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Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum Core Gold DMMIF

Core Gold Inc is a gold mining company based in Canada with all operations in Southern Ecuador. The company primarily explores for gold and silver. Some of its projects includes Zaruma Mine & Portovelo Mill, Dynasty Goldfield and Copper Duke Project.

OTCQX:DMMIF - Post Discussion

Core Gold > ASX investigation
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Post by RONNIE111 on Nov 27, 2019 1:17am

ASX investigation

jessica.coupe@asx.com.au

Ms. Coupe

Core Gold shareholders , like myself, have written to you countless times in the past, let's see, 9 months it seems.  We have written to you about the various misdeeds of Titan Minerals. Misdeeds that seem to warrant action by securities regulators in Australia, where Titan is listed. We have waited patiently for a response from you, or anyone else, but to date the only response we have gotten are form letters, and one response a number of months ago requesting us to stop writing you; it sounded like some sort of actiion was imminent.  But there has been no action. And there has been plenty of time for you to investigate this.  So my question to you is: what is the basis of your lack of action? How do you dismiss all of our allegations of:
-misreporting of facts in an egregious manner amounting to outright lying with the purpose of duping shareholders.
-not reporting all manner of material events, again for the purpose of deceiving shareholders, both of Titan and Core Gold. As you must know, Titan is still trying to do a takeover of Core Gold. Now this attempt might be abandoned shortly, but that does not mean that the ASX does not need to fulfill it's regulatory responsibilities.  It is the basic right of shareholders on an exchange like the ASX to be able to assume that companies listed there are in compliance of the rules.  I am curious what the rule abiding companies, which I am sure comprise most of the ASX listed companies, think about you allowing Titan to flagrantly break the rules.
-manipulating the share price.  This is so obvious , and has been going on so long it is almost funny. You could have gotten a very low mark , or failed miserably, in your Share  Price Manipulation 101 course that you must  have taken, and still be able to see it with the proverbial one eye closed and the other mostly turned to your social media feeds. It is probably the thing I am  most amazed about in the ASX's lack of action in regard to Titan Minerals.  Share price manipulation is very close to insider trading, and no matter how uninterested the ASX seems to be in regulating, it must at least be interestred in insider trading.

Now I don't realistically expect any response to this email.  I am writing for myself, venting, and maybe a little for the readers of 'Stockhouse' where I will post it. Not sure what those readers will gain, perhaps a laugh, and to have their beliefs once again confirmed that: doing nothing is always easier for people in your position, everyone is a crook and nobody cares, (and I could probably come up with another 20 like that) .

For a long time actually , Jessica, I have beleived that you are not an actual person.  The ASX just puts a nice sounding female name on their letterheads.  And this email, and all the others , is just machine read, and shjot into the ether, and after 6 months the all cleaning delete is pressed.  That would certainly be the most cost effective way for the ASX to deal with these nuisances.  The only purpose of the ASX is to turn a profit, and anything that might impinge on that must be gotten rid of a cheaply as possible.

The final thing I cant help myself from mentioning , is the fact that Titan Minerals poisoned a small town in Peru. The town was Tulin and they posioned it by treating the tailings from the toll mill they operated there for awhile, with total disregard for the safety of the workers and the towns people, in amazingly flagrant disregard of the most basic rules of tailings disposal. It is true that most of this happened when the toll mill was operated by ( I suspect your good friend, assuming you are a person which I am abit ambivalent about)  Matthew Carr. But Titan also operated the mill for awhile, and Matthew is a big part of Titan.  I wrote 30 emails to various environment, government, newspaper, organizations in Australia with all the details about Tulin, and after 6 months have, very dissappointly, yet to receive one response. I like to think that if a Canadian company committed such 'Crimes Against Humanity' someone would be interested.  And in fact there was a news story written in Canada that was partially about that.  I will copy it at the bottom here. 

I am still haunted by the image of the innocent indigenous children of Tulin town being forced to breath the cyanide laced dust that blow off the tailings  that Titan just made a big pile of.  I see the picture of those tailings in my nightmares.  Now their parents are also being posioned, but I think adults are always to be held responsible for their children.  One might argue that they should have taken whatever action they needed to to stop Titan.  Now I hope that the Peruvian authorities will finally hold Titan responsible and accountable and go after them with all the powers they can muster.  Perhaps then the Australian authorities can then prove me wrong. 

Finally in my dreams, I am locked in a room with no exit, with   your Matthew Carr.  That wouldn't help the children of Tulin in any material way, but he would get the justice he deserves. 
 

Australian-listed Titan Minerals makes a play for Vancouver-based Core Gold in deal opposed by some investors

 
A processing facility in Tulin, Peru, leased by Australia-based Titan Minerals. Opponents of Titan's proposed takeover of Core Gold, a small Canadian mining company, say environmental contamination at the facility could leave the new company facing hefty fines and other penalties. Supporters of the merger say Titan has continued to get environmental approvals from Peruvian authorities. (Keith Piggot)

A boardroom battle for control over a small Canadian mining company with untapped gold assets in South America has unearthed reports from Peruvian authorities of improperly stored toxic waste — and allegations of corporate malfeasance — in the rough and tumble world of junior resource firms.

Some shareholders of Core Gold, a Vancouver-based and Toronto-listed junior mining company, are adamantly opposed to a takeover bid by Australian-listed Titan Minerals.

 

Supporters of the deal, including Core Gold's board of directors, say the takeover is crucial for bringing fresh capital into the cash-poor company so it can start developing a series of potentially lucrative mineral concessions in Ecuador. 

As part of their effort to rebuff the takeover, Core Gold's former CEO and some shareholders have been leveraging serious environmental violations reported by Peruvian prosecutors at a facility Titan was leasing in Peru, including improperly disposing of cyanide-laced tailings.

The corporate showdown illustrates how duelling mining executives can leverage environmental complaints for their own economic interests, said Pablo Heidrich, a Carleton University political economy professor specializing in Latin America.

"It's a business conflict and there is an overlap with an environmental crime committed by this junior mining company in Peru," said Heidrich, after reviewing documents from Peruvian state prosecutors sanctioning a Titan subsidiary for its environmental conduct.

"This isn't necessarily common but it's not unusual ... There are never any good guys or bad guys in a story like this." 

Core Gold shareholders will vote on Titan's takeover proposal on June 12 in Vancouver. Both sides have launched public relations offensives ahead of the meeting. 

The stakes

Core Gold controls three significant mining concessions in Ecuador, according to corporate statements. Together, these largely untapped properties could yield more than $1 billion in minerals, said Keith Piggot, who was Core Gold's CEO for more than two years before he was ousted by the board in March.  

His estimate could not be independently verified and Core Gold's current valuation — essentially a penny stock — comes nowhere close to justifying such projections.

In a statement, Titan said it's offering each shareholder in Core Gold 20 shares in the newly merged company. It also pledged to bring $25 million in new financing so the firm can meet debt and other obligations. 

 
Peruvian state prosecutors have fined Titan's Tulin operation, pictured here, for improperly handling toxic cyanide. (Keith Piggot)

Some shareholders think that's not a good deal. "We feel this [proposal from Titan] is vastly undervaluing the assets of our company," said Paul Tadeson, a retired GM employee living near Sharbot Lake, Ont., who invested much of his savings in Core Gold. 

He said the Australian-listed Titan is "basically a shell company," and its environmental record in Peru could "put up red flags" with the government of Ecuador for getting mining permits to start developing Core's concessions there.  

Titan and Core Gold's current board said the company has continued to receive environmental permits from Peruvian authorities, underscoring their view that the firm has a solid environmental record. They say the vast majority of Core Gold shareholders — more than 80 per cent of votes cast so far — support the deal as the corporation's best option.

Titan "has had a great response to the merger with Core Gold, with a large range of sophisticated and generalist funds participating in the placement, with continued support from our existing shareholders as well," Titan executive chairman Matthew Carr said in a statement.

Titan did not respond to repeated requests for comment. A receptionist at the co-working space in Australia listed as its office said Carr rarely checks his official email, and messages left for the company were not returned.

The Australian Securities Exchange is probing whether Titan breached regulations on overstating assets, according to an email from the ASX compliance division. "We are looking into the issues you've raised to see if there has been a breach of our rules," an ASX spokesperson wrote in May to a Core Gold shareholder concerned about Titan's assets.

Environmental fines

The concerns about Titan's environmental track record stem from its activities between 2012 and 2018, when the company's subsidiary, Tulin Gold, was leasing a processing facility in southern Peru's Ica province from a Russian-owned company, according to reports from Peruvian state prosecutors. 

Titan was not directly mining gold in the facility. Instead, the company was using it to process ore collected by smaller miners in the mountainous, wind-swept region.

 
Former Core Gold CEO Keith Piggot poses outside of the office of a Peruvian government regulator in Lima, Peru, earlier this year. Piggot says he was ousted from Core Gold for opposing the proposed merger with Titan. Core Gold's board says he was sacked for poor performance. (Keith Piggot)

Tailings — waste created in the process of separating gold from rocks using cyanide —  weren't disposed of properly by Titan, said state prosecution reports reviewed by CBC News.

Cyanide is a rapidly acting, potentially deadly chemical that can exist in various forms, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

Poisonous tailings were stored without being properly covered, allowing cyanide-laced dust to blow onto neighbouring villages in what prosecutors described as a "very serious" infraction. 

In another report, prosecutors said the company breached occupational health rules by exposing workers to cyanide tailings.

Multiple fines for these and other environmental and labour violations were levelled at the company between 2012 and 2017, the prosecutors' reports said. 

"They hid what I estimate to be thousands of tons of waste within, and outside of the Tulin plant," said Lucio Dario Meza, 34, who worked at the facility from 2015-2018, in a sworn statement to a Peruvian notary, which was collected by Piggot's research team as part of his campaign against the deal.

"In 2016-2017, they buried tons of tailings without treating them," Meza said in the letter. CBC News could not independently verify Meza's account. He was dismissed from his job in 2018. 

 
A sign for the culturally sensitive Nazca lines in the area of southern Peru's Ica province where the Tulin gold processing plant is located. (Keith Piggot)

Core Gold's current board of directors dismissed concerns over Titan's environmental record. 

"Core Gold does note that if its former CEO's assertions regarding Titan were true, that it seems unlikely the Peruvian authorities would have provided the final permit for Titan's Vista Plant in Peru, which it announced on May 27, 2019," Mark Bailey, the interim CEO of Core Gold, said in a statement. 

Competing claims

Sam Wong, Core Gold's chief financial officer, initially expressed interest in an interview with CBC. But neither he, nor other members of Core's board, nor the public relations company hired by the company to advise on Titan's proposal responded to written questions or repeated followup calls. 

Piggot said fines issued by Peruvian prosecutors for environmental violations were not disclosed to Titan's shareholders in Australia, and he believes the company faces serious liabilities.

Sooner or later, someone will have to clean up all this cyanide material.- Keith Piggot, ex-CEO of Core Gold

"Sooner or later, someone will have to clean up all this cyanide material," Piggot said in a phone interview from Peru. "Titan has a terrible track record with this environmental liability and it probably has negative value." 

Piggot said he still controls about seven per cent of Core Gold's shares, and claimed he was turfed for opposing the Titan merger. 

In a press release, Core Gold interim CEO Mark Bailey on Thursday accused Piggot of being "disgruntled and self-interested" while peddling "misleading claims."

Core's current board said Piggot was fired for poor performance. They point out that during his tenure the company's liabilities rose by 27 per cent, its assets dropped by 60 per cent, and the stock tanked. 

According to a press release from Titan, two independent advisory firms, Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. and Glass Lewis & Co., on Thursday recommended Core Gold shareholders back the deal with Titan, arguing that Piggot bears "significant responsibility for the company's financial condition."

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