yet for the day, Sierra bought only 5,400 shares from other broker-dealers.

60. Sierra bid and bought aggressively (from Yang and Luo) in the absence of arms-length retail demand for BluePoint from Sierra customers. Every retail customer to whom Sierra sold BluePoint on March 6, with the exception of one person, was either one of the promoters, a Sierra employee, a relative of Geiger, someone whose account Geiger set up specifically to trade in BluePoint, or someone with ties to Markow. Because Sierra had purchased enough shares of BluePoint from Yang and Luo in the first eleven minutes to satisfy the total retail customer demand on March 6, Sierra had no legitimate reason to raise the bid throughout the day.

61. Likewise, Sierra had purchased enough shares to satisfy demand from other broker-dealers and had no legitimate reason to raise the bid throughout the day on March 6.

62. Geiger and Richardson knew they could immediately resell 80,000 shares to Sierra customers when Sierra bought the initial 100,000 shares from Yang. The customers, however, were Goelo, Geiger`s wife, Geiger`s mother, Richardson, and McCamey. There was no preexisting retail interest in the remaining 20,000 Yang shares, or for the other 100,000 shares Sierra bought from Yang and Luo in the first eleven minutes of trading on March 6, 2000.

63. As the day wore on, Sierra bought back over half of the 40,000 BluePoint shares Sierra had sold earlier to Geiger`s wife, Geiger`s mother, Richardson, and McCamey. Sierra paid as much as $19.875 per share for the stock, which it had sold to these customers for $6.1275 per share.

64. At all relevant times and to date, the Promoter Defendants never made any filings with the Commission as required to report their sales of BluePoint securities and the change in their ownership.

65. At all relevant times, Tsai, the Promoter Defendants, Sierra and Richardson sold or offered to sell shares of BluePoint without a registration statement in effect.

The Slide Down

66. BluePoint never regained the $21 per share high and million-plus volume seen on its first day of trading. On the first day, it closed at $17.75 per share. On the second day, BluePoint closed at $18.50 per share, and trading volume fell to slightly over 100,000 shares. By March 13, 2000, BluePoint closed at $17.875 per share on volume of 80,000 shares. By March 20, 2000, the closing price was $14.50 per share on a volume of 34,000, and by March 27, 2000, BluePoint closed at $13.75 per share with volume of 25,000. On April 6, 2000, one month after it began trading, BluePoint closed at $6.875 per share with volume of 6,700.

67. On the last trading day in April, BluePoint closed at $6.375 per share with 3,700 in volume. By the end of May, it was down to slightly over $4.00 per share, and by the end of June, it fell to under $3.00 per share, with volume at 3,800.

68. After July 2000, BluePoint never closed above $5 again.

Touting Scheme

69. Markow and Goelo orchestrated a scheme to arrange for individuals, including Armstrong, to tout the BluePoint stock. Armstrong posted over eighty times on the BluePoint message board located on the Raging Bull website in the first three weeks. He praised BluePoint`s investment value and encouraged traders who were having trouble getting their orders filled to keep trying. Armstrong never stated in his posts on the Internet that he was being compensated for making the postings. However, Goelo and Markow compensated Armstrong by transferring stock in three separate companies to Armstrong at below market prices during the relevant time period.

Profits to the Defendants

70. All the defendants profited from selling BluePoint. After the first day of trading and continuing through July, the Promoter Defendants sold off many of their remaining shares. Although the price of BluePoint fell sharply during this period, the Promoter Defendants continued to profit because they had paid Tsai only pennies per share for their stock.

71. Tsai received $250,000 from the Promoter Defendants when they bought the nominee shares from him.

72. To date, the Promoter Defendants` approximate profits from selling BluePoint are as follows: Yang $1.27 million; Luo $1.24 million; Markow $1.23 million; and Goelo $300,000.

73. Sierra`s profits from BluePoint were about $570,000 on March 6, 2000 and about $40,000 thereafter. Sierra paid 60% of its March 6 BluePoint profits to Geiger, per his usual compensation program. Richardson has made about $90,000 in profits from trading BluePoint in his personal account, most of which he made on March 6.

74. Armstrong made at least $20,000 from selling the shares of the three securities he received from Markow and Goelo.

75. In making their profits, the Promoter Defendants did not give up their control of the float. By the end of the third week of trading (March 27, 2000), they still directly held about 2.97 million shares. On succeeding dates, they still held shares as follows: April 17, 2.96 million shares; April 30, 2.94 million shares; May 31, 2.63 million shares; June 30, 2.82 million shares; July 31, 2.78 million shares.

76. During this time, the Promoter Defendants never reported made any filings with the Commission as required to report their sales of BluePoint stock and the change in their ownership of the securities.

COUNT I

Violations of Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act
[15 U.S.C. §77e(a) and §77e(c)]

77. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are hereby realleged and incorporated by reference.

78. From February 2000 through at least July 2000, Defendants Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra and Richardson, and each of them, directly or indirectly, made use of the means or instruments of transportation or communication in interstate commerce or of the mails to offer and sell securities through the use or medium of a prospectus or otherwise when no registration statement has been filed or was in effect as to such securities and when no exemption from registration was available.

79. Tsai orchestrated a complex scheme to create the appearance that he had distributed MAS shares to dozens of shareholders who in fact were nominees. Tsai then sold this nominee stock to the Promoter Defendants. Yang and Luo resold 220,000 shares to Sierra, which immediately resold shares. Thereafter, all the promoters continued to sell shares they had acquired from Tsai, and Richardson sold the BluePoint shares he obtained from Sierra. Overall, Tsai, the promoters, Sierra and Richardson funneled BluePoint stock into the public trading market without a registration statement in effect.

80. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 77 through 79 above, Defendants Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra and Richardson, and each of them, violated Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77e(a) and §77e(c)].

COUNT II

Violations of Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)(1)]

81. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference herein.

82. At the times alleged in this Complaint, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, in the offer and sale of securities, by the use of the means and instruments of transportation and communication in interstate commerce and by the use of the mails, directly and indirectly, employed devices, schemes and artifices to defraud, all as more fully described in paragraphs 1 through 76 above.

83. Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, knew or were reckless in not knowing of the facts and circumstances described in paragraphs 1 and 76 above.

84. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 81 through 83 above, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, violated Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)(1)].

85. Alternatively, by reason of the activities described in paragraphs 81 through 83 above, Defendant Markow and Global Guarantee knew, or was reckless in not knowing, of the activities committed by Defendants Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, violated Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §78q(a)(1)], and provided substantial assistance in their violation. Thus, Defendants Markow and Global Guarantee aided and abetted Defendants Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson`s violation of Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §78q(a)(1)].

COUNT III

Violations of Section 17(a)(2) and 17(a)(3) of the Securities Act
[15 U.S.C. §§77q(a)(2) and 77q(a)(3)]

86. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference herein.

87. At the times alleged in this Complaint, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, in the offer and sale of securities described above in paragraphs 1 through 76, by the use of the means or instruments of transportation and communication in interstate commerce and by the use of the mails, directly and indirectly, obtained money and property by means of untrue statements of material facts and have omitted and are omitting to state material facts necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading; and engaged in transactions, practices or courses of business which operated and operated as a fraud and deceit upon purchasers and prospective purchasers as more fully described in paragraphs 1 through 76 above.

88. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 86 and 87 above, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, violated Section 17(a)(2) and 17(a)(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)(2) and §77q(a)(3)].

89. Alternatively, by reason of the activities described in paragraphs 86 through 87 above, Defendants Markow and Global Guarantee knew, or was reckless in not knowing, of the activities committed by Defendants Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, violated Section 17(a)(2) and 17(a)(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(a)(2) and §77q(a)(3)], and provided substantial assistance in their violation. Thus, Defendants Markow and Global Guarantee aided and abetted Defendants Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson`s violation of Section 17(a)(2) and 17(a)(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §78q(a)(2) and §78q(a)(3)].

COUNT IV

Violations of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)]
and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] Thereunder

90. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference as if set forth fully herein.

91. At the times alleged in the Complaint, Defendants Markow and Global Guarantee, in connection with the purchase and sale of securities described above in paragraphs 1 through 76, by the use of the means and instrumentalities of interstate commerce and of the mails, directly and indirectly, employed devices, schemes and artifices to defraud; made statements of material fact and omitted to state material facts necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading; and engaged in acts, practices and courses of business which operated as a fraud and deceit upon purchasers and sellers of such securities as more fully described in paragraphs 1 through 76 above; or in the alternative, by reason of the activities described in paragraphs 1 through 76 above, Defendants Markow and Global Guarantee knew, or was reckless in not knowing, of the activities committed by Defendants Goelo, Yang, Luo, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, violated Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)] and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] promulgated thereunder, and provided substantial assistance in their violation. Thus, Defendants Markow and Global Guarantee aided and abetted Defendants Goelo, Yang, Luo, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson`s violation of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)] and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] promulgated thereunder.

92. At the times alleged in the Complaint, Defendants Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, in connection with the purchase and sale of securities described above in paragraphs 1 through 76, by the use of the means and instrumentalities of interstate commerce and of the mails, directly and indirectly, employed devices, schemes and artifices to defraud; made statements of material fact and omitted to state material facts necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading; and engaged in acts, practices and courses of business which operated as a fraud and deceit upon purchasers and sellers of such securities as more fully described in paragraphs 1 through 76 above.

93. Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, knew or were reckless in not knowing of the activities described in paragraphs 1 and 76 above.

94. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 90 through 93 above, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, and each of them, violated Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)] and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] promulgated thereunder.

COUNT V

Violations of Section 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)]

95. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference herein.

96. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendants Sierra, as a registered broker-dealer, made use of the mails and instrumentalities of interstate commerce, and induced the purchase and sale of securities, otherwise than on a national securities exchange of which they were members, by means of manipulative, deceptive and fraudulent devices and contrivances, as more fully described in paragraphs 1 through 76 above.

97. Defendant Sierra knew, or was reckless in not knowing, of the activities described in paragraphs 1 and 76 above.

98. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 95 through 97 above, Defendant Sierra violated Section 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)] and Rule 15c1-2 [17 C.F.R. §240.15c1-2].

COUNT VI

Aiding and Abetting Violations of Section 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act
[15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)]

99. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference herein.

100. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendant Sierra, as a registered broker-dealer, made use of the mails and instrumentalities of interstate commerce, and induced the purchase and sale of securities, otherwise than on a national securities exchange of which they were members, by means of manipulative, deceptive and fraudulent devices and contrivances, as more fully described in paragraphs 1 through 76 above.

101. Defendants Geiger and Richardson knew, or were reckless in not knowing, of the activities committed by Defendant Sierra as described in paragraphs 1 and 76 above, violated Section 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)], and provided substantial assistance in Defendant Sierra`s violation.

102. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 99 through 101 above, Defendants Geiger and Richardson aided and abetted Defendant Sierra`s violation of Section 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)].

COUNT VII

Violations of Section 17(b) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(b)]

103. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference herein.

104. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendant Armstrong, by engaging in the conduct described above with respect to BluePoint, used the means or instruments of interstate transportation, or communication in interstate commerce, or the mails, to publish or circulate communications which described securities for a consideration received or to be received, directly or indirectly from the issuers, without fully disclosing the receipt, whether past or prospective, of such consideration and the amount thereof, as more fully described in paragraph 66 above.

105. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 103 through 104 above, Defendant Armstrong violated Section 17(b) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. § 77q(b)].

COUNT VIII

Violations of Section 13(d) (1) and (2) of the Exchange Act
[15 U.S.C. §§78m(d)(1) and (2)] and Rule 13d-1(a) and 13d-2(a)
thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§240.13d-1(a) and 240.13d-2(a)]

106. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference herein.

107. The common stock of BluePoint was registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78l] and was listed and traded on the OTC Bulletin Board, as more fully described in paragraphs 31 and 32 above.

108. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendant Tsai, directly or indirectly through nominees, beneficially owned substantially more than 5% of the issued and outstanding shares of MAS. Defendant Tsai, however, never filed any Schedule 13D with the Commission which disclosed his beneficial ownership of MAS stock.

109. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M acted as a "group for the purpose of acquiring, holding, or disposing of securities" and thus, are deemed a "person" as defined by Section 13(d)(3) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78m(d)(3)].

110. Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M acting as a group, directly or indirectly, beneficially owned substantially more than 5% of the issued and outstanding shares of BluePoint. During all relevant times, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, and Luo, directly or through entities they controlled, sold, for their own benefit, no less than 611,400 of these shares. Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M, however, never filed any Schedule 13D with the Commission disclosing their beneficial ownership and changes in beneficial ownership of BluePoint stock.

111. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M, never filed any Schedule 13D with the Commission disclosing their purpose for acquiring shares in BluePoint and any contracts, arrangements, or understandings they had amongst themselves with respect to BluePoint, including but not limited to, guaranties against loss or guaranties of profits. During this same time period, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M, never filed any Schedule 13D with the Commission disclosing the source and amount of the funds or other consideration used or to be used in making the purchases in shares of BluePoint. Furthermore, Markow never reported the "desist-and-refrain" orders issued against him by the state of California as required by Schedule 13D.

112. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 106 through 111 above, Defendants Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M violated Section 13(d)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78m(d)(1)] and Rule 13d-1(a) thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§240.13d-1(a)].

113. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 106 through 111 above, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M violated Section 13(d)(2) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78m(d)(2)] and Rule 13d-2(a) thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§240.13d-2(a)].

COUNT IX

Violations of Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78p(a)]
and Rule 16a-3 thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§ 240.16a-3]

114. Paragraphs 1 through 76 are realleged and incorporated by reference herein.

115. The common stock of BluePoint was registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78l] and was listed and traded on the OTC Bulletin Board, as more fully described in paragraphs 31 and 32 above.

116. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M, are deemed a "person" as defined by Rule 16a-1(a)(1) of the Exchange Act [17 C.F.R. §240.16a-1(a)(1)].

117. At all times alleged in the Complaint, Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M, acting as a group, and Tsai beneficially owned substantially more than 10% of the issued and outstanding shares of BluePoint. Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M, however, never filed any Forms 3 or 5 with the Commission disclosing their beneficial ownership of BluePoint stock.

118. Defendants Markow, Goelo, Yang, and Luo, directly or through entities they controlled, sold, for their own benefit, no less than 611,400 of their BluePoint shares. Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M, never filed any Forms 4 notifying the Commission of changes in their BluePoint holdings.

119. By reason of the activities described in paragraphs 114 through 118 above, Defendants Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, and M&M violated Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78p(a)] and Rule 16a-3 thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§240.16a-3].

PRAYER FOR RELIEF

WHEREFORE, the Commission requests that the Court:

I.

Find that Defendants committed the violations alleged above.

II.

Grant an Order of Permanent Injunction, in a form consistent with Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, restraining and enjoining Defendants Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, and Richardson, their officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys and those persons in active concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of the Order of Permanent Injunction, by personal service or otherwise, and each of them, from, directly or indirectly, engaging in the acts, practices or courses of business described above, or in conduct of similar purport and object, in violation of Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77e(a) and 77e(c)].

III.

Grant an Order of Permanent Injunction, in a form consistent with Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, restraining and enjoining Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, Sierra, Geiger, and Richardson, their officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys and those persons in active concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of the Order of Permanent Injunction, by personal service or otherwise, and each of them, from, directly or indirectly, engaging in the acts, practices or courses of business described above, or in conduct of similar purport and object, in violation of Sections 17(a)(1), 17(a)(2) and 17(a)(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §§77q(a)(1), 77q(a)(2) and 77q(a)(3)] and Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78j(b)] and Rule 10b-5 [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5] thereunder.

IV.

Grant an Order of Permanent Injunction, in a form consistent with Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, restraining and enjoining Sierra, Richardson and Geiger, their agents, servants, employees, attorneys and those persons in active concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of the Order of Permanent Injunction, by personal service or otherwise, and each of them, from, directly or indirectly, engaging in the acts, practices or courses of business described above, or in conduct of similar purport and object, in violation of Sections 15(c)(1) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78o(c)(1)].

V.

Grant an Order of Permanent Injunction, in a form consistent with Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, restraining and enjoining Armstrong, his agents, servants, employees, attorneys and those persons in active concert or participation with him who receive actual notice of the Order of Permanent Injunction, by personal service or otherwise, and each of them, from, directly or indirectly, engaging in the acts, practices or courses of business described above, or in conduct of similar purport and object, in violation of Sections 17(b) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77q(b)].

VI.

Grant an Order of Permanent Injunction, in a form consistent with Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, restraining and enjoining Defendants Tsai, Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, their agents, servants, employees, attorneys and those persons in active concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of the Order of Permanent Injunction, by personal service or otherwise, and each of them, from, directly or indirectly, engaging in the acts, practices or courses of business described above, or in conduct of similar purport and object, in violation of Sections 13(d)(1) and 16(a) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §§78m(d)(1) and 78p(a)] and Rules 13d-1(a) and 16a-3 promulgated thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§240.13d-1(a) and 240.16a-3].

VII.

Grant an Order of Permanent Injunction, in a form consistent with Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, restraining and enjoining Defendants Markow, Global Guarantee, Goelo, Yang, K&J, Luo, M&M, their agents, servants, employees, attorneys and those persons in active concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of the Order of Permanent Injunction, by personal service or otherwise, and each of them, from, directly or indirectly, engaging in the acts, practices or courses of business described above, or in conduct of similar purport and object, in violation of Sections 13(d)(2) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78m(d)(2)] and Rule 13d-2(a) promulgated thereunder [17 C.F.R. §§240.13d-2(a)].

VIII.

Grant an Order requiring all Defendants to disgorge the ill-gotten gains that they received as a result of their wrongful conduct, including prejudgment interest.

IX.

Impose civil penalties against all Defendants in accordance with Section 20(d) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §77t(d)] and Section 21(d)(3) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §78u(d)(3)].

X.

Retain jurisdiction of this action in accordance with the principals of equity and the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in order to implement and carry out the terms of all orders and decrees that may be entered or to entertain any suitable application or motion for additional relief within the jurisdiction of this Court.

XI.

Grant Orders for such further relief as the Court may deem appropriate.

Respectfully Submitted,

___________________________
Amy Stahl Cotter

___________________________
Tracy W. Lo

Attorneys for
Plaintiff U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
175 W. Jackson Blvd., Suite 900
Chicago, IL 60604
(312) 353-7390 (phone)
(312) 353-7398 (fax)
Dated: April 11, 2003



http://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/comp18088.htm

Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and GameMary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.

Mary Cummins, Mary K. Cummins, Mary Katherine Cummins, Mary Cummins-Cobb, Mary, Cummins, Cobb, real estate, appraiser, appraisal, instructor, teacher, Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Brentwood, Bel Air, California, licensed, permitted, single family, condo, pud, hud, fannie mae, freddie mac, uspap, certified, residential, certified resident, apartment building, multi-family, commercial, industrial, expert witness, civil, criminal, orea, dre, insurance, bonded, experienced, bilingual, spanish, english, form, 1004, 2055, land, raw, acreage, vacant, insurance, cost, income approach, market analysis, comparative, theory, appraisal theory, cost approach, sales, matched pairs, plot, plat, map, diagram, photo, photographs, photography, rear, front, street, subject, comparable, sold, listed, active, pending, expired, cancelled, listing, mls, multiple listing service, claw, themls,

Tuesday, November 25, 2003

Mary Cummins comment to the SEC


My comment to the SEC on a proposed rule for short sales

From: MMMARYinLA@aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2003 1:48 PM
To: rule-comments@sec.gov
Subject: File No. S7-23-03

I have read a few articles about the new shorting regulations and would
like to comment. I believe that in order to have a balanced market the
investor should be allowed to play the market up and down equally with
the same set of rules. If there are not enough shares to borrow to cover
short positions, a short squeeze occurs and the price shoots up artificially
to the benefit of the "long" investors and companies. This balances out the
market. Someone can also borrow shares to play them in an up trend through
leverage. Borrowing is borrowing, if one plays it up or down. Investors need
to be able to play markets up and down. That's capitalism, that's the
American way.

I also believe that it is the broker who is responsible for processing the
paperwork and following the rules. The investor just puts in an order and
has no idea how that order is executed or what regulations are involved. With
that said I have a few more comments about the entities who are begging the
SEC to stop all this "criminalistic naked shorting that is taking food out of
orphans mouths."

The people who have filed suits over this naked shorting issue are not newly
formed innocent small companies selling shares to raise capital for legitimate
business activities. They are not 100% owned by Joe average investor. They are
owned by insiders, investment companies, stock promoters and major risk takers.
Take a look at some of these companies. Nanopierce NPCT is run by a CEO who
was sued three times by you, the SEC for fraud. The stock promoters were also
sued by the SEC for their fraud in hyping the stock price up. It's worth about
.001 yet went to over $6. Why didn't the company complain about that "artificial"
movement? Because they paid promoters to move the price up as per your own
lawsuit. A large investor is currently suing the company for fraud. Based on
what I know, this company is guilty of securities fraud. This company has
promised profits since 1999 and is on the verge of bankruptcy without meeting
any of its projections. Most of their press releases have turned out to be
unverifiable hype if not outright lies. They even agreed to do toxic funding
knowing full well that their shares would be shorted. Insiders may have even
shorted the shares themselves through holding companies. They used this shorting
to help fund the company. Without shorting, the company would be bankrupt and now
they complain? The SEC has allowed them to fraudulently hype the share price UP
yet now the company asks the SEC to make it even more difficult to short the price
down to it's true value. That is not a balanced market. That is one doomed to
collapse on a larger scale.

There are others on this list which I believe are total stock scams. They have
hired many stock promoters to hype the share price up fraudulently through
newsletters, message boards, "investor conferences," and direct marketing. These
promoters are telling people invested in these stock scams to copy/paste their
comments to the SEC en masse so you will be influenced artificially to change the
regulations. This is the same way they artificially hype share prices up. Please,
read these comments individually.

I follow stock scams so I can alert authorities and investors so the true few
innocent investors won't be scammed. I watched an elderly gentleman invest in a
total scam believing all the hype only to lose his entire retirement fund. Last
I spoke to him he was considering suicide over telling his wife that he lost all
their money. He was never heard from again. I have been sued by these fraudulent
stock promoters just so they can try to silence my honest information about bad
investments. I don't even short these stocks or profit in any way. I also helped
the SEC in two securities fraud cases. If anything, the SEC should be going after
these scamsters even more.

Shorters tell the public the truth about stock scams and loser investments.
Shorters are generally sued frivolously because of releasing honest negative
information. They are doing a service to the public. They regulate the markets
better than the SEC. They should be allowed to play the stocks down just as
others are allowed to play the stocks up. There must be financial gain in order
for them to bear the huge risks and costs involved in releasing negative news.
Why in America do we think that we should only speak positively. That is what
causes our stock market collapses. It's bad enough the major news distribution
companies will not allow negative news to be released about any company unless
it comes from the company itself or they give expressed permission. The US
investor is only allowed to see positive news. All these factors make shorting
a necessity in these markets. If markets were allowed to go up and up, the entire
market would eventually collapse. We need shorters to let out a little market
steam from time to time so the entire market doesn't explode and collapse. Please
allow the markets to be balanced naturally by honest capitalism. It will help
sustain a healthy market and will help all investors in the end.

Mary Cummins
"Just say NO to stock scams"
MMMARYinLA@aol.com
Los Angeles, CA
_____________________

http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s72303/mcummins112503.txt


Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and Game. Mary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.


Friday, November 9, 2001

Mary Cummins wins Ashton Technology lawsuit

UPDATE: 02/29/2016: SEC busts Fred's partner Van Gothner for accounting fraud. I predicted this how many years ago? These people never change. 

I just read many more articles. Van and Freddy had to flee US investments because of their stupid lawsuit against me and my DD page. They went to China because of language barrier and distance. Freddy is considered a "whale" of a con. Too funny.

_____________________________


A Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas judge has thrown out a lawsuit filed earlier this year by Ashton Technology Group, Inc. and its CEO, Freddie Rittereiser, against a frequent online message board critic of the company and its CEO. The lawsuit was filed by Rittereiser and Ashton after the internet poster uploaded documents and other information connecting Ashton and Rittereiser to individuals who work for the Mafia, and who have been arrested by the FBI and indicted by the U.S. Attorney on charges of securities fraud, money laundering, and other Mafia-related activity. In the lawsuit, Rittereiser and Ashton sought court intervention to prevent the defendant, a self-employed Southern California business woman, from posting her research findings and opinions about the plaintiffs to investors on a Yahoo! stock message board.

The allegations were published in the midst of FBI and SEC investigations of Ashton’s financial partners. Earlier this year, Ashton (symbol: ASTN) received notice that its stock would be delisted by Nasdaq by the end of the year. Following the investigations, several former Ashton consultants were indicted and jailed on the fraud charges. Ashton has never derived a profit from its operations since its launch in 1994, but instead relies on revenue from the sale of stock to feed its cash-hungry operations and management. Recently the company announced that it would be relying on death-spiral financing to meet its financial needs for 2001, thus sealing for good any hope that ASTN investors may have of ever recovering their losses. Death-spiral financing usually involves severe dilution of the outstanding shares, causing share value to plummet amidst short perks of market manipulations. Since Ashton filed the lawsuit against the Yahoo! board posters, its stock price has fallen approximately 90% from about $3 to 30 cents, the price at the time of this writing.

The Pennsylvania court ruled that the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania held no personal jurisdiction over the defendant, because she had no minimal contacts within the state which would permit jurisdiction under Pennsylvania’s “long-arm” statute. The defendant, who represented herself pro se, relied on the well-publicized case Barrett v. Catacombs Press in which a Philadelphia federal court had previously ruled that Pennsylvania held no jurisdiction in a similar internet case. That ruling by Judge Antwerpen has been cited by state and federal courts in many different states as a model for determining jurisdiction in states which have “long-arm” statutes similar to Pennsylvania.

Frequently companies such as Ashton file so-called SLAPP lawsuits (Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation) claiming “defamation” when the real intent is to somehow prevent the person from exercising his/her constitutionally protected right of free speech. The Ashton case follows a familiar pattern we have seen repeatedly, that is, that the corporation (we call them “bully corps”) will file suit outside of the state of residence of the defendant, making it difficult of the defendants to defend and to object to discovery. That is because it is known to the company that the suit is frivolous from the outset, and the plaintiffs are counting on the inability of defendants to hire sufficient legal counsel due to economic and other circumstances. For example, one California law firm will not even make a telephone consultation to a defendant without first receiving a $10,000.00 cash retainer. Therefore, many SLAPP plaintiffs are relying on the odds that a defendant will not have the cash resources to launch a substantial defense and counterclaims, and therefore the plaintiff may win by default.

The John Does Anonymous Foundation provides a free legal referral service for anonymous defendants in jurisdictions where lawyers have made their services available to defend on a pro bono or reduced fee basis. In situations where the Foundation is unable to make a referral, or, in cases such as Ashton where the Defendant wanted to represent herself, the johndoes.org web site provides various networking tools where pro se defendants can share information and experiences with one another.

Ashton Technology Group and Freddie Rittereiser were represented by the Pennsylvania law firm of Frank & Rosen. The lawyers for the plaintiffs have requested that the judge in the case reconsider her ruling. The defendant, Mary Cummins, a commercial real estate appraiser in southern California, represented herself pro se.

Staff Report

November 10, 2001
________________

UPDATE: Plaintiff appealed and lost again. Plaintiff can never refile case against Cummins. After the stock scam finally unraveled Ashton Technology went bankrupt.

SEC action against Ashton Technology

March 8, 2001 SEC initiated action against First United Equities  who pump and dumped Ashton Technology's IPO. They pled guilty in 2003.
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/33-8282.htm

October 14, 2005 they impose sanctions and slap Winston's wrist
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/33-8627.pdf

January 2006 they do the same to Hirsch.
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/33-8658.pdf

Mary Cummins to be interviewed about "busting" stock scams on public message boards, on the French Connection tonight November 6

LOS ANGELES --Nov. 6, 2002--Mary Cummins an internet "scambuster" will be interviewed tonight on the French Connection radio show. The show will deal with her experiences with public company Ashton Technology now called Vie Financial Group (OTCBB: VIEF). Listen to her talk about being threatened by the CEO and ultimately sued by the company for her honest message board posts. Hear about how she represented herself pro se and ultimately prevailed in the lawsuit. Learn how to avoid stock scams on the internet and how to protect yourself from being sued for posting the truth about dishonest companies. JohnDoes.org will be the host. Tonight at 9:00 PM ET, 6:00 PM PST. Please see **** for other air times and more information. Be sure to download your radio player.

The French Connection airs every Wednesday night, "two hours of passionate empowerment of common people with uncommon valor." The show is broadcast on over 100 public radio stations and on the internet on Fair Network on Live365, the world's largest internet broadcaster.

______________

Wall Street Journal interviewed me and Fredric for an article. They were putting it all together when 9/11 hit, end of article. More important things to write about.

I can't seem to find the case in Pacer any more so I will copy/paste what I have of the old docket. I have all docs on disc. I may post some docs.

I just checked again. All negative lawsuits against Fredric Rittereiser and Ashton Technology are gone from the Pacer system. Very strange. His lawyer did offer me money right before our last hearing if I would just shut up about Freddy. He told me I could speak about the company as much as I liked but he wanted me to leave Freddy alone. I didn't take the offer. I won that hearing and the case was dismissed. I only appeared once in Philadelphia in person at that hearing.

Right before the hearing the plaintiff's lawyer swore "on the eyes of my wife and child" that I will lose the hearing. He told me if I went into the hearing, I'd lose. He told me not to go into the hearing. What an awful lie to tell. Why are some of these lawyers so ruthless? They also refused to send me a copy of anything they filed. Thank god it was all on Pacer quickly. I'd end up only getting a day to reply because of this. The judge reprimanded the lawyers at my last hearing.

Some documents. I don't know if these were my final documents because I see a lot of typos, grammatical errors and mistakes. I had to dig up a CD from over ten years ago. Some formatting may have fallen apart. I can't open some files because they are old .doc files.

My first appearance
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_appearance.pdf
Letter from their lawyer. They promised to send me copies of what they filed but they didn't
http://www.marycummins.com/frletter.jpg
My old due diligence page on Ashton. Most links don't work.
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_dd.pdf
Request for deposition of Fredric Rittereiser
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_deposition.pdf
Request for interrogatories from Rittereiser
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_interrogatories.pdf
Letter from Ashton to me about scheduling discovery
http://www.marycummins.com/astn_letter_discovery.jpg
My objections, answer to their complaint.
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_objections.pdf
A proposed order. I meant "with prejudice."
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_proposed_order.pdf
My request for documents from Ashton Rittereiser
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_request_for_documents.pdf
A sample post which they called "defamatory." This is not defamatory at all. It's the truth.
http://www.marycummins.com/4.jpg

Fredric Rittereiser aka Freddy.

Freddy speaking on one of those fake stock promotion "interviews."

I found some interesting audio files while I was going through my old disks. I did indeed call up "Fridays with Freddy" and ask him about the status of his lawsuit against me. I wanted him to publicly state why he was suing me. I did not make any other calls or send any other letters to him. And FTR I never had an affair with John Westergaard. He was 75 when I was 25. I kept refuting his paid touts and reporting him to the SEC while he threatened to sue then "destroy" me. I still have my dd page on WBN and Westergaard if anyone wants it. I never met him in person. He later died of prostate cancer which spread to his spine, karma. Here's the audio from that portion of Freddy's audio show 1.6MB.  Keep in mind Freddy was an ex-NJ cop who'd gotten friendly with the mob. There's an in depth article about this on Silicon Investor. It may be linked in my dd page. He then got involved in mob stock scams. This audio is pretty funny.

I never emailed, called, faxed, sent a letter to the company before this show. The show asked for questions for the Friday with Freddy show. It was posted on the Yahoo message board. I of course sent in a question asking him why he sued me and what was the status of his lawsuit against me. It was all so ridiculous! While a few were sued, I was the only one identified. I posted in my real name, location... The others were anonymous. I'd prepared motions to quash subpoena for identities but they were never sent. I was the only one served, sued and I replied. I won.

I did my research, sent it to FBI, SEC, posted my report. FBI, DOJ arrested 50 Ashton Tech people, filed charges against the company. Freddy sued me for defamation for my report to the FBI! For that reason I really started to DIG DEEP! I unearthed more info which sent 25 more to the slammer!

Freddy still kept suing me so I kept DIGGING, DIGGING, DIGGING. I dug so much many more people were arrested. The stock scam was busted and they went bankrupt.

The lesson here is don't sue message board posters for posting the truth about your stock scam. You just draw more media, FBI, public attention to your shitty stock scam. Your scams fails more quickly and in flames.

Frederic Rittereiser talks with his paid interviewer Ted during "Fridays with Freddy" online stockholder radio question/answer show. I have a lot more recordings, files...

Ted: Alright, uh, Mary Cummins wants to know what is the status of the lawsuit against Mary Cummins and the John Does.

Freddy: You know, he he he, the only answer I, I can give you because there are SO many Mary Cummins out there. You wouldn't believe how many people claim they are Mary Cummins calling up here sending us letters and so forth, so on. But I'm sure there's only one that WE SERVED, so she's been SERVED. Uh, um, she sort of controlled the statements and things (?) and she leads a poupourri of subject matter that, dats, totally irrelevant to our business or the implementation of our business plan but I mean, what can I say, I, you know, I've received, we've received calls from supposed share holders who claim that are "the" Mary Cummins. One of them claimed to have had an affair with Westergaard (he was 75 and dying I was 25 and living) and was mad at him and was out to destroy him . We don't even pay attention to these people whether they are writing us, whether, we, we just don't pay attention to them.
Ted: Well, but people have asked on this topic, Fred  why go after uh, someone as the company has.

Freddy: Well, well, well, well, you know, there are certain things she can say and , there are , there are many things she can say, but when you start harming the company or you start harming someone's reputation

Ted: Ahum.

Freddy: Dats when you go after 'em. And, ya know, so, der are certain aspects to, to these types of people, um, dat uh, have defamed the company

Ted: Uhuh

Freddy: And, you know, we just ask them to stop . We don't mind 'em trowing a little baloney out . You know, dis, dis, uh is America.

Ted: Uhum. Alright, uh, fair enough, couple ...

http://www.marycummins.com/fred3.wav

Many people were indeed pretending to be me. I'd threatened to fly to NY for the shareholder meeting if someone would pay my fare. I didn't go but a woman dressed in a red dress showed up and everyone thought that was "the" Mary Cummins. If I were there, I would have asked the tough questions during the Q&A as I did at the Easyriders and Ultra shareholder meetings. They actually tried to lock me out of the Ultra shareholder meeting. I went because I was local. Other out of state investors asked me to go to ask questions for them.

Freddy also sued John Does 1-5. They were anonymous posters. I posted in my own name. I had prepared motions to quash for them so their identities would not be revealed. Freddy didn't even try to go after them. He just wanted me because I had my dd page with evidence of his illegal activity. I just went through some files. He only attached posts by marycummins, notrealbright_2000 and seersucker_for_sheersuckers. I think he also sued blitz_bud and oily_kittens, not sure. I did not know the names of any of the other posters. They stopped posting after the lawsuit was served on me. They returned when I won. Of course by then the company was toast.

Here are two message boards about ASTN. I am user MMMARY and was_mmmary I think. The Yahoo and Raging Bull boards for ASTN are gone. It was the posts on Yahoo that bothered Freddie the most.


ASTN on iHub
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=558

ASTN on Silicon Investor
http://www.siliconinvestor.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=4251


I just checked up on Freddy. He's 75 y.o. and still doing the same thing. He's still in a public company with  his old scam buddy Ivan Gothner! He now calls himself Van Gothner. Chinese AgFeed, I should have known. He has not changed. AgFeed is the new stock scam. Few years back it was anything nano. Before that it was anything having to do with cell phones. CVGC trading on the pinks at .28 These Chinese companies held by US public companies are the new scam du jour. The Chinese companies generally don't exist or have no real assets. The unsuspecting US investor can't tell because he doesn't speak Chinese. There is a shorter named Left who got some translators and has been Googling the companies and outing them for a nice profit. You can only view CVGC on otcbb.com Last trade was a month ago. Look at the numbers.

You can probably see a theme in my last three defamation lawsuits. I tell the absolute truth about bad people who are breaking the law and harming people. I turn them in to authorities. They sue me for defamation. I end up doing a ton more research showing them to be truly bad people. In the end I end up winning the case. Notice all three of these people have huge egos and have personality issues. All three attack other people viciously. Here is a letter Freddy sent to a shareholder. He basically said "quit moaning!" when asked why the company wasn't doing well as promised. Generally CEOs of scam companies say "have faith, just believe, sooooon, great things are happening..." they don't attack the shareholder.



Judge Flora Barth Wolf's final ruling. I won. The case was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. Then the company went bankrupt as I predicted. Judge Flora Barth Wolf was a wonderful judge. She was fair, kind and didn't put up with crap from Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs refused to give me copies of documents and refused to communicate with me. Before the only hearing I attended in person Plaintiffs' attorney swore to me "on the life of my wife and child" that if I went into that court room, I would lose. He offered me hush money. He said "talk about Asthon Technology all you like, but we'll give you money if you shut up about Freddie." I refused the hush money, went into the hearing and won. Judge reprimanded attorney for refusing to give me copies of documents and refusing to communicate with me (except for the one chat before the hearing).

61-01062261 UPON CONSIDERATION OF MARY CUMMINS' MOTION TO DETERMINE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS, THE MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT THEREOF, AND PLAINTIFFS' RESPONSE THERETO, AND THIS COURT FINDING THAT MARY CUMMINS LACKED SUFFICIENT MINIMUM CONTACTS WITH THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED AND DECREED THAT THE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS ARE SUSTAINED AND THE COMPLAINT IN THIS MATTER IS DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE AS TO MARY CUMMINS ONLY FOR LACK OF JURISDICTION. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED THAT PLAINTIFFS' PRAECIPE TO OVERRULE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS IS DENIED AS MOOT...BY THE COURT, JUDGE WOLF, 8-28-01.

Link to official docket (no files)
http://fjdefile.phila.gov/efsfjd/zk_fjd_public_qry_03.zp_dktrpt_frames?case_id=010402722&uid=L0bNTorMyIolqsSYDxam&o=R2h1NYhcS!rzHdb

Full docket as a pdf
http://www.marycummins.com/ashton_technology_v_mary_cummins_docket.pdf

Case Description
Case ID: Case Caption: Filing Date: Court: Location: Jury: Case Type: Status:
Related Cases
010402722 RITTERREISER ETAL VS CUMMINS ETAL Monday , April 23rd, 2001 MAJOR NON JURY 100 PENN SQUARE EAST NON JURY EQUITY - NO REAL ESTATE (TRO) DISCONTINUANCE ORDERED
No related cases were found.
Case Event Schedule
No case events were found.
Case motions
No case motions were found.
Case Parties
Seq #
Assoc
Expn Date
Type
Name
1
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF
FRANK, ALAN L
Address:
ALAN L. FRANK LAW ASSOCS PC 135 OLD YORK ROAD JENKINTOWN PA 19046 (215)935-1000
Aliases:
none
2
1
PLAINTIFF
RITTEREISER, FREDERIC
Address:
3
Address:
4
Address:
11PENNCENTER1835 MARKET ST 4TH FLOOR PHILADELPHIA PA 19103
1
1835MARKETSTSTE 400 PHILADELPHIA PA 19103
906 N DOHENY DR #214 LOS ANGELES CA 90069
Aliases: none
PLAINTIFF
Aliases: none
DEFENDANT
Aliases: none
Filing Party
FRANK, ALAN L
FRANK, ALAN L
ASHTON TECHNOLOGY GROUP INC
CUMMINS, MARY
Disposition Approval/ Amount EntryDate
23-APR-2001 10:58 AM
23-APR-2001 12:00 AM
23-APR-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entries
Filing Date/Time
23-APR-2001 10:57 AM
Docket Type
ACTIVE CASE
DocketEntry: none.
23-APR-2001 11:11 AM
COMMENCEMENT OF CIVIL ACTION
DocketEntry: none.
23-APR-2001 11:11 AM
DocketEntry:
23-APR-2001 11:11 AM
COMPLAINT FILED NOTICE GIVEN
COMPLAINTWITHNOTICETODEFENDWITHINTWENTY(20)DAYSAFTER SERVICE IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 1018.1 FILED.
WAITING TO LIST CASE FRANK, ALAN L 23-APR-2001 MGMT CONF 12:00 AM
DocketEntry: none.
11-MAY-2001 02:07 PM
TRANSFERRED TO MAJOR NON-JURY
SHEPPARD, JR., ALBERT W
11-MAY-2001 02:09 PM
Docket Entry:
AFTER A REVIEW OF PLAINTIFF'S(S') PLEADING AND THE COMMERCE PROGRAM CASE CRITERIA, IT IS ORDERED THAT THIS CASE IS INAPPROPRIATE FOR THE COMMERCE PROGRAM BECAUSE IT DOES NOT INVOLVE A DISPUTE BETWEEN OR AMONG TWO BUSINESS ENTERPRISES. ADMINISTRATIVE DOCKET 01 OF 1999 IN RE: COMMERCE CASE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM, B.1.2. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED THAT THE CASE IS TRANSFERRED TO THE NON JURY PROGRAM AND PLACED IN A WAITING TO LIST STATUS CONFERENCE STATUS. BY THE COURT....SHEPPARD J 5/11/01
11-MAY-2001 02:10 PM
NOTICE GIVEN
11-MAY-2001 02:10 PM
Docket Entry:
none.
11-MAY-2001 02:10 PM
WAITING TO LIST STATUS CONF
11-MAY-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
none.
14-MAY-2001 03:50 PM
REFUND OF FEES/PROTHY APPROVED
15-MAY-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
$22.00 REFUNDED TO FRANK & ROSEN. OVERPAYMENT.
21-MAY-2001 10:36 AM
ENTRY OF APPEARANCE FILED
CUMMINS, MARY
22-MAY-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
ENTRY OF APPEARANCE OF MARY CUMMINS FILED ON BEHALF OF DFT, MARY CUMMINS (PRO-SE) $102.00 FEE PAID FILED.
29-MAY-2001 03:45 PM
PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS
CUMMINS, MARY
30-MAY-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
DEFENDANT, MARY CUMMINS PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS PURSUANT TO PA RCP 1028(A) TO PLAINTIFFS' COMPLAINT.
14-JUN-2001 03:55 PM
ANSWER TO PRELIMINARY OBJCTNS
FRANK, ALAN L
15-JUN-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
ANSWER TO DEFENDANT MARY CUMMINS' PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS.
20-JUN-2001 09:23 AM
LISTED FOR STATUS CONFERENCE
20-JUN-2001 09:23 AM
Docket Entry:
none.
21-JUN-2001 04:05 PM
NOTICE GIVEN
21-JUN-2001 04:05 PM
Docket Entry:
none.
28-JUN-2001 02:13 PM
MOTION TO DETERMINE P O FILED
CUMMINS, MARY
29-JUN-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
61-01062261 RESPONSE DATE 7-30-01
29-JUN-2001 11:36 AM
PRAECIPE/OVERRULE PRELIM OBJS
FRANK, ALAN L
05-JUL-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
35-01062335 PRAECIPE TO OVERRULE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS
05-JUL-2001 03:17 PM
MOTION ASSIGNMENT UPDATED
05-JUL-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
35-01062335 PRAECIPE TO OVERRULE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS ASSIGNMENT DATE UPDATED TO 7-30-01
19-JUL-2001 10:52 AM
STATUS HEARING DISPOSED
TERESHKO, ALLAN L
19-JUL-2001 10:53 AM
It is hereby ORDERED and DECREED as follows: 1. Development of Joint Statement of Uncontested and Contested Facts. (a) Plaintiff's Proposed Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Legal Issues for Trial. By 1/18/02, plaintiff shall provide the Court with a narrative statement listing all facts proposed to be proved by him or her at trial in support of his or her claim(s) as to liability and damages. Additionally, plaintiff shall provide the Court with all relevant conclusions of law based upon his or her proposed findings of fact and any and all legal issues presented thereto. (b) Defendant's Response and Proposed
Docket Entry:
Facts. By 2/18/02, defendant shall provide the Court a statement: (1) indicating the extent to which defendant contests and does not contest the plaintiff's proposed facts: (2) listing all additional facts proposed to be proved by defendant at trial in opposition to, or in special defense of, the plaintiff's claim(s) as to liability and damages; (3) listing all facts proposed to be proved by defendant at trial in support of any counterclaim(s), and/or third-party claim(s) if such claims exist; (4) listing any and all conclusions of law which arise from all contested and uncontested facts as proposed by the plaintiff; and, (5) listing for the Court all legal issues presented based upon proposed facts and conclusions of law. (c) Statement of Uncontested Facts. By 1/18/02, the same date as that listed in paragraph 1 (a) of this order, the parties shall submit a joint statement of uncontested facts. This statement is separate and distinct from any other submitted. As such, agreement or disagreement, which terms are defined below, with any proposed fact by a defendant does not obviate the requirements of this paragraph. 2. Identification of Witnesses and Exhibits. (a) Plaintiff's Witnesses. By 1/18/02, plaintiff shall provide the Court with a list of all possible witnesses, including a brief narrative of each respective witness's expected testimony. (b) Plaintiff's Exhibits. By 1/18/02, plaintiff shall provide the Court with a list of all possible exhibits which he or she may use during the course of trial. (c) Defendant's Witnesses. By 2/18/02, defendant shall provide the Court with a list of all possible witnesses, including a brief narrative of each respective witness's expected testimony. (d) Defendant's Exhibits. By 2/18/02, defendant shall provide the Court with a list of all possible exhibits which he or she may use during the course of the trial. 3. Definitions. (a) Narration of Proposed Facts. In stating facts proposed to be proved, counsel shall do so in simple, declarative, self contained, consecutively numbered sentences. In a case with multiple parties, if a fact is to offered against fewer than all parties, counsel shall indicate the parties against which the fact will (or will not) be offered. (The facts to be set forth include not only ultimate facts, but also all subsidiary and supporting facts except those offered solely for impeachment purposes.) (b) Agreement and Disagreement. Defense counsel shall indicate that he or she does not contest a proposed fact if at trial they will not controvert or dispute that fact. In indicating disagreement with a proposed fact, defense counsel shall so set forth those disagreement(s) as explained above. (c) Objections. Objections to the admissability of a proposed fact (either as irrelevant or on other grounds) may not be used to avoid indicating whether or not the party contests the truth of that fact. (Counsel shall, however, indicate any objections, both to the facts which they contest and those which they do not contest.) (d) Individual Positions. To the extent feasible, counsel with similar interests are expected to coordinate their efforts and express a joint position with respect to the facts they propose to prove and to the facts other parties propose to prove. Subject to the time limits above, each party may, however, list additional proposed facts to cover positions unique to it. 4. Annotations. For each proposed fact, the parties shall, at the time of proposing to prove the fact, list the witnesses (including expert witnesses), documents, and (with line-by-line references) any depositions and answers to interrogatories or requests for admissions that they will offer to prove that fact. In his or her response, defense counsel shall, if he or she objects to any such proposed fact
or proposed proof, state precisely the grounds of their objections and, if they will contest the accuracy of the proposed fact, similarily list the witnesses, documents, depositions, interrogatories, or admissions that they will offer to controvert that fact. Except for good cause shown, a party will be precluded at trial from offering any evidence on any fact not so disclosed and from making any objection not so disclosed. 5. Effect. (a) Preclusion of other facts. Except for good cause shown, parties shall be precluded at trial from offering proof of any fact not disclosed in their listing of proposed facts (except purely for impeachment purposes). 6. Sanctions. Unjustified refusal to admit a proposed fact or to limit the extent of disagreement with a proposed fact shall be subject to sanctions. Excessive listing of proposed facts (or of the evidence to be submitted in support of or denial of such facts) which imposes obvious burdens on opposing parties shall also be subject to sanctions. BY THE COURT: Allan L. Tereshko, Supervising Judge
19-JUL-2001 10:53 AM
LISTED FOR SETTLEMENT CONF
19-JUL-2001 10:53 AM
Docket Entry:
none.
19-JUL-2001 10:54 AM
LISTED FOR TRIAL
19-JUL-2001 10:54 AM
Docket Entry:
none.
30-JUL-2001 09:17 AM
ANSWER (MOTION/PETITION) FILED
RITTEREISER, FREDERIC
31-JUL-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
61-01062261 ANS FILED TO PO'S
01-AUG-2001 04:21 PM
MOTION ASSIGNED
01-AUG-2001 04:21 PM
Docket Entry:
35-01062335 PRAECIPE TO OVERRULE OBJECTIONS ASSIGNED TO JUDGE WOLF ON, 8-2-01.
01-AUG-2001 04:21 PM
MOTION ASSIGNED
01-AUG-2001 04:21 PM
Docket Entry:
61-01062261 MOTION TO DETERMINE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS ASSIGNED TO JUDGE WOLF ON 8-2-01.
29-AUG-2001 03:24 PM
ORDER ENTERED/236 NOTICE GIVEN
WOLF, FLORA B
29-AUG-2001 03:28 PM
Docket Entry:
61-01062261 UPON CONSIDERATION OF MARY CUMMINS' MOTION TO DETERMINE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS, THE MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT THEREOF, AND PLAINTIFFS' RESPONSE THERETO, AND THIS COURT FINDING THAT MARY CUMMINS LACKED SUFFICIENT MINIMUM CONTACTS WITH THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED AND DECREED THAT THE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS ARE SUSTAINED AND THE COMPLAINT IN THIS MATTER IS DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE AS TO MARY CUMMINS ONLY FOR LACK OF JURISDICTION. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED THAT PLAINTIFFS' PRAECIPE TO OVERRULE PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS IS DENIED AS MOOT...BY THE COURT, JUDGE WOLF, 8-28-01.
06-SEP-2001 12:00 PM
PETITION FOR RECONSIDERATION
10-SEP-2001 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
24-01090224 PETITION FOR RECONSIDERATION FILED (FILED BY FREDERIC RITTEREISER AND ASHTON TECHNOLOGY GROUP)
10-SEP-2001 12:04 PM
MOTION ASSIGNED
10-SEP-2001 12:04 PM
Docket Entry:
24-01090224 PETITION FOR RECONSIDERATION ASSIGNED TO JUDGE WOLF ON 9-11-01.
16-OCT-2001 03:17 PM
ORDER ENTERED/236 NOTICE GIVEN
WOLF, FLORA B
16-OCT-2001 03:18 PM
Docket Entry:
24-01090224 IT IS ORDERED THAT PLAINTIFF'S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION IS DENIED AND THE ORDER ENTERED AUGUST 27, 2001, GRANTING DEFENDANT MARY CUMMINS' PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS IS HEREBY AFFIRMED. ...BY THE COURT: WOLF, J. 10-11-01.
25-JAN-2002 12:21 PM
CONFERENCE CANCELLED
25-JAN-2002 12:21 PM
Docket Entry:
none.
25-JAN-2002
OTHER EVENT
25-JAN-2002
03:13 PM
CANCELLED
03:13 PM
Docket Entry:
REFER TO THE ORDER OF JUDGE WOLF DATED 8/28/01.
15-MAR-2002 10:04 AM
NOTICE GIVEN UNDER RULE 236
21-MAR-2002 10:05 AM
Docket Entry:
none.
15-MAR-2002 10:58 AM
PRAECIPE TO DISCONTINUE
FRANK, ALAN L
18-MAR-2002 10:58 AM
Docket Entry:
ORDER TO DISCONTINUE WITHOUT PREJUDICE FILED BY PLAINTIFF(S) ATTORNEY.
21-MAR-2002 10:04 AM
DISCONTINUANCE ORDERED
TERESHKO, ALLAN L
21-MAR-2002 10:05 AM
Docket Entry:
DISCONTINUED 3/18/02 BY THE COURT: JUDGE ALLAN L. TERESHKO
30-DEC-2005 02:36 PM
RECORD DESTROYED
30-DEC-2005 12:00 AM
Docket Entry:
THIS RECORD HAS BEEN DISPOSED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISIONS OF THE COUNTY RECORDS ACT AND PA. R.J.A. NO. 507(A)

Part of old Pacer docket

Case Description 
Case ID: 010402722 
Case Caption: RITTERREISER ETAL VS CUMMINS ETAL 
Filing Date: Monday , April 23rd, 2001 
Court: CZ - COMMERCE 
Location: CH - CITY HALL 
Jury: N - NON JURY 

Case Type: E3 - EQUITY - NO REAL ESTATE (TRO) 
Status: CLWCM - WAITING TO LIST CASE MGMT CONF 

Related Cases 

No related cases were found. 

Case Event Schedule 

No case events were found. 

Case Parties 

Seq # Assoc Expn Date Type ID Name 
1 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF A34414 FRANK, ALAN L 
Address: 1835 MARKET ST STE 320 
11 PENN CENTER 
PHILADELPHIA PA 19103 
(215)864-2900 Aliases: none 

2 1 PLAINTIFF @4247418 RITTEREISER, FREDERIC 
Address: 11 PENN CENTER 1835 MARKET ST 
4TH FLOOR 
PHILADELPHIA PA 19103 Aliases: none 

3 1 PLAINTIFF @4247426 ASHTON TECHNOLOGY GROUP INC 
Address: 1835 MARKET ST STE 400 
PHILADELPHIA PA 19103 Aliases: none 

4 DEFENDANT @4247429 CUMMINS, MARY 
Address: 906 N DOHENY DR #214 
LOS ANGELES CA 90069 Aliases: none 


Docket Entries 

Filing Date/Time Docket Type Filing Party Disposition Amount 
23-APR-2001 
10:57 AM ACTIV - ACTIVE CASE 
Docket Entry: none. 

23-APR-2001 
11:11 AM CIVIL - COMMENCEMENT OF CIVIL ACTION FRANK, ALAN L 
Docket Entry: none. 

23-APR-2001 
11:11 AM CMPLT - COMPLAINT FILED NOTICE GIVEN FRANK, ALAN L 
Docket Entry: COMPLAINT WITH NOTICE TO DEFEND WITHIN TWENTY (20) DAYS AFTER SERVICE IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 1018.1 FILED. 

23-APR-2001 
11:11 AM CLWCM - WAITING TO LIST CASE MGMT CONF FRANK, ALAN L 
Docket Entry: none.

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