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MountainWest Resources Inc. C.MWR



CSE:MWR - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by SDavison Nov 24, 2013 9:03am
273 Views
Post# 21935704

Utah Legislators will help MSX Stock to rise

Utah Legislators will help MSX Stock to riseSince March, 2010 Brent Johnson has visited Utah several times. These trips and meetings therein taught Brent Johnson the importance of open communication in Utah because the General Public want to know the truth about "secret deals" with Politicians. MSX is being researched by many Utah Stockbrokers and Marketmakers because of the 8 US Class Actions litigations against Barrick Gold and their corruption in Chile against the Villar/Lopehandia 2005 Partnership. CLEAR TITLE RIGHTS TO MINE is held by Jorge, a partner to MSX.


Back in March, 1993 when I sued Barrick Gold at the Nevada Bullfrog Mine I had CLEAR TITLE to mine the property. I had it since August, 1984. Judges in Nevada are elected. I found out quickly what I needed to do == JUDGES HAD TO RELEASE WHO CONTRIBUTED FOR THEIR ELECTIONS. I educated Jorge Lopehandia about corrupt politicians in Utah and Nevada (in the pocket of Newmont, Franco-Nevada, ABX, etc) between 2002-2009 when he had been interviewed on Vancouver Co-Op Radio Station after Barrick established CASE LAW that Jorge could not use the Internet any longer in Canada. How corrupt are Canadian Politicians

Because of this experience I also sued Zions First National Bank in Provo, Utah because they embezzled $40,000 from our family bank account (restaurant business since 1971). Kirton & McConkie represented Zions Bank. Both cases educated the general public.

Finally in November, 2013 Justice has prevailed in Utah Politics. Behind the scene for the past eighteen months I have dealt with elected Legislators about the corruption of the Utah Attorney General’s Office thru loose and hidden secret deals by Kirton & McConkie (Fitzgerald/Ranspot Utah attorneys) to discredit Brent Johnson and MSX. The Utah laws are changing.

MSX/Cobre stock trading price was high back between 1989-1994. Then it crashed and the Stockbrokers asked Brent Johnson to intervene. Brent has done a great job, because he is t he cornerstone in educating Utah Legislators about the controls Utah has had on the price of MSX stock since January, 2010 when Jorge Lopehandia asked me to get involved.


"....Utah campaign laws are now so loose, said Powell, that, at least so far, "I don’t see much positive effect on other office holders from the Swallow inquiry because we haven’t changed the underlying ground rules.... There ought to be some guidance, some incentive to avoid the types of situations that Swallow found himself in." Martindale said it’s time to draw hard lines in campaign laws. "I think we’ve operated for far too long under the assumption that we just elect good people and we should trust them and everything’s going to be OK. By and large most of our elected officials are well-meaning people, but we can’t just make that assumption," she said. "We should have laws in place to take care of when that’s not the case."


Swallow leapt before he was pushed
Election laws » Utah campaign laws have few teeth, but they can be sharp.
By Lee Davidson | The Salt Lake Tribune, Sunday, November 24, 2013
When Utah Attorney General John Swallow announced his resignation on Thursday while defiantly proclaiming his innocence, he said the timing had nothing to do with a report due out that very day from a special counsel investigating alleged violations of campaign finance and conflict-of-interest laws.
https://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/57169233-90/swallow-campaign-laws-utah.html.csp
But, the delayed report, issued Friday, made clear that Swallow’s timing — even if coincidental — was probably a smart move.
Had Swallow not resigned, he now would be facing the real possibility of a judge removing him from office. Utah Democratic Party Chairman Jim Dabakis quipped that would be "like getting Al Capone on tax evasion."
But it shows that penalties in campaign laws — which historically have led to little more than slaps on the wrist — can have some teeth. Many bills are soon to be considered that could add even more.
"Candidates need to take this seriously," said Mark Thomas, elections director for Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox, after Friday’s release of a special counsel’s report that asserts Swallow violated campaign laws and could have faced removal from office.
"Election laws may not be the sexiest way to get someone who is a crooked or unethical politician, but it works. It’s not to be taken lightly," said Maryanne Martindale, executive director of the left-leaning Alliance for a Better Utah, which had filed the complaints against Swallow.
In the not-distant past, running afoul of campaign laws led to little punishment in Utah.
A search of news archives found only a few punishments in recent years.
For example, at least four minor candidates were removed from the ballot for failing to file campaign donation disclosure forms. Some lobbyists were fined a few hundred dollars for filing forms late. Rep. Paul Ray, R-Clearfield, self-reported a violation (after questioning by The Tribune) for misspending campaign money to take his family to a circus, and he had to repay it and pay a $64 fine to the state.
Adding a few teeth • Usually, though, candidates faced few, if any, consequences. As recently as 2010, one of every eight legislators missed deadlines for required online ethics training. They simply hurried to finish it after staff warned them that they were late, and they faced no other penalties.
Lawmakers, though, have toughened up parts of campaign law in recent years regarding disclosing potential financial conflicts. A failed ethics initiative helped prod legislative action.
"The requirement to disclose conflicts of interest has only been in place since the 2010 election cycle," Thomas said. "There has been some minor complaints of candidate’s conflict of interest reports, but none were as extensive" as what were alleged about Swallow.

The special counsel’s report says Swallow intentionally hid payments and his interest in companies related to allegations that he was involved in attempting to facilitate bribes, make promises of preferential treatment and take improper gifts.
Martindale says given past wrist-slapping, she frankly is surprised and pleased at how seriously her group’s complaints were treated — and how it shows some improvements in law in recent years. But she said more reforms are needed because some types of unethical behavior still likely are not technically illegal.
"We literally have no campaign finance laws. We have reporting laws [about donations received], but there’s really still no restrictions in terms of who can donate in any amount to any candidate," she said.

Wide open • Rep. Kraig Powell, R-Heber City, House chairman of the Government Operations Interim Committee, which oversees campaign reform, said Utah laws are so wide open without any donation caps "that there’s no way for officeholders to really know if certain conduct should be avoided, because there’s no guidance from the law."
Powell — who personally does not accept donations from lobbyists, special interests or corporations — said a problem the Swallow scandals show is "many people were saying even if these allegations are true, did he break the law? We don’t have a lot of campaign-finance regulation, so maybe there’s not a law that’s broken."

Similarly, Kirk Jowers, director of the Hinckley Institute of Politics at the University of Utah, said a state commission he cochaired that looked at ways to strengthen democracy talked about the need for donation limits — which he says the Swallow scandals show are needed.
"You’re fighting against some preconceptions when you take $100,000 from someone, whether you did something wrong or not," he said.
Thomas said the lieutenant governor’s office will use the special counsel’s report to identify any changes in law it feels are needed.
Already, requests have been filed for more than two dozen bills on campaign and election reform for the Legislature’s next session, beginning in January. Powell’s committee endorsed one this week that, ironically, might make it more difficult to void elections for violations.
It would allow such action only if the violation affected the outcome of the election, which could be difficult to prove.
Powell, though, said legislative attorneys warned "that without that provision in the bill, the statute could be held unconstitutional," because a candidate could argue a minor violation wouldn’t have changed an election outcome, especially if the margin of victory was wide, as in many Utah races.
Utah campaign laws are now so loose, said Powell, that, at least so far, "I don’t see much positive effect on other office holders from the Swallow inquiry because we haven’t changed the underlying ground rules.... There ought to be some guidance, some incentive to avoid the types of situations that Swallow found himself in."
Martindale said it’s time to draw hard lines in campaign laws.
"I think we’ve operated for far too long under the assumption that we just elect good people and we should trust them and everything’s going to be OK. By and large most of our elected officials are well-meaning people, but we can’t just make that assumption," she said. "We should have laws in place to take care of when that’s not the case."


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