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Health

Breast Implants Might Be Linked to Extra Cancers, F.D.A. Warns

They are extremely rare, he added, and the new warning should not cause any general concern. Realizing that ALCL was associated with breast implants had already “allowed us to be more aware that other things might be happening in this area,” said Dr. Clemens.

“If ALCL is uncommon, these are very rare,” he added. It has long been known that scar tissue, such as that formed after breast implant surgery, can lead to squamous cell carcinoma, added Dr. added Clement.

“A wound that’s trying to heal and trying to heal for a long time can develop into these things,” he said. But the exact nature of the relationship between the implant and the cancer, and whether the implant causes the cancer, is not yet clear, he said.

In a typical year, approximately 400,000 women in the United States receive breast implants, 300,000 for cosmetic reasons and 100,000 for reconstruction after mastectomies performed to treat or prevent breast cancer.

Numbers dropped significantly in the first year of the pandemic, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

Last year, the FDA put so-called black-box labels on breast implants, warning that they have been linked to a variety of chronic conditions, including autoimmune diseases, joint pain, mental confusion, muscle pain and chronic fatigue to lymphoma.

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Politics

Florida man Stephen Alford, linked to alleged Gaetz plot, charged in $25 million scheme

Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) walks out of the committee room during a hearing with the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Cyber, Innovative Technologies, and Information System in the Rayburn House Office Building on May 14, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images

A man reportedly at the center of an alleged extortion plot involving Rep. Matt Gaetz and his family has been charged with engaging in a scheme to defraud a victim out of $25 million, in part by falsely promising he could secure a presidential pardon.

A grand jury charged Florida resident Stephen Alford, 62, with wire fraud in connection with the pardon scheme, carried out between March 16 and April 7, federal prosecutors said Tuesday.

Alford was also charged with attempting to stop the seizure of his iPhone by the government, said the grand jury indictment, which was signed by a U.S. magistrate judge on Aug. 18.

Alford was arrested earlier Tuesday and made his initial appearance in federal court, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Florida said in a press release. He faces up to 25 years imprisonment on the charged crimes, according to the prosecutors’ office.

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Gaetz, R-Fla., a staunch supporter of former President Donald Trump, is being investigated by the Department of Justice about whether the 39-year-old congressman had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old girl, The New York Times reported in March.

Gaetz, at the time that report came out, had linked that DOJ probe with the alleged $25 million “organized criminal extortion” scheme against him and his father, Don Gaetz.

Gaetz has denied all wrongdoing. He has not been charged with a crime.

A Times report from April 1, which described Alford as a real estate agent with a prior fraud conviction, said that he and a former Air Force intelligence officer named Robert Kent approached Don Gaetz about providing funding for an attempt to rescue an American hostage in Iran.

They reportedly told Don Gaetz, 73, that securing that hostage, Robert Levinson, could help clinch a pardon for his son in case he was charged with federal crimes.

Don Gaetz then hired a lawyer and contacted the FBI, the Times reported. Kent denied the allegations.

The grand jury indictment did not refer to Matt Gaetz, Don Gaetz, Levinson or Kent by their full names.

Instead, it said that Alford gave “Person A” the phone number of “D.G.” in order to “discuss the purported release of R.L. from captivity in Iran and a purported ‘current federal investigation’ into Family Member A of D.G.”

In a text message, “it was conveyed to D.G. that Person A’s ‘partner will see to it that [Family Member A] receives a Presidential Pardon, thus alleviating all his legal issues,” the indictment alleged.

Alford then wrote a letter, titled “Project Homecoming,” which made claims about an “‘investigation by the FBI for various public corruption and public integrity issues’ related to Family Member A,” as well as a “Presidential Pardon” and the request for $25 million to “‘immediately fund the release’ of R.L.,” according to the indictment.

The letter allegedly instructed that the money was to be “deposited into a trust account of Law Firm A.”

Alford’s letter also falsely asserted that his “‘team has been assured by the President’ that he will ‘strongly consider’ a ‘Presidential Pardon,'” or tell the Justice Department to quash any probe of “Family Member A” if R.L. is released from captivity, the indictment said.

Alford also falsely told D.G., “I will assure you that [Family Member A] will get off his problems” and claimed he could “guarantee” that that family member “would not go to prison.”

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Health

Blood clots linked to AstraZeneca shot have 22% mortality charge: research

A paramedic prepares doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine for patients at a walk-in COVID-19 clinic at a Buddhist temple in the Smithfield suburb of Sydney on Aug. 4, 2021.

Saeed Khan | AFP | Getty Images

A new study has provided further details on the “rare but devastating” blood clotting complications associated with the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine.

In a peer-reviewed article published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, Massachusetts Medical Society scientists analyzed the first 220 cases of the disease reported in the UK.

The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine – now one of the most widely used Covid vaccines in the world – was launched in the UK in January, making it the first country to give the vaccine.

A very small number of people who were vaccinated with the AstraZeneca vaccine have developed blood clots. Described by health officials as “extremely rare”, it is characterized by blood clots accompanied by low platelet counts.

The Massachusetts Medical Society study uses data identified from 294 patients who presented to UK hospitals between March 22nd and June 6th.

All of these patients had received their first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca shot and were hospitalized with symptoms between five and 48 days after their vaccination. The average time between vaccination and hospitalization was 14 days, the results showed.

The overall mortality rate for VITT in the study was 22%.

The researchers also found that 41% of patients who presented with VITT were not diagnosed with any underlying health problems. Of those reporting a past or current illness, the study found that no illnesses or medications that were “unexpected in the general population” were prevalent.

“Against the background of a successful vaccination program in the UK, VITT has emerged as a rare but devastating complication,” the study’s authors said in their report. “We found that it often affects young, otherwise healthy vaccine recipients and is associated with high mortality.”

“In our cohort, 85% of the patients were younger than 60 years, although the (Oxford / AstraZeneca) vaccination was predominant in older adults,” the scientists found.

As a precaution, Great Britain has been offering people under 40 an alternative to the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine since May.

People diagnosed with VITT ranged from 18 to 79 years old, with the mean age being 48, the study showed.

As of July 28, inclusive, an estimated 24.8 million first doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid vaccine had been administered in the UK, with an estimated 23.6 million second doses received.

On July 28, government figures show that for every million first or unknown doses of the Oxford AstraZeneca shot, 14.9 people developed a rare blood clot with low platelet counts. After a second dose of the vaccine, the number dropped to 1.8 cases per million.

The overall death rate for that period was 18%, the government data showed, with 73 deaths. Six of these occurred after the second dose.

Late last month, AstraZeneca published a study that found the VITT rate was 8.1 per million after the first dose of its vaccine, which dropped to 2.3 per million after a second dose.

According to official information, 411 suspected cases of VITT had been reported in Great Britain by July 28.

Benefits vs. Risks

In a statement Thursday, AstraZeneca said the research published in the New England Journal of Medicine was drawn from “a small sample size.”

“Recent practical evidence from millions of people shows that AstraZeneca’s vaccine has a similar safety profile to other vaccines and that thrombosis with thrombocytopenia is extremely rare and treatable,” said a spokesman.

The spokesman added that the infection with Covid-19 “poses a far greater risk” for rare blood clotting events.

“Vaccines remain the most effective protection against Covid-19 and the best way out of this pandemic,” they said.

Both the UK and EU drug regulators have identified possible links between the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine and rare blood clots.

In April, the company announced it would comply with government requests in the UK and Europe to update its Covid vaccine labels. However, it stressed that the WHO had said “a causal relationship is considered plausible but not confirmed”.

The UK Joint Vaccination and Immunization Committee has stated time and time again that for the vast majority of people, the benefits of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine continue to outweigh the risks.

Several health authorities, including the WHO, the European Medicines Agency and the International Society on Thrombosis and Hemostasis, agree that the benefits of giving the vaccine outweigh the risks.

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Business

E-Waste, firm linked to New Jersey deli, broadcasts reverse merger

Hometown Deli, Paulsboro, N.J.

Mike Calia | CNBC

E-Waste, a shell company linked to a nearly $100 million company that owns just one New Jersey deli, announced Tuesday it will enter into a reverse merger with a privately held electric vehicle corporation called EZRAider Global Inc.

E-Waste, which itself has a sky-high market capitalization of $110 million despite having no business operations, had been marketed along with deli company Hometown International for such a reverse merger or similar transaction.

“This demonstrates that there is a credible process in place for [E-Waste] to complete a merger with an appropriate private company,” said a person with knowledge of the situation who declined to be named. “The merger will be an efficient and robust manner for EZRAider to access the U.S. capital markets.”

E-Waste’s mailing address is in a North Carolina office building and is the same address as a company connected to Peter Coker Sr., whose son, Peter Coker Jr., is chairman and CEO of Hometown International. The deli owner until recently held a $150,000 promissory note from E-Waste.

EZRAider described itself in an April news release as a proprietary electric vehicle platform that comes in 2-, 4- and 6-wheel-drive options “when combined with the Ecart trailer.”

“It was originally developed in Israel for military troop mobility in the field and has since become available to governments and consumer markets in numerous countries, including the US,” EZRaider said in its release at the time.

“When paired with accessories, EZRaider vehicles are competitive for a wide variety of uses including urban commuting & errands, agriculture, off-road work and adventure, search and rescue, fire, security, military, enhanced mobility for disabled persons, golf, tourism, hunting, fishing, camping, facilities maintenance, micro-deliveries and more.”

In March, EZRaider Global Inc. said it had obtained a $50 million investment commitment from Luxembourg-based Global Emerging Markets Group to take the company public.

A Securities and Exchange Commission filing by E-Waste on Tuesday noted GEM’s involvement in the reverse merger.

CNBC in April detailed the fact that E-Waste before fall 2020 was registered at the Manhattan office of GEM Group. That article also noted that as of early 2020 four of the five biggest shareholders of E-Waste were, in order of size of shares held: the Valletta, Malta-based GEM Global Yield Fund LLC SCS, and three individuals whose address was that of something called GEM Advisors, located on Madison Avenue in New York.

At the time, E-Waste’s president, treasurer and secretary was a man named Peter de Svastich, who is a managing director at the GEM Group.

GEM, which had been E-Waste’s controlling shareholder, sold 6 million restricted shares of the company’s stock last year for $30,000 to Global Equity Limited — a Macau, China-based entity.

Global Equity Limited is also the biggest single shareholder of record in Hometown International, the deli company.

E-Waste’s filing Tuesday with the SEC detailed the series of transactions that will underlay its reverse merger with EZRaider.

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The company said another company, the privately held EZ Global, will acquire a limited liability company called EZ Raider LLC, which will include the rights to acquire a fourth company, based in Israel, called DS Raider Ltd.

“EZ Global will enter into a reverse merger with E-Waste and a newly-formed acquisition subsidiary of E-Waste,” the SEC filing said.

“All the outstanding shares of capital stock of EZ Global will be transferred to E-Waste in exchange for shares of E-Waste Common Stock.”

The filing said that after the reverse merge, E-Waste will conduct a private placement offering of its securities on the terms described below to complete the acquisition of DS Israel by EZ Global.

The transaction is expected to be completed on or before June 30.

“Following the completion of all necessary business and legal due diligence after the execution of this Term Sheet, EZ Global will offer and sell a minimum of … $2,000,000.00 … and a maximum of …$3,000,000 … principal amount of EZ Global’s senior secured convertible notes,” the filing said. It added that those “will be sold to a limited number of sophisticated investors and/or non-US persons.”

According to the filing, “GEM Global Yield Fund LLC SCS or its affiliate, agent, or assign (‘GEM’) has entered into a purchase agreement with EZ Global to purchase up to $50,000,000 of EZ Global’s issued and outstanding shares of registered and freely tradeable common stock issued pursuant to the Securities Act for a period of thirty-six months.”

Both E-Waste and Hometown International, whose stock trades on the over-the-counter Pink market, disavowed weeks ago their preposterously high market capitalizations in SEC filings, which noted that their share price did not reflect the value of their businesses.

Hometown International in mid-April drew widespread attention when hedge fund manager David Einhorn, in a client letter, noted that it recently had a more than $100 million market capitalization despite owning only the small deli in Paulsboro, New Jersey.

Since then, CNBC has detailed how the tangled history of arrests, lawsuits and regulatory sanctions involving a number of people connected to Hometown and E-Waste, among them Coker Sr., his business partner, a lawyer involved in the creation of the deli company, and others.

E-Waste’s former president, John Rollo, last month resigned from that post, which he had assumed after a career that included winning Grammy Awards as a music sound engineer and working as a patient transporter at a New Jersey hospital.

Rollo was replaced by 31-year-old Elliot Mermel, a California resident whose business background includes founding a company that raised crickets as human food and a partnership in a cannabis-related business with Paul Pierce, the former Boston Celtics superstar basketball player.

Shortly after Rollo quit, Hometown International’s shareholder fired the deli company CEO, Paul Morina, who is the principal and head wrestling coach at Paulsboro High School, and replaced him with Coker Jr.

A person familiar with the situation confirmed to CNBC that the moves to replace the executives were part of ongoing housecleaning effort at both companies. The person insisted on anonymity in order to speak freely about the circumstances of the moves.

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Health

FDA official says coronary heart challenge presumably linked to pictures is uncommon

A healthcare worker administers a dose of a Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine to a child at a pediatrician’s office in Bingham Farms, Michigan, U.S., on Wednesday, May 19, 2021.

Emily Elconin | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A heart inflammation condition in adolescents and young adults who received Covid-19 vaccines appears to be very rare and it remains unclear if the issue is actually related to the shots, the Food and Drug Administration’s top vaccine regulator, Dr. Peter Marks, said Thursday.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine safety group said last week it was looking into a condition called myocarditis, which is an inflammation of the heart muscle, in a “relatively few” people who received Covid vaccinations.

Myocarditis can affect one’s heart muscle and heart electrical system, “reducing its ability to pump and causing rapid or abnormal heart rhythms,” according to the Mayo Clinic.

The cases were predominantly in adolescents and young adults and usually occurred within four days after getting the shot, according to the CDC. The condition was seen more often in men and most cases appear to be mild, the agency said, though officials are following up with the patients.

“We still don’t know whether this is truly related to the vaccine,” Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said during a virtual Q&A event with the COVID-19 Vaccine Education and Equity Project.

The CDC is coordinating its investigation with the FDA, which recently authorized the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for adolescents ages 12 to 15. The vaccine has been available for Americans 16 and up since December. Vaccines from Moderna and Johnson & Johnson are available to those 18 and older.

Health experts say finding rare side effects once a vaccine or drug is administered to the general population is common and if myocarditis turns out to be related to the Covid vaccine, the risk is negligible when compared with the risks of being infected with Covid-19.

Marks, who has been at the FDA for nearly a decade, added Thursday that the “handful” of cases reported have been “very mild, lasting a day or two” and usually happened after a second dose.

“My kids are a little older, but I wouldn’t hesitate to vaccinate my children, just because this is a pretty rare finding and we really don’t know yet if it’s truly related” to the vaccines, he said.

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Health

CDC says 28 blood clot instances, three deaths could also be linked to J&J Covid vaccine

The Johnson & Johnson Janssen vaccine

Stephen Zenner | LightRocket | Getty Images

CDC scientists say their investigation into a rare blood clotting problem related to the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine identified 28 people who may have developed life-threatening blockages – three of whom have died.

The Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged states on April 13 to temporarily cease use of J & J’s vaccine “out of caution” while examining six women ages 18 to 48 who developed cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, or CVST combined with low platelets within about two weeks of receiving the shot.

They recommended resuming use of the shot 10 days later after the CDC found the benefits of the vaccinations outweighed their risks.

CVST is a form of thrombosis with thrombocytopenia, or TTS, which are blood clots with a low platelet count that make patients at risk of stroke. Platelets actually help the blood to clot.

CDC official Dr. Tom Shimabukuro said Wednesday that four of the 28 people with TTS were hospitalized on May 7, one of whom was in intensive care, and two were being discharged to a post-acute care facility. The remaining 19 patients have all been discharged, he said during a presentation to the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. The panel voted earlier in the day to recommend the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine for 12 to 15 year olds.

The mean age of the patients with TTS was 40 years and ranged from 18 to 59 years. Women aged 30 to 39 were the greatest risk group. All patients received the J&J shot before the April 13 break. Of the 28 TTS cases, 19 involved the brain, with 10 of those patients suffering from cerebral haemorrhage, Shimabukuro said.

The other clots formed in the lower extremities, pulmonary arteries, or other areas of the body.

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Health

C.D.C Confirms Extra Instances of Uncommon Blood Clot Dysfunction Linked to J.&J. Vaccine

Federal health officials have now confirmed 28 cases, including six in men, of a rare bleeding disorder in adults who have received the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine.

Dr. Tom Shimabukuro, deputy director of the vaccination safety bureau at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, presented the new cases on Wednesday at a CDC advisory board meeting

The number is an increase from the 15 confirmed cases that were all women reported at the meeting last month.

Although officials have now identified a handful of cases in men, women – particularly between the ages of 30 and 49 – appear to be at increased risk. “The trend is that women in all age groups have higher reporting rates than men,” said Dr. Shimabukuro at the meeting.

Patients with the rare but serious disorder develop blood clots, often in the brain, as well as low levels of platelets, components of the blood that promote clotting. The disorder is a “rare, clinically serious, and potentially life-threatening condition,” said Dr. Shimabukuro.

Last month, after reports first emerged that six women who had received the vaccine had developed the disorder, federal health officials recommended discontinuing use of the vaccine during the investigation. They lifted the suspension 10 days later and warned the vaccine label of possible risks that suggest that there is a “plausible” link between the vaccine and the disease.

22 of the confirmed cases so far involved women and six men. All were adults between the ages of 18 and 59 who received the vaccine before the national break. (Another case was also recorded in a 25-year-old male who participated in the clinical trial.)

Three people have died and four remain in the hospital, including one in intensive care. No new deaths have been documented since last month’s meeting, said Dr. Shimabukuro.

The overall risk remains extremely low. More than 9 million doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine have now been administered in the United States.

There were 12.4 cases per million doses in women between 30 and 39 years of age and 9.4 cases per million doses in women between 40 and 49 years of age, the two demographics that appear to be at greatest risk. There were fewer than 3 cases per million doses in older women and men of all ages.

Of the 28 confirmed cases, 12 people who developed the disorder had obesity, 7 had high blood pressure, 3 had diabetes, and 3 were taking estrogen, although it is not yet clear whether any of these factors could significantly increase the risk of the disorder.

Officials will continue to look for cases of the coagulation disorder in vaccinated people, said Dr. Shimabukuro.

There were no confirmed cases of coagulation disorder after the Pfizer BioNTech or Moderna vaccines, which use a different technology, said Dr. Shimabukuro.

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Politics

‘We Construct the Wall’ founder, linked to Steve Bannon, faces tax, fraud expenses

Brian Kolfage Jr., Senior Airman in the U.S. Air Force, a triple amputee who lost both his legs and arm on his second deployment to Iraq in 2004, takes part in the Veterans Day parade in the November 11, 2014 5th Avenue in New York (USA).

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Brian Kolfage, who was previously charged with Steve Bannon for his role in an allegedly fraudulent crowdfunding campaign to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, was charged Tuesday on Tuesday on additional charges of fraud and filing a false tax return.

A federal grand jury in Florida accused Kolfage of failing to report hundreds of thousands of dollars in income for his 2019 taxes, on recent indictments.

An indictment and a first appearance for Kolfage are scheduled for May 27 in a courthouse in Pensacola before Judge Elizabeth Timothy, court records show.

Kolfage was charged with wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy in federal court in Manhattan last year along with three employees, including Bannon.

Former President Donald Trump pardoned Bannon and dozens of others on his last night in office. Trump did not apologize to Kolfage.

The allegations all stemmed from “We Build the Wall,” the alleged fundraiser to privately build parts of the border wall that Trump had promised.

The Justice Department claimed that Kolfage, who founded the campaign, and his staff defrauded “hundreds of thousands of donors” by raising millions of dollars “on the false pretext that all of this money would be spent on building” the border wall.

Instead, the defendants planned to pass some of this money on to Kolfage, “which he used to finance his lavish lifestyle,” the Justice Department said.

Harvey Steinberg, a Kolfage attorney, did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

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Politics

$100 million New Jersey deli linked to shell firm E-Waste

Ihr Deli in Ihrer Heimatstadt in Paulsboro, NJ

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Wir werden haben, was sie haben.

Ein mysteriöses 100-Millionen-Dollar-Unternehmen, das nur ein kleines Delikatessengeschäft in New Jersey besitzt, ist in mehrfacher Hinsicht mit einem anderen Unternehmen verbunden, E-Waste Corp.

Die Aktien von E-Waste, wie die des Deli-Besitzers Hometown International, sind im vergangenen Jahr stark angestiegen und haben Anfang dieses Monats eine Marktkapitalisierung von mehr als 100 Millionen US-Dollar erzielt. Dieser Anstieg ereignete sich, obwohl E-Waste kein wirklich laufendes Geschäft hat, wie Aufzeichnungen belegen.

Aus den Unterlagen geht auch hervor, dass Hometown International Ende letzten Jahres E-Waste 150.000 US-Dollar geliehen hat. Das Delikatessengeschäft war im vergangenen Jahr wegen der Covid-Pandemie für mehr als fünf Monate geschlossen.

Und wie der CEO von Hometown International, ein Schulleiter und Head Wrestling-Trainer aus New Jersey, hatte John Rollo, CEO von E-Waste, kürzlich einen Job, der für den Leiter eines Unternehmens ungewöhnlich ist, das auf dem Papier einen Wert von mehreren zehn Millionen Dollar hat. Er war ein Patiententransporter in einem Krankenhaus im Norden von New Jersey und arbeitet offenbar immer noch im selben Gesundheitssystem.

Die Karrieregeschichte des CEO von E-Waste ist voller anderer überraschender Umwege. Der 66-jährige Rollo, der keinen Anruf mit der Bitte um einen Kommentar erwiderte, gewann zuvor zwei Grammy-Preise während seiner langen Karriere als Toningenieur und Produzent auf Alben von Künstlern wie The Kinks, Joe Cocker, Whitney Houston, Kool & the Gang und Quiet Riot , zeichnet Zustand auf.

Außerdem war er fast 18 Jahre lang Vice President für Operations bei Comus International, einem in New Jersey ansässigen Schalt- und Sensorhersteller. Rollo wurde 2019 von Comus entlassen, laut einer Klage, die er in diesem Jahr im Zusammenhang mit seiner Kündigung eingereicht hatte.

Zu den Verbindungen zwischen E-Waste und Hometown International, deren Your Hometown Deli in Paulsboro in den letzten zwei Jahren zusammen einen Umsatz von nur etwa 35.000 US-Dollar erzielt hatte, gehört, dass dasselbe Unternehmen in Hongkong ihre größten Anteilseigner sind, ähnliche Beratungsverträge mit Unternehmen, die von Investoren kontrolliert werden, und deren Unternehmen derzeitige Nutzung derselben New Yorker Anwaltskanzlei.

Und genau wie bei frühen Finanzanträgen von Hometown International zeigen die ersten behördlichen Einreichungen von E-Waste die Beteiligung eines Anwalts, der später von der Securities and Exchange Commission wegen Beteiligung an betrügerischen Vorhaben zur Gründung von Unternehmen verklagt wurde.

Der Anwalt für E-Waste war ein anderer als der ursprünglich von Hometown International verwendete – Hometowns früherer Anwalt wurde im Gegensatz zu E-Waste wegen verwandter Bundesverbrechen angeklagt und verurteilt.

Eine weitere Ähnlichkeit zwischen den Unternehmen besteht darin, dass niemand, der mit ihnen in Verbindung steht, Anrufe oder E-Mails von CNBC zurückgegeben hat.

Eine Schlüsselfigur in beiden Unternehmen ist Peter Coker Sr., ein 78-jähriger Geschäftsmann aus North Carolina, dessen Sohn Peter Coker Jr. Vorsitzender von Hometown International ist.

Der jüngere Coker ist Executive Chairman von South Shore Holdings Ltd., einem Unternehmen in Hongkong, das ein finanziell angeschlagenes Hotel in Macau, China, besitzt: The 13.

Zu den ersten Investoren dieser überaus luxuriösen Immobilie gehörten Steve Cohens SAC Capital Advisors, Fidelity International und Omega Advisors. Die Website der 13 gibt an, dass sie seit dem 15. Februar 2020 wegen der Coronavirus-Pandemie geschlossen ist.

Aufzeichnungen zeigen, dass Coker Sr. ein Investor in Hometown International ist, ebenso wie ein Unternehmen von ihm, Europa Capital.

Zu den größten Anteilseignern von Hometown International gehören drei separate Unternehmen in Hongkong, die alle dieselbe Adresse haben, und vier separate Unternehmen in Macau, die dort ebenfalls alle dieselbe Adresse haben.

Paul Morina, der CEO des Deli-Besitzers und Direktor und Wrestling-Trainer der örtlichen High School, ist ebenfalls ein Hauptaktionär von Hometown.

Ein Nettoverlust und große Verbindlichkeiten

E-Waste, das sich in den von der Securities and Exchange Commission eingereichten Unterlagen als Shell-Unternehmen bezeichnet hat, hatte im November eine Bilanzsumme von fast 183.000 USD und Verbindlichkeiten von fast 412.400 USD, wie aus der jüngsten 10-Q-Meldung bei der SEC hervorgeht.

Das Unternehmen hatte in den neun Monaten zum 30. November einen Nettoverlust von fast 58.000 USD.

Das Unternehmen wurde 2012 in Florida gegründet, “um ein E-Abfall-Recycling-Geschäft aufzubauen”, aber “war in seinen Bemühungen nicht erfolgreich und hat diesen Geschäftsbereich eingestellt”, so die SEC-Unterlagen.

Seitdem ist das Unternehmen ein Shell-Unternehmen und möchte “einen Unternehmenszusammenschluss mit einem privaten Unternehmen eingehen, dessen Geschäft seinen Aktionären eine Chance bietet”, heißt es in der Akte.

Aus dieser Einreichung geht auch hervor, dass erhebliche Zweifel daran bestehen, dass E-Waste im nächsten Jahr im Geschäft bleiben kann, und dass das Unternehmen “seit seiner Gründung erhebliche Verluste erlitten hat und nicht in der Lage ist, ausreichende Einnahmen zu erzielen”, um rentabel zu werden .

“Es kann nicht garantiert werden, dass rentable Operationen jemals erreicht werden oder, falls sie erreicht werden, auf kontinuierlicher Basis aufrechterhalten werden können”, heißt es in der Akte.

“Wenn das Unternehmen kein zusätzliches Kapital erhält, muss das Unternehmen den Umfang seiner Geschäftsentwicklungsaktivitäten reduzieren oder den Betrieb einstellen.”

Trotz dieser äußerst schlechten Aussichten geht es der Aktie von E-Waste recht gut.

Die Aktie, die offenbar im Juli letzten Jahres mit 2 Cent pro Aktie gehandelt wurde – danach wurden die Aktien wochenlang für deutlich unter 1 USD pro Stück verkauft – ist seitdem stark gestiegen.

Letzte Woche erreichte die Aktie, von der 10 Millionen Stammaktien im Umlauf sind, einen Höchststand von 10,25 USD je Aktie. Es gab dem Unternehmen eine Marktkapitalisierung von 100,25 Millionen US-Dollar. E-Waste schloss am Mittwoch mit 8,26 USD je Aktie, was einem Rückgang von 17,4% entspricht, was einer Marktkapitalisierung von 82,6 Mio. USD entspricht.

Am 12. April schloss E-Waste einen sogenannten “Zeichnungsvertrag … mit drei” akkreditierten Investoren “ab, die 2,5 Millionen Einheiten der Wertpapiere des Unternehmens zu einem Preis von 1 USD pro Einheit kauften, was 2,5 Millionen US-Dollar entspricht ein Unternehmen, das bei der SEC einreicht. Jede Einheit besteht aus einer Stammaktie und einem Optionsschein zum Kauf von zwei weiteren Stammaktien zu einem Ausübungspreis von 4,50 USD pro Aktie.

E-Waste erklärte in seiner Einreichung, dass es beabsichtige, den Erlös aus dem Verkauf der Einheiten für “Betriebskapital, allgemeine Unternehmenszwecke” zu verwenden und einen Unternehmenszusammenschluss mit einer privaten Einrichtung zu suchen, zu untersuchen und gegebenenfalls zu betreiben, deren Das Geschäft ist eine Chance für unsere Aktionäre. “

Weitere Verbindungen zwischen Heimatstadt, E-Waste

Der Bestand von E-Waste und Hometown International wird im Freiverkehr gehandelt. Das Handelsvolumen in beiden Unternehmen war im vergangenen Jahr in der Regel sehr gering.

Das Volumen der Hometown International-Aktien hat sich jedoch nach einer spöttischen Erwähnung der Unternehmensbewertung in einem Brief an Kunden des Hedgefonds-Managers David Einhorn am Donnerstag erhöht, der sagte: “Der Pastrami muss erstaunlich sein.”

Die Aktie von Hometown International stieg von 3,25 USD pro Aktie Ende März 2020 – als die Covid-19-Pandemie ihr Delikatessengeschäft für mehr als fünf Monate geschlossen hatte – auf bis zu 14 USD pro Aktie Anfang dieses Monats.

Der eigene Anstieg von E-Waste an der Börse erfolgte nach einem großen Wechsel in Eigentümer und Management des Unternehmens, der vor Herbst 2020 bei einer Firma in der Park Avenue in Manhattan, GEM Group, registriert wurde.

Anfang letzten Jahres waren vier der fünf größten Anteilseigner von E-Waste in der Reihenfolge der Größe der gehaltenen Anteile: der in Valletta, Malta, ansässige GEM Global Yield Fund LLC SCS, und drei Personen, deren Adresse die eines sogenannten GEM war Berater in der Madison Avenue in New York.

Zu dieser Zeit war der Präsident, Schatzmeister und Sekretär von E-Waste ein Mann namens Peter de Svastich, der Geschäftsführer der GEM Group ist.

Als CNBC am Mittwoch de Svastich anrief, schnappte er: “Ich weiß nicht, wer Sie sind, und ich spreche nicht mit Reportern” – bevor er auflegte.

GEM, der Mehrheitsaktionär von E-Waste, verkaufte im vergangenen Jahr 6 Millionen eingeschränkte Aktien des Unternehmens für 30.000 USD an Global Equity Limited – ein in Macau, China, ansässiges Unternehmen.

Global Equity Limited ist der größte Einzelaktionär von Hometown International, dem Deli-Eigentümer, dessen Vorsitzender der Sohn von Coker Sr. ist.

De Svastich trat im Rahmen dieses Verkaufsvertrags für E-Waste-Aktien an Global Equity Limited zurück – und Rollo, der Musikproduzent und Patiententransporter, übernahm die alleinige Geschäftsführung bei E-Waste.

Die Registrierung und Telefonnummer von E-Waste wurde ebenfalls in das Büro von Coker Sr. in Carrboro, North Carolina, geändert. Das Unternehmen schloss einen einjährigen Mietvertrag für das dortige Büro zu einem monatlichen Preis von 250 US-Dollar ab, teilte das Unternehmen in seiner SEC-Meldung mit.

Im selben Monat erhielt E-Waste von Coker Sr. ein Darlehen in Höhe von 255.000 USD. Dies geht aus der Einreichung hervor, wonach die Zinsen für dieses Darlehen 8% pro Jahr betragen.

E-Waste zahlt der Firma Tryon Capital von Coker Sr. monatlich Beratungsgebühren in Höhe von 2.500 USD, wie aus einer SEC-Meldung hervorgeht.

Hometown International zahlt Tryon Capital außerdem eine monatliche Beratungsgebühr von 15.000 USD. Dieser Deal bedeutet, dass Hometown über drei Monate mehr Beratungsgebühren zahlt als das zugrunde liegende Deli-Geschäft, das in den letzten zwei Jahren im Verkauf getätigt wurde.

Die Heimatstadt leiht E-Waste Geld

Ende November gab E-Waste Hometown International einen Schuldschein über 150.000 US-Dollar aus, aus dem hervorgeht, dass Hometown dem anderen Unternehmen einen Kredit in dieser Höhe gewährt hat. Der Zinssatz für diese Schulden gegenüber Hometown wird in der Anmeldung in einem offensichtlichen Tippfehler sowohl mit 8% als auch mit 6% angegeben.

Die Notiz wurde von Rollo unterzeichnet und von Morina, dem Präsidenten und CEO von Hometown International, als akzeptiert unterzeichnet.

Morina, 62, ist Direktorin der Paulsboro High School, die sich in der Nähe des Delikatessengeschäfts befindet, das Hometown International besitzt. Er ist auch Cheftrainer des renommierten Wrestling-Teams dieser Schule, das unter seiner Führung häufig staatliche Meisterschaften gewonnen hat.

Morinas 1,5 Millionen Stammaktien von Hometown International haben auf dem Papier einen Wert von mindestens mehr als 19 Millionen US-Dollar. Er verfügt über Optionsscheine für weitere 30 Millionen Aktien, die theoretisch einen Wert von fast 400 Millionen US-Dollar zum aktuellen Aktienkurs von Hometown International haben.

Der Schuldschein von E-Waste an Hometown International gab die Firmenadresse des Deli-Eigentümers als Wohnsitz in Woodstown, New Jersey, an, wo Christine Lindenmuth wohnt.

Lindenmuth ist Vizepräsident und Sekretär von Hometown International. Sie ist außerdem Mathematiklehrerin und Administratorin an der Paulsboro High School.

Von Morristown nach Indien

Laut einer SEC-Meldung ist Rollo seit März 2020 als Patiententransporter für Atlantic Health Systems in New Jersey tätig.

Ein Vorgesetzter im Büro für Patiententransport in einer der Einrichtungen des Unternehmens, dem Morristown Medical Center, teilte CNBC mit, dass Rollo zuvor in dieser Abteilung gearbeitet habe, derzeit aber an anderer Stelle in Atlantic Health Systems arbeite.

CNBC hat Sprecher von Atlantic Health kontaktiert, um zu fragen, wo Rollo derzeit arbeitet.

Laut SEC-Unterlagen von E-Waste war Rollo von Januar 2010 bis November 2019 auch “Vorstandsvorsitzender von Switching Technologies Gunther, LTD (‘STG’) in Chennai, Indien”, einem Unternehmen, das früher an der BSE notiert war bekannt als die Bombay Stock Exchange.

Dieser Zeitrahmen überschneidet sich mit Rollos Arbeit bei Comus, die sich selbst als einer der führenden Hersteller von Schaltern auszeichnet.

Aufzeichnungen zeigen, dass Rollo CEO eines anderen Unternehmens ist, Med Spa Vacations, dessen Postanschrift auch das Carrboro-Büro von Coker Sr. ist.

SEC-Einreichungen von Med Spa Vacations zeigen, dass zu seinen Aktionären Global Equity Limited gehört.

Global Equity Limited hält außerdem 2 Millionen Stammaktien von Hometown International, die das Unternehmen im April 2020 von Peter Coker Jr., dem Vorsitzenden des Unternehmens, gekauft hat. Global Equity Limited verfügt über Optionsscheine für weitere 40 Millionen Aktien von Hometown International.

Die Eigentümer von Global Equity Limited sind als zwei Personen aufgeführt, Michael Tyldesley und Ibrahima Thiam.

Laut Angaben von Med Spa Vacations besitzen Tyldesley und Thiam “90% bzw. 10% der Anteile an Global Equity Limited und verfügen über eine gemeinsame Stimm- und Investitionsbefugnis über die Aktien, die direkt im Besitz von Global Equity Limited sind.”

Tyldesley ist auch als Geschäftsführer von VCH Limited aufgeführt, einem weiteren Unternehmen in Macau, das 500.000 Stammaktien von Hometown International besitzt und über Optionsscheine für weitere 10 Millionen Aktien verfügt.

Im vergangenen Mai hat Hometown International, wie aus den Unterlagen hervorgeht, einen Beratungsvertrag mit VCH Limited geschlossen, der vom Deli-Eigentümer monatlich 25.000 US-Dollar ausgezahlt wird.

Diese monatliche Zahlung ist nur etwa 10.000 US-Dollar weniger als die Delikatessen von Hometown International, die in den letzten zwei Jahren in italienischen Hoagies, Cheesesteaks und Pommes Frites verkauft wurden.

Die Geschichte von Coker Sr.

Categories
Politics

Lawyer linked to deli proprietor concerned in inventory scams

Your deli in your hometown in Paulsboro, NJ

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A now-disqualified attorney pleading guilty to federal crimes related to shell company fraud is listed as an attorney in early financial documents for a New Jersey company whose stock valuation rose to $ 100 million or more is, despite only owning a single small delicatessen company.

Former attorney Gregg Jaclin was copied on notices deli owner Hometown International filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2015 and 2016.

This includes the very first document Hometown filed with the SEC that is publicly available.

In June 2020, Jaclin pleaded guilty to conspiracy and obstruction of justice. Separately, in a related case in 2019, the SEC issued a final verdict against him “for operating a fraudulent shell factory system that put bogus companies public and sold for a profit,” a press release said Year.

The companies involved in this behavior – none of which was Hometown International – were founded in Nevada with the support of Jaclin, who was disfellowshipped in New Jersey for his actions last October.

Records show that Hometown International, while having its only business in southern New Jersey, was itself incorporated in Nevada.

In a 2015 letter to Hometown International, SEC officials wrote, “We believe you are a Shell company.”

Hometown International and its executives have not been accused of wrongdoing by the SEC or any other government agency.

“The pastrami must be incredible”

Hometown International’s stock, traded on the over-the-counter market, fell roughly 33% in the hours after it started trading on Friday morning. The day before, CNBC had published articles about the company’s unusually high market capitalization, which were first mentioned in a letter to clients addressed to hedge fund manager David Einhorn.

“The pastrami must be amazing,” quipped Einhorn in his letter.

Share prices recovered significantly during the day. Hometown’s stock closed at $ 12.99 per share on Friday, down 3.78% from the previous day.

Jaclin, who is still serving his three-year prison sentence for his criminal case, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

There were also no other people associated with Hometown International, including top executives and the current attorney, and whoever is monitoring the company’s voicemail when CNBC reached out to them.

Paul Morina is the President and CEO of Hometown International, which owns Your Hometown Deli in Paulsboro, New Jersey.

Morina is also the director and head coach of the renowned wrestling team at Paulsboro High School. SEC documents show he holds 1.5 million shares of Hometown, with warrants for 30 million more shares.

The hometown vice president and secretary is Christine Lindenmuth, a math teacher and administrator at the same high school.

Lindenmuth’s home address is listed as the mailing address of Hometown International.

Morina and Lindenmuth’s biographies in the SEC filings do not mention any previous experience of either in the food service industry, a publicly traded company, or the financial industry.

The Hometown deli had sales of only about $ 35,000 for the past two fiscal years. The delicatessen store was closed from mid-March to early September last year due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Even so, the nearly 8 million common shares recently traded at nearly $ 14 per share, for a market capitalization of over $ 100 million.

A woman who answered the phone at the deli on Friday asked, “Would you like to place an order?”

She then hung up after the caller identified himself as a reporter and said he wanted to speak to someone about Hometown International.

In the SEC filings, Homeland is open about its business prospects.

“Our financial situation raises doubts as to whether we will continue as a company.” the company says in one filing.

The company suggests finding an acquisition target or additional funding to keep operations going.

“Future success depends to a large extent on management’s ability to find and attract a suitable acquisition,” Hometown said in a release last year.

Shareholder Controversy

Hometown International’s major shareholders also include companies in Hong Kong and Macau, China, a mecca for wealthy gamblers.

Hometown chairman Peter Coker Jr. is listed as chairman of a Hometown investor who also operated a luxury hotel in Macau known as The 13.

The hotel has a fleet of Rolls-Royce Phantoms that are available as limousines for hotel guests. Online booking sites indicate that the 13 hotel is not currently accepting reservations.

Coker’s father, Peter Coker Sr., is listed on the financial records as another major shareholder in Hometown.

The elder Coker, who lives in North Carolina, is listed on the SEC with 63,334 common shares of Hometown International and has warrants for an additional 1.26 million shares.

The elder Coker was identified in other SEC filings as the founder and director of Tryon Capital Ventures, a North Carolina company. The hometown pays Tryon $ 15,000 a month under a consulting agreement.

“We are assuming that the term of the consulting contract with Tryon will be extended by another year,” says the Hometown annual report.

In 2019, an investor named W. Robert Bizzell sued Peter Coker Sr. and other managing partners of a company called Tryon Capital LLC in the North Carolina Business Court.

The lawsuit related, among other things, to solicitation fraud and constructive fraud related to inducing Bizzell to invest in another Coker Sr. affiliate, SSAC Capital. It also said the Bizzell money would help grow a specialty retail operation during the Chapel Hill-based Southern Season.

Bizzell’s lawsuit stated that the defendants had “deviated” from their stated use of his money, which amounted to hundreds and thousands of dollars, and converted his interest into equity as a debtor.

Coker Sr. and the other defendants denied Bizzell’s allegations.

A filing in August 2020 revealed that Bizzell’s lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed with prejudice, which is normal when civil claims are settled out of court by the parties.

John Marshall, a Bizzell attorney, declined to comment when contacted by CNBC. He said he was bound by a confidentiality clause in the settlement agreement.

Coker Sr. has not returned any requests for comments. An attorney for him did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Public records show that Coker Sr. lived in Macungie, Pennsylvania.

In 1992, The Morning Call newspaper published an article in nearby Allentown in which American Express Bank alleged in bankruptcy proceedings filed by Peter Coker that he had “fraudulently transferred hundreds of thousands of dollars of his property to thwart their collection efforts to nearly $ 900,000.” . “

In court files, the newspaper said, American Express said Coker was “a solvent debtor who wants to appear insolvent”.