May 24, 2005
Pair of Las Vegas Lawyers Roll Snake Eyes Again
Sean Flanagan and Daniel Chapman are back in the news, once again targeted for their role in a fraudulent stock scheme. We thought we had heard the last of these two Las Vegas, Nevada lawyers in August 2003, when they were indicted for their roles in a $414 million stock fraud scam. At the time, prosecutors charged that Chapman and Flanagan were engaged in a scheme to create phony shell companies and dump shares on the public.
But there was more two come for this pair of attorneys, who represented a lengthy list of obscure over-the-counter companies, many of which had entered the public marketplace through reverse-mergers. StockPatrol.com readers already were well acquainted with Chapman and Flanagan. The two men had acted as attorneys for a series of highly touted, non-performing companies, like Infotopia, Inc. Hydro Environmental Resources, Inc., Inc. and Bach-Hauser, Inc. – often receiving stock, registered on Forms S-8, in exchange for their services.
Now Flanagan and Chapman have run afoul of regulators once more. On April 25, 2005, the SEC filed a civil action charging the two lawyers and several of their associates with orchestrating a stock manipulation and accounting fraud scam from 1999 through 2002. The lawsuit centers on a scheme to rig the market for shares of Exotics.com, Inc., a Nevada corporation that maintains its principal office in Vancouver, British Columbia,. Named as defendants in the Complaint are Exotics.com, its sole officer, four accountants, and Chapman and Flanagan. The law firm of Flanagan & Associates Ltd was named as a relief defendant because it purportedly received proceeds from the scheme.
The Commission alleges that, from 1999 through 2002, the defendants manipulated trading of Exotics.com stock in order to increase both the share price and trading volume, filed false and misleading public documents, and issued misleading press releases and promotional material about the Company using fax and spam e-mail.
According to the Commission, fraudulent trading activity was coordinated from the law offices of Chapman & Flanagan. Shares were funneled through accounts maintained by Chapman & Flanagan to further the illicit scheme. In this case the SEC says the corrupt lawyers were teamed with a series of unscrupulous accountants, some of whom prepared phony financial statements and filed false financial reports.
In essence, Exotics.com, the product of a reverse-merger – one of the specialties employed by Chapman and Flanagan – became a vehicle for these "professionals" to ride as they manipulated the marketplace.
The SEC is seeking, among other relief, to bar Chapman and Flanagan from future participation in penny stock offerings and to recover funds from the Flanagan law firm.
Posted at 16:31 in news | Permalink | 15676 Trackbacks
July 07, 2004
LashBack 2.13
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Product: Lashback Vendor: LashBack LLC Price: $3.99 per month / $29.99 per year Editor Rating: 3 ½ stars Download Now! |
Pros
+ Highly effective at fighting spam
+ Easy to use
Cons
- Price
- Only supports Outlook and Outlook Express
Review
We test each spam filter by first sending 100 spam emails to a test account with the spam filter installed. If necessary, we then train the product, typically by pressing a button marking the email as spam. After the training process is complete, we then send a larger set of spam emails to the same account to determine the overall effectiveness of the product.
Installation
LashBack installed easily into both Outlook Express and Outlook 2000. When Outlook was started for the first time, Internet Explorer displayed a Flash based tutorial on how to use the product. The short tutorial was very helpful in becoming familiar with the function of each of the four LashBack toolbar buttons.
Usability
LashBack works much like other spam filtering applications. If a spam email gets into your Inbox, you designate it as spam using the 'LashBack' button and the message is moved automatically to the ‘Spam’ folder. If a legitimate email is erroneously marked as spam, simply click 'AddToSafeList' and emails from the sender will no longer be filtered.

Training
After installing LashBack for the first time, we downloaded 70 spam emails and 30 legitimate emails from our test account. The software quarantined 78 total emails of which 13 were legitimate emails. Five spam emails made it through (93% effectiveness).
The emails that slipped through the initial test were corrected using the ‘LashBack’ and ‘AddToSafeList’ buttons. We then downloaded another 283 spam messages and 17 legitimate emails. LashBack quarantined 266 emails, including 3 legitimate ones; another 20 spam emails were not identified as such. This puts LashBack accuracy up there with the other top spam filters at 94%. While LashBack was extremely effective at blocking spam, it tended to filter more legitimate emails than our #1 product, Spam Inspector.
Other Features
One feature that sets LashBack apart from the other spam filters is that it will attempt to unsubscribe you from distribution lists using an unsubscribe link, if available. While this is a nice feature, the worst spammers will not include a working unsubscribe link in their email. This could change with the advent of tougher anti-spam laws.

Summary
LashBack is easy to use and very effective at filtering spam out of your Inbox. The software is sold on a subscription ($3.99 per month, $29.99 per year) basis, which makes it a slightly more expensive product.
Price: $3.99 per month, $29.99 per year
Free Trial: Yes
Posted at 17:14 in news | Permalink | 14878 Trackbacks
June 25, 2004
The Great Nigerian Scam
For those who have not received the Nigerian scam e-mail letter or a newer variation, the letter says that your name was given to someone in Nigeria (or elsewhere) as a "trustworthy person who can help." For some long-winded reason, the sender has access to a large amount of money—usually around $20 million—that he needs to get out of the country. If you help him, you can earn 10 to 20 percent of the money as a fee. Then the letter gets vague and goes into weird, off-the-wall details.
Wow! You—the sucker—have been flattered by being selected. And you realize that you can make a cool $2 to $4 million just by helping this poor sap. Apparently, a university professor in northern California fell prey to this scam and lost $30,000.
One version of the scam works by convincing you that the money will be transferred by wire into your bank account. You have to provide all sorts of financial information, and soon your account is drained of whatever it had, as money is transferred out instead of in. Duh!
What interests me is that thanks to spamming techniques, the con men do not have to spot a mark anymore. They simply try to scam everyone in the world and see what happens. This particular con actually did begin in Nigeria and predates the Web. In the original scam, paper letters were sent out by hand, including elaborate packages of documents. Care went into finding the right suckers. With spam broadcast mailing, such research is no longer necessary. I predict quality con jobs are going to be a thing of the past, and Darwinism will take over. The dumbest get ripped off.
I might be more aware than most of the extent of broadcast spamming. I have been collecting these scam letters for a few years and have both a good collection of them and one of the best lists of names by whom these letters are supposedly authored. This is urban folklore at its finest.
The scam has expanded from Nigeria to all over the world. I wonder whether any Nigerians even do this scam anymore. The latest version I received was from a Mr. Nosa (no first name given) who is supposedly hiding out in the Benin Republic and has millions of dollars he needs me to help him get out of the country. In the past, you would do a Google search using Benin and Nosa and find out there really is some famous guy named Nosa hiding out in Benin who is loaded with dough. But nowadays, when you type those search terms, you get hit after hit regarding the Nigerian scam. Oops!
I received another variation of the classic a week ago from a "Senator David T.I. Mark," who claims to be some sort of investment honcho trying to move a mere $9 million from Nigeria (aha!) to a safe haven. This is supposedly pension money that was overinvoiced and available to steal. Apparently, when a bookkeeping error is made in Nigeria, the money is up for grabs, if you can just get it out of the country.
Then there is the letter I received from Funsho Williams, telling me that he is executing the will of a passenger killed in a Korean Air flight, and nobody is claiming the money. Would I help him figure something out? Of course, I would be paid handsomely. You'll note the use of a foreign-sounding name combined with a Western-sounding name in many of the scam letters. There's Jensen Davis, who tells me I won $1.5 million in some Dutch lottery and I must claim the money ASAP! A weird rigmarole is involved. Geez.
The wives of recently killed, indicted, or imprisoned husbands writing for help is a common theme, too. A letter arrived from Louisa Ejercitor Estrada, whose husband was indicted for a scam in the Philippines. Guess what! She wants me to help her move $65 million to Switzerland.
I'm impressed with the way the classic scam letter has morphed over time, but I still appreciate the original Nigerian scam, in which there is a crooked banker trying to move money out of Nigeria. And I love the names of the supposed letter writers. One of my favorites is Prince Ahmadu A. Ahmadu, whose middle initial must stand for Ahmadu. And a mention goes to two identical letters from two different fakes: Dr. Thomas Okon and Dr. Raymond Okoro, both of whom claimed to be the manager of Zenith Bank in Lagos, Nigeria.
Posted at 9:48 in news | Permalink | 15440 Trackbacks
June 17, 2004
How to Avoid Internet Investment Scams
The Internet serves as an excellent tool for investors, allowing them to easily and inexpensively research investment opportunities. But the Internet is also an excellent tool for fraudsters. That's why you should always think twice before you invest your money in any opportunity you learn about through the Internet.
This alert tells you how to spot different types of Internet fraud, what the SEC is doing to fight Internet investment scams, and how to use the Internet to invest wisely.
Navigating the Frontier: Where the Frauds Are
The Internet allows individuals or companies to communicate with a large audience without spending a lot of time, effort, or money. Anyone can reach tens of thousands of people by building an Internet web site, posting a message on an online bulletin board, entering a discussion in a live "chat" room, or sending mass e-mails. It's easy for fraudsters to make their messages look real and credible. But it's nearly impossible for investors to tell the difference between fact and fiction.
Online Investment Newsletters
Hundreds of online investment newsletters have appeared on the Internet in recent years. Many offer investors seemingly unbiased information free of charge about featured companies or recommending "stock picks of the month." While legitimate online newsletters can help investors gather valuable information, some online newsletters are tools for fraud.
Some companies pay the people who write online newsletters cash or securities to "tout" or recommend their stocks. While this isn't illegal, the federal securities laws require the newsletters to disclose who paid them, the amount, and the type of payment. But many fraudsters fail to do so. Instead, they'll lie about the payments they received, their independence, their so-called research, and their track records. Their newsletters masquerade as sources of unbiased information, when in fact they stand to profit handsomely if they convince investors to buy or sell particular stocks.
Some online newsletters falsely claim to independently research the stocks they profile. Others spread false information or promote worthless stocks. The most notorious sometimes "scalp" the stocks they hype, driving up the price of the stock with their baseless recommendations and then selling their own holdings at high prices and high profits. To learn how to separate the good from the bad, read our tips for checking out newsletters.
Bulletin Boards
Online bulletin boards – whether newsgroups, usenet, or web-based bulletin boards – have become an increasingly popular forum for investors to share information. Bulletin boards typically feature "threads" made up of numerous messages on various investment opportunities.
While some messages may be true, many turn out to be bogus – or even scams. Fraudsters often pump up a company or pretend to reveal "inside" information about upcoming announcements, new products, or lucrative contracts.
Also, you never know for certain who you're dealing with – or whether they're credible – because many bulletin boards allow users to hide their identity behind multiple aliases. People claiming to be unbiased observers who've carefully researched the company may actually be company insiders, large shareholders, or paid promoters. A single person can easily create the illusion of widespread interest in a small, thinly-traded stock by posting a series of messages under various aliases.
E-mail Spams
Because "spam" – junk e-mail – is so cheap and easy to create, fraudsters increasingly use it to find investors for bogus investment schemes or to spread false information about a company. Spam allows the unscrupulous to target many more potential investors than cold calling or mass mailing. Using a bulk e-mail program, spammers can send personalized messages to thousands and even millions of Internet users at a time.
How to Use the Internet to Invest Wisely
If you want to invest wisely and steer clear of frauds, you must get the facts. Never, ever, make an investment based solely on what you read in an online newsletter or bulletin board posting, especially if the investment involves a small, thinly-traded company that isn't well known. And don't even think about investing on your own in small companies that don't file regular reports with the SEC, unless you are willing to investigate each company thoroughly and to check the truth of every statement about the company. For instance, you'll need to:- get financial statements from the company and be able to analyze them;
- verify the claims about new product developments or lucrative contracts;
- call every supplier or customer of the company and ask if they really do business with the company; and
- check out the people running the company and find out if they've ever made money for investors before.
Here's how you can use the internet to help you invest wisely:
Start With the SEC's EDGAR Database
The federal securities laws require many public companies to register with the SEC and file annual reports containing audited financial statements. For example, the following companies must file reports with the SEC:
- All U.S. companies with more than 500 investors and $10 million in net assets; and
- All companies that list their securities on The Nasdaq Stock Market or a major national stock exchange such as the New York Stock Exchange.
Anyone can access and download these reports from the SEC's EDGAR database for free. Before you invest in a company, check to see whether it's registered with the SEC and read its reports.
But some companies don't have to register their securities or file reports on EDGAR. For example, companies raising less than $5 million in a 12-month period may be exempt from registering the transaction under a rule known as "Regulation A." Instead, these companies must file a hard copy of the "offering circular" with the SEC containing financial statements and other information. Also, smaller companies raising less than one million dollars don't have to register with the SEC, but they must file a "Form D." Form D is a brief notice which includes the names and addresses of owners and stock promoters, but little other information. If you can't find a company on EDGAR, call the SEC at (202) 942-8090 to find out if the company filed an offering circular under Regulation A or a Form D. And be sure to request a copy.
The difference between investing in companies that register with the SEC and those that don't is like the difference between driving on a clear sunny day and driving at night without your headlights. You're asking for serious losses if you invest in small, thinly-traded companies that aren't widely known just by following the signs you read on Internet bulletin boards or online newsletters.
Contact Your State Securities Regulators
Don't stop with the SEC. You should always check with your state securities regulator, which you can find on the website of the North American Securities Administrators Association, to see if they have more information about the company and the people behind it. They can check the Central Registration Depository (CRD) and tell you whether the broker touting the stock or the broker's firm has a disciplinary history. They can also tell you whether they've cleared the offering for sale in your state.
Check with the NASD
The National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. can also give you a partial disciplinary history on the broker or firm that's touting the stock. Call their toll-free public disclosure hot-line at (800) 289-9999 or visit their website at http://www.nasdr.com.
Online Investment Fraud:
New Medium, Same Old Scam
The types of investment fraud seen online mirror the frauds perpetrated over the phone or through the mail. Remember that fraudsters can use a variety of Internet tools to spread false information, including bulletin boards, online newsletters, spam, or chat (including Internet Relay Chat or Web Page Chat). They can also build a glitzy, sophisticated web page. All of these tools cost very little money and can be found at the fingertips of fraudsters.
Consider all offers with skepticism. Investment frauds usually fit one of the following categories:
The "Pump And Dump" Scam
It's common to see messages posted online that urge readers to buy a stock quickly or tell you to sell before the price goes down. Often the writers will claim to have "inside" information about an impending development or to use an "infallible" combination of economic and stock market data to pick stocks. In reality, they may be insiders or paid promoters who stand to gain by selling their shares after the stock price is pumped up by gullible investors. Once these fraudsters sell their shares and stop hyping the stock, the price typically falls and investors lose their money. Fraudsters frequently use this ploy with small, thinly-traded companies because it's easier to manipulate a stock when there's little or no information available about the company.
The Pyramid
Be wary of messages that read: "How To Make Big Money From Your Home Computer!!!" One online promoter claimed that investors could "turn $5 into $60,000 in just three to six weeks." In reality, this program was nothing more than an electronic version of the classic "pyramid" scheme in which participants attempt to make money solely by recruiting new participants into the program.
The "Risk-Free" Fraud
"Exciting, Low-Risk Investment Opportunities" to participate in exotic-sounding investments – such as wireless cable projects, prime bank securities, and eel farms – have been offered through the Internet. But no investment is risk-free. And sometimes the investment products touted do not even exist – they're merely scams. Be wary of opportunities that promise spectacular profits or "guaranteed" returns. If the deal sounds too good to be true, then it probably is.
Off-shore Frauds
At one time, off-shore schemes targeting U.S. investors cost a great deal of money and were difficult to carry out. Conflicting time zones, differing currencies, and the high costs of international telephone calls and overnight mailings made it difficult for fraudsters to prey on U.S. residents. But the Internet has removed those obstacles. Be extra careful when considering any investment opportunity that comes from another country, because it's difficult for U.S. law enforcement agencies to investigate and prosecute foreign frauds.
Posted at 11:53 in news | Permalink | 6806 Trackbacks | 0 Comments
June 09, 2004
12 scams most likely to arrive by bulk email
Email boxes are filling up with more offers for business
opportunities than any other kind of unsolicited commercial email. That's a
problem, according to the Federal Trade Commission, because many of these
offers are scams.
In response to requests from consumers, the FTC asked email users
to forward their unsolicited commercial email to the agency for an inside look
at the bulk email business. FTC staff found that more often than not, bulk
email offers appeared to be fraudulent, and if pursued, could have ripped-off
unsuspecting consumers to the tune of billions of dollars.
The FTC has identified the 12 scams that are most likely to arrive
in consumers' email boxes. The "dirty dozen" are:
Continue reading "12 scams most likely to arrive by bulk email"
Posted at 17:15 in news, side | Permalink | 11871 Trackbacks | 0 Comments





