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Great Panther Mining Ltd GPLDF

Great Panther Mining Limited is a Canada-based precious metals producer focused on the operation of the Tucano Gold Mine in Brazil. The Company controls a land package covering nearly 200,000 hectares in the prospective Vila Nova Greenstone belt. The Company has three wholly owned mining operations including the Tucano gold mine, which produces gold dore and is located in Amapa State in northern Brazil. In Mexico, Great Panther operates the Topia mine in the state of Durango, which produces concentrates containing silver, gold, lead and zinc, and the Guanajuato Mine Complex (the GMC) in the state of Guanajuato. The GMC comprises the Guanajuato mine, the San Ignacio mine, and the Cata processing plant, which produces silver and gold concentrates. The Company also wholly owns the Coricancha Mine Complex, a gold-silver-copper-lead-zinc mine and processing facility in the central Andes of Peru. It has a portfolio of exploration projects: El Horcon property, Santa Rosa, and Plomo property.


GREY:GPLDF - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by whypromoteon Dec 18, 2010 11:15am
712 Views
Post# 17865938

FYI on Thom Calandra...

FYI on Thom Calandra...Saw he has resurfaced here. May not be a bigger snake.
Do your DD.

https://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr19028.htm


Securities and Exchange Commission v. Thom Calandra, Case No. C05 00135 JCS (N.D. Cal. filed January 10, 2005)

SEC BRINGS FRAUD CHARGES AGAINST FORMER CBS MARKETWATCH COLUMNIST THOM CALANDRA FOR ILLEGAL TRADING SCHEME

The Securities and Exchange Commission today brought and settled civil fraud charges against Thom Calandra, a former columnist for the Internet website CBS MarketWatch.com. The Commission alleges that Calandra profited by secretly selling stocks shortly after his investment newsletter's positive recommendations of the stocks caused their prices to rise. In settling the matter, Calandra, who lives in Sausalito, California, will pay over $540,000 in disgorgement and penalties.

According to the Commission's complaint, filed in the Northern District of California, Calandra made over $400,000 in illegal profits through a practice known as "scalping"-buying shares of thinly-traded, small-cap companies, writing highly favorable newsletter profiles recommending the companies to his newsletter subscribers, and then selling the majority of his shares when the increased demand generated by his favorable columns drove up the stock price. From March to December 2003, Calandra followed this "Buy-Write-Sell" pattern for 23 different stocks that he covered in The Calandra Report, without disclosing his actions to his readers.

In addition, the Commission alleged that Calandra failed to tell his readers that he had received compensation from a stock promoter affiliated with two mining companies that Calandra profiled in The Calandra Report. The compensation took the form of heavily-discounted shares in the two companies-shares which Calandra later sold at a substantial profit after the stock prices rose following his favorable newsletter write-ups.

Calandra, without admitting or denying the allegations in the Commission's complaint, has agreed to a permanent injunction from further violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws (Sections 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder), and from further violations of Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933, which prohibits the non-disclosure of compensation received for providing publicity about a security. Calandra also will disgorge $416,109.58 in illegal trading profits and prejudgment interest and will pay a civil penalty of $125,000.

SEC Complaint in this matter


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