
New Regime, Same Goals: Inform, Expose Truth

In the microcap world, consultants or people who lend money to micro companies who then can’t pay the debts back then have to pay in large blocks of stock, which they usually sell off fast and drive the price of the stock to nothing. Often, the same consultants and lenders go from company to company repeating the same frauds. Investors have a right to know the history of an individual in control of their money. If an individual has any ties to past scam companies, this information is either totally concealed or hard to find.
“Of potentially greater concern is that the lack of reliable, readily available information about some microcap companies can open the door to fraud. It’s easier for fraudsters to manipulate a stock when there’s little or no information available about the company.”
“Publicly-available information about microcap stocks, including penny stocks often is scarce. This makes it easier for fraudsters to spread false information. In addition, it is often easier for fraudsters to manipulate the price of microcap stocks because microcap stocks historically have been less liquid than the stock of larger companies.”
Before investing in a microcap, the SEC advises:
Who pulling the strings inside a company is a significant information that investors in all types of publicly traded companies should have the right to. But often if you read the fine print of a financial report you will find a statement like these: (pulled from real reports)
“On September 4, 2015, the Company entered into a consulting agreement, effective October 1, 2015, for an initial term of three months”
“the Company entered into consulting agreements with four sons of its President, for their respective consulting services at a rate of $29,000, respectively.”
With Who? Or the consulting agreement will be with a company, you have no idea who the actual people are you’re giving your money to. If you look up the company it can be some ambiguous company registered to another company.
Information is investors best weapon against fraud. Fraudsters don’t want their information public.
This is why we support reporters like Teri Buhl, be thank ful for her trademark “Smashmouth Investigative Journalism” probing and asking the questions and reporting stories fraudsters don’t want told. She dug deep into the NIR debocal that caused investors to lose millions that the government could never recover. All this is relevant to this site because of NIRs storied PIPE deal finder Eric Noveshen – knowing the players is important when thousands of people have their money on the line.http://www.teribuhl.com/2011/11/23/pwc-says-nir-group-doesnt-have-access-to-dealer-market/
Some of the comments posted on her reports:
I have lost a huge portion of my retirement in the NIR fund, AJW Offshore. Corey Ribotsky seems to be doing well and I need to contact him regarding my losses. I need Corey’s phone or email address. Help!
December 9, 2011 at 1:06 pm
Can you please look into the NIR payment arrangement with the Itronics settlement.
I think you’ll be startled at what you uncover. In a nutshell, Itronics has been committing fraud on multiple levels. They agreed to settle with NIR for $8M+ payable in shares or cash. The company has zero cash yet they only added about $600k worth of shares to their outstanding share count since the May 4, 2011 payout commencement date. This means NIR is being paid in something other than just shares. It’s widely speculated that ITRO is grossly understating revenues and selling silver off the books to pay this settlement or some other nefarious scheme. Perhaps they have a deal with silver? Nobody knows for sure but I’d bet my bottom dollar that NIR is receiving dirty money from ITRO and may very well be complicit in the scheme.
Itronics the good ole fertilizer company, Eric Noveshen had his hand in that cookie jar. Last year he claimed he wasn’t connected to NIR, for good reason, but don’t investors have the right to know? https://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/2011/lr22106.htm
From a 2009 deposition of Corey Ribotsky:
Curt Kramer? Connect the dots again…Noveshen worked with Kramer in a pump and dump of a Florida based company, SMEV that resulted in a federal lawsuit in 2012, Allen Licht v. Ajene Watson et. al (Noveshen was a defendant). Bet Allen Licht wish he knew this information prior to signing a deal with him.
Curt Kramer was blacklisted by FINRA in 2013.
EDWY, edoorways – another pump and dump Noveshen benefited from in 2009-10, as noted in Allen Licht v. Ajene Watson et. al. Warning: the circle isn’t too big folks.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=103620719
Eric Noveshen, a great divisor of financial schemes, a great vexatious litigant, a great manipulator of Florida foreclosure laws to attain free housing, a great, to sum it up a great fraud – is seeking to have this website and any others exposing his financial scams taken down.
Noveshen demands that these pages contain “untruthful” claims and defamatory remarks, much like the baseless “Cease and Desist” Noveshen posted on a RipOff Report about his business. Other then reader comments, which we cannot verify, Noveshen has not identified anything untruthful on this site. The fact is every blog is based on and often features the public document upon which it is based. Proof is in the publications, many written by Noveshen himself.
Noveshen’s goal is to deprive would be investors of information. He will bully, harass, stalk and sue, anyone attempting to combat his economic crimes through exposure. He want’s this site down because it links his dozens of fraudulent activities in one easy-to-find location, ultimately shrinking his pool of potential victims to deprive of money. Operating in secrecy is the only way the “stinky pinky” penny stocks Noveshen makes a living off of thrive. If his name is publicly linked investors would run!
We issue this challenge – can someone provide the name of ONE company Eric Noveshen has been a broker/employee where he was not sued for illegal broker activities? Or fired for same? Or didn’t include in his personal bankruptcy to avoid repayment of debt? Not Roan Meyers (sued and settled for unauthorized trading, fraud, common law fraud and negligence). Not Gruntal & Co. (sued unauthorized trades) ultimately fired for violation of firm policy. Not Newbridge Securities, see Noveshen bankruptcy filing, 2005.
Is there any company Eric Noveshen has acted as a “consultant” to that is not associated with claims of kickbacks, shorting, churning, pump and dump or other stock manipulation tactics?
Is there any home Eric Noveshen has resided from 2000-2016 that has not been the subject of a foreclosure lawsuit? See Bank One Indymac v. Eric L. Noveshen 2003. Wells Fargo v. Christina Noveshen and Eric Noveshen 2003. Or property documents on 436 NE 10th Ave, 33301 and 508 Coconut Isle Dr., 33301.
A new rip off report on Eric Noveshen was published on November 23, 2015. The author says he lost $12,000 by investing in one of Eric L Noveshen penny stocks. He also mentions other fraud victims Including, Ellen Frankel, James Vennoker, Allen Licht, Daniel Jacobs, Gary Kimmons and stockholders of, EDWY, PNOW and SMEV ALL PENNYSTOCK PUMP AND DUMP SCAMS.
See ripoffreport.com Eric Noveshen/Envision Capital.