Tag: Christopher Dubeau

  • INCREDIBLE: Florida — Again: SEC Files Complaint Against Purported ‘Gold’ Mining Operation In Miami Known As Quri Resources And Its CEO, Jaime Santiago Gomez

    BULLETIN: The SEC has gone to federal court in Florida to accuse Quri Resources Inc. and its Chief Executive Officer Jaime Santiago Gomez of operating a pump-and-dump scheme to drive up the price of Quri’s unregistered stock.

    It was the second major action in Florida today against companies and individuals who allegedly were running stock-fraud schemes. Named defendants in a separate SEC case were Atlantis Technology Group and CEO Christopher Dubeau of Weston, Fla.

    “Investors were duped into believing that Quri Resources was a successful mining company and that Atlantis Technology Group was selling cutting-edge technology services,” said Eric I. Bustillo, director of the SEC’s Miami Regional Office.

    “Both companies misled investors with exaggerated claims while their respective senior executives illegally dumped shares into the market,” Bustillo said. “We will continue to crack down on companies that promote misleading information.”

    The SEC said that Quri purported to be a “mining company headquartered in Miami, Florida, and operating in Ecuador.”

    As was the case with Atlantis and Dubeau, Quri and Gomez were accused of issuing “a series of false press releases and other misleading public statements” as part of the scheme, the SEC charged.

    From February to July 2009, Quri claimed in several press releases that, among other things:

    • It was ready to begin drilling on a mining project in Ecuador with a probable gold reserve worth over $1 billion.
    • It had signed letters of intent to acquire two valuable mining projects in Arizona.
    • It had acquired a second mining project in Ecuador and anticipated producing gold within three months.
    • It had signed a letter of intent to acquire a third valuable mining project in Ecuador.

    “[A]t the same time, Quri’s website and other public statements described Quri as having ongoing operations, employees worldwide, and an impressive management team,” the SEC charged. “The complaint alleges that these claims were grossly misleading because, among other things:

    • The exact value of the gold reserves in Ecuador could not be known without further detailed exploration.
    • Quri never acquired any mining projects in Arizona, and it acquired, at most, only one project in Ecuador.
    • Quri never developed any of its purported mining projects and was never in a financial position to do so.
    • Quri had no money, was never able to raise any funds, had no reasonable expectation of any funding, and was heavily indebted.

    The SEC said the scheme also involved the misuse of a website and a social-networking site.

    “Gomez also authored Quri’s internet website and approved its profile on the social network website LinkedIn,” the agency alleged. “These falsely described Quri as having ongoing operations, 28 employees worldwide, a geologist with a PhD on staff, and an impressive management team led by Gomez, a college graduate. None of these claims were true.”

    Gomez simply fleeced investors, the SEC charged.

    “[T]aking advantage of Quri’s artificially inflated stock price, Gomez, through an entity he controlled, dumped over half a million shares of Quri stock on the unsuspecting public, selling Quri stock in unregistered transactions, earning at least $17,500 from the sale of the stock,” the SEC charged.

    See earlier story about Atlantis.

    Read the SEC complaint against Quri.

  • BULLETIN: Florida — Again: SEC Sues Atlantis Technology Group In Alleged Online Television Pump-And-Dump Scheme; CEO Christopher M. Dubeau Threatened ‘Bashers’ For Making ‘Slanderous’ Postings, March News Release Says

    BULLETIN: UPDATED 10:51 A.M. EDT (U.S.A., Oct. 1.) About six months after the chief executive officer of Atlantis Technology Group (Atlantis) was quoted in a Marketwire news release that threatened online commentators for “making slanderous postings” about the company, the SEC has gone to federal court in Florida to accuse Atlantis CEO Christopher Dubeau and the firm of running a penny-stock swindle.

    The SEC’s lawsuit concerns the operations of an Atlantis subsidiary known as Global Online Television (GOTV), which allegedly used a commission-based sales force to promote the purported TV company.

    Dubeau and Atlantis actually were operating a “pump-and dump” stock fraud, the SEC charged in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.

    “From at least August 7, 2009 through April 5, 2010 . . . Atlantis and Dubeau issued numerous false and misleading press releases that artificially inflated the trading volume and price of Atlantis’s stock,” the SEC charged. “Dubeau benefited financially from Atlantis’s artificially increased trading volume and stock price. In December 2009, he sold more than 60 million shares of Atlantis stock for proceeds of about $240,000, and in August 2009 he received $77,000 of the proceeds from an associate’s sale of more than 16 million shares.”

    A Marketwire news released dated March 26, 2010, and issued under the names of Atlantis and Dubeau accuses “bashers” of making “slanderous” remarks about the company online.

    “I can assure you I will not play the bashers’ games,” Dubeau was quoted as saying. “Atlantis has Launched an Investigation into these Individuals that are attacking the Company and its Associates. Atlantis has Identified at least 3 of these Participants in what we deem to be manipulation of the Company’s Stock price by making slanderous postings. We will seek every avenue available to bring these persons of interest to the forefront of the Judicial System.”

    Now, six months later, the SEC has accused Dubeau of operating a large-scale fraud by fabricating news about the company’s ability to offer online TV and video-phone services.

    “Atlantis’s press releases were false because Atlantis’s subsidiary has never offered
    Internet protocol television service or video phone services,” the SEC charged. “At the time the company and Dubeau issued these press releases, the subsidiary did not offer (and was not able to offer) either service, and it did not have relationships with television networks to offer content to Atlantis’s subscribers. In fact, until March 1, 2010, neither the subsidiary nor Atlantis had any product or service to offer to consumers.”

    Threats against critics who voice concerns about business opportunities online are common, as is the issuance of news releases to spread false information. In the alleged AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme, for example, ASD President Andy Bowdoin threatened critics with lawsuits. ASD operated from Florida.

    An operation known as AdViewGlobal (AVG) that has close ASD ties and also operated at least in part from Florida also threatened critics. AVG even threatened its own members with lawsuits.

    Critics of Data Network Affiliates (DNA), a Florida company that purports to offer an MLM program that collects license-plate data to aid law enforcement and the AMBER Alert program rescue abducted children, also were threatened.

    DNA figure Phil Piccolo used an online radio program last month to threaten critics.

    Convicted Florida Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein, who ran one of the largest scams in U.S. history, also threatened critics. Rothstein pleaded guility to racketeering.

    Read the SEC complaint against Atlantis and Dubeau of Fort Lauderdale and Weston, Fla.