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   Microcap & Penny StocksStratcomm Media, Ltd., (otc bb: SMMM)


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To: robertohenry who wrote (14)2/12/2000 10:01:00 PM
From: robertohenry
   of 29
 
financialweb.com

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To: Arcane Lore who wrote (13)2/23/2000 6:22:00 PM
From: Arcane Lore
   of 29
 
From today's SEC Digest:

DISTRICT COURT ENTERS FINAL JUDGMENT AGAINST JACK RODRIGUEZ, JR. PERMANENTLY ENJOINING HIM FROM VIOLATING ANTIFRAUD AND REGISTRATION PROVISIONS OF THE SECURITIES LAWS

The Commission announced today that on February 2 the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida entered a Final Judgment against Jack Rodriguez, Jr., a.k.a. Jack R. Rodriguez (Rodriguez), a former employee of Corporate Relations Group, Inc. (CRG) and a resident of Florida.

Without admitting or denying the Commission's allegations, Rodriguez consented to the entry of a judgment which permanently enjoins him from violating Sections 5(a), 5(c) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 (Securities Act) and Sections 10(b) and 15(a)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act) and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The judgment also requires Rodriguez to pay disgorgement in the amount of $19,432.79, representing his gains from the conduct alleged in the complaint together with prejudgment interest. However, in light of Rodriguez' demonstrated inability to pay, disgorgement of this amount has been waived and a civil money penalty was not sought.

The Commission alleged that, in late 1994 and early 1995, in connection with the promotion of one of CRG's issuer-clients, Rodriguez paid registered representatives to solicit their clients to purchase this issuer's stock. Rodriguez knew, or was reckless in not knowing, that he was part of CRG's overall fraudulent scheme concerning this stock. As a result, Rodriguez violated the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. The Commission also charged that Rodriguez violated the registration provisions of the Securities Act and the broker-dealer registration requirement of the Exchange Act by selling unregistered shares of Stratcomm Media Ltd. common stock and collecting commissions based upon those sales.

The Commission's enforcement action, which alleged a variety of federal securities laws violations, including violations of the antifraud, antitouting and registration provisions, is still pending in the Middle District of Florida. See Litigation Release No. 16294 (September 27, 1999). [SEC v. Corporate Relations Group, Inc., Stratcomm Media Ltd., Gulf Atlantic Publishing, Inc., New Concepts L.L.C., CJL Corporation, Pow Wow, Inc., Fondo De Adquisiciones E Inversiones Internacionales XL, S.A., C.A. Oportunidad, S.A., Ammonia Hold, Inc., Roberto E. Veitia, James W. Spratt III, James A. Skalko, Jack Rodriguez, Jr., Jose Antonio Gomez Cortes, Arnold Zousmer, Charles J. Lidman and Michael Parnell, Civil Action No. 99-1222-CV-22-A, M.D. Fla., Orlando] (LR-16447)

sec.gov

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To: Retaylor who wrote ()3/2/2000 6:43:00 PM
From: robertohenry
   of 29
 
tscn.com

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To: robertohenry who wrote (17)3/20/2000 2:34:00 PM
From: Walter Morton
   of 29
 
Bad news:

Message 13241809

There is much more in the March 9, 2000 SEC filing.

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To: Walter Morton who wrote (18)4/22/2000 3:16:00 AM
From: EL KABONG!!!
   of 29
 
Stratcomm Media Ltd - Street Wire

SEC settles with four Stratcomm defendants

Stratcomm Media Ltd

SMMM

Shares issued 7,952,200

Fri 14 Apr 2000

Street Wire

by Brent Mudry


The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has reached a settlement with a former consultant to Stratcomm Media and its subsidiary Corporate Relations Group as part of a continuing touting and securities fraud prosecution against Stratcomm, CRG, Stratcomm chief executive Roberto Veitia and a number of associates of the Florida-based investor relations group.

The SEC claims the Stratcomm defendants generated $20-million in illicit profits by secretly selling shares of client companies while they were touting the stocks.

In a consent settlement released Friday, Jerry Berman, who sold unregistered shares and acted as a broker without a licence, in violation of sections of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, agreed to cease and desist from future securities violations. The commission waived payment of disgorgement of $50,000 and elected not to impose a civil fine, based on Mr. Berman's demonstrated inability to pay.

Stratcomm was delisted in October of 1998 from the Vancouver Stock Exchange, the exchange formerly known as the Scam Capital of the World, and now trades on the OTC Bulletin Board.

Stratcomm's VSE clients included Giovanni Camporese's A&A Foods, the Kalpakian's AG Armeno Mines, Dimples Group and Seven Mile High Group.

Mr. Berman also served as a finder for VSE-listed Luxor Industrial in 1993, in a $100,000 private placement. His Luxor dealings were not the subject of regulatory proceedings.

After an administrative hearing, the SEC found that Mr. Berman sold more than 300,000 shares of Stratcomm to the public, in violation of registration provisions of federal securities laws, earning commissions from Stratcomm and CRG of more than $50,000.

The SEC notes that Stratcomm had not filed a registration statement concerning the stock sales, and there was no other registration statement or exemption in effect.

The Berman settlement is the third in recent months in the Stratcomm case.

The SEC recently settled with Jack Rodriguez Jr., a former employee of Corporate Relations Group, Ammonia Hold, and Michael Parnell, an insider of the CRG client.

On Feb. 23, the SEC disclosed a consent settlement with Mr. Rodriguez, in which the securities violator was required to pay disgorgement of $19,432 and refrain from future securities violations. Based on Mr. Rodriguez's demonstrated claim of his inability to pay, the disgorgement was waived and a civil fine was not sought.

The SEC alleges that in late 1994 and early 1995, Mr. Rodriguez, as part of the promotion of one of Corporate Relations' clients, paid registered representatives to solicit their clients to purchase the stock. "Rodriguez knew, or was reckless in not knowing, that he was part of CRG's overall fraudulent scheme concerning this stock," states the SEC.

The regulator notes that Mr. Rodriguez violated the antifraud provisions of federal securities laws. The commission also alleges that Mr. Rodriguez violated registration provisions and the broker-dealer registration requirement of securities laws by selling unregistered shares of Stratcomm and collecting commissions based on these sales.

The SEC disclosed on Jan. 21 that former Stratcomm group client Ammonia Hold and its major shareholder and one-time president Mr. Parnell agreed to refrain from future securities violations. Mr. Parnell was fined $25,000 by
the regulator.

In a final judgment entered Dec. 28 in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, the SEC alleged that Ammonia Hold, a Little Rock, Ark., company that manufactures odour-eliminating products for consumer and industrial markets, and Mr. Parnell violated registration requirements in the issuance and sale of Ammonia Hold shares to Corporate Relations Group.

The SEC also charged Ammonia Hold and Mr. Parnell with fraudulently reporting the proceeds of the shares sold to CRG through co-defendant Fondo de Adquisiciones E Inversiones Internacionales XL SA, as licensing revenues. The regulator notes that proceeds of the stock sales should have been posted as capital infusions in regulatory filings, a press release and on Ammonia Hold's Web site.

The SEC's prosecution of other Stratcomm defendants, including Mr. Veitia, continues.

Mr. Veitia was quite upbeat in September when the SEC launched its prosecution. "We applaud the SEC's efforts to clean up the seamier side of the investor relations industry; however, in this case, we believe they are aimed at the wrong target," stated Mr. Veitia.

"Stratcomm Media discloses the nature and amount of compensation we receive from clients, and we work hard to make it easily accessible for readers of our publications," stated Mr. Veitia. The Stratcomm CEO noted that his company adopted "new policies" for disclosing compensation from public companies in 1997.

Stratcomm's subsidiaries include co-defendant Gulf/Atlantic Publishing, investor relations firm Rainbow Communications, Arrow Marketing, Applied List Management and Altamonte Printing.

Gulf/Atlantic's publications include MoneyWorld, a monthly magazine, Financial Sentinel, a tabloid, and investor newsletters such as Rumor Mill, Confidential Fax Alert and MoneyWorld Insider.

(Readers wishing further details on Stratcomm may refer to bulletins under previous Canadian symbols SML and SMMM.)

(c) Copyright 2000 Canjex Publishing Ltd.
canada-stockwatch.com


KJC

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To: EL KABONG!!! who wrote (19)8/2/2000 7:56:34 PM
From: varoujik
   of 29
 
should i buy smmm for .375 ?

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To: varoujik who wrote (20)8/2/2000 10:30:20 PM
From: EL KABONG!!!
   of 29
 
varoujik,

should i buy smmm for .375 ?

What do you think?

KJC

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To: EL KABONG!!! who wrote (21)8/3/2000 8:28:09 PM
From: varoujik
   of 29
 
yeah?

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To: varoujik who wrote (22)8/3/2000 8:47:27 PM
From: EL KABONG!!!
   of 29
 
varoujik,

Well, it's your money I guess. I wouldn't buy this stock with anyone's money, let alone my own. But, to each his own. Good luck. I think you'll need it with this one.

KJC

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To: EL KABONG!!! who wrote (23)8/4/2000 6:21:31 PM
From: varoujik
   of 29
 
thanx for a honorable answer

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