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#31
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Jerry Springer wrote:
where extra lift is obtained from operating near the ground. For more information, visit www.Moller.com. How are they going to solve the problem of having all those cranes that his vehicles have to be tethered to? Even his Ground Effect vehicle is tethered in the video. Moller has not built an aircraft yet. BUT he has made some real cool looking Gondolas. |
#32
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I've known for a long time that the Skycar was a scam but I got bored
yesterday and I decided to look over his website. It's amazing he hasn't been busted for fraud. I first heard about this thing in 95 and 12 years later he has no new news on making it fly. The videos make it look like he has a working prototype. The feds should bust him for selling stock for something that will never work. I think he should stop trying to make it take of vertically and prove it can fly conventionally but that's looks to be a scam too. It doesn't look like it has enough wing surface to fly. I think it's best role would be to sell it as a movie prop... Tony |
#33
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In a previous article, Anthony W said:
I've known for a long time that the Skycar was a scam but I got bored yesterday and I decided to look over his website. It's amazing he hasn't been busted for fraud. I first heard about this thing in 95 and 12 years later he has no new news on making it fly. The videos make it look like he has a working prototype. The feds should bust him for selling stock for something that will never work. Read the Wikipedia entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moller_Skycar He already settled with the SEC after they sued him in 2003 for civil fraud for making unsubstaniated claims about the performance of the Skycar. He agreed to a permanent injunction and a $50,000 fine. http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr17987.htm Moller, age 64, the company's founder, chief executive office and president, made false and misleading statements about the company's imminent listing on the NYSE and the Nasdaq Stock Market, the projected value of company shares after such listing, and the prospect for Skycar sales and revenue. In September 2001, the company filed a fraudulent registration statement with the Commission that exaggerated the true scope of patents the company held for the Skycar. During the Commission's investigation, the company belatedly cooperated with the staff in an attempt to bring it into compliance with the securities laws and to resolve all outstanding enforcement issues. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ I'm fairly sure that if they took all the porn off the Net, there'd only be one website left, and it would be called "bring-back-the-porn dot com". -- Perry Cox, _Scrubs_ |
#34
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Paul Tomblin wrote:
Read the Wikipedia entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moller_Skycar He already settled with the SEC after they sued him in 2003 for civil fraud for making unsubstaniated claims about the performance of the Skycar. He agreed to a permanent injunction and a $50,000 fine. http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr17987.htm Moller, age 64, the company's founder, chief executive office and president, made false and misleading statements about the company's imminent listing on the NYSE and the Nasdaq Stock Market, the projected value of company shares after such listing, and the prospect for Skycar sales and revenue. In September 2001, the company filed a fraudulent registration statement with the Commission that exaggerated the true scope of patents the company held for the Skycar. During the Commission's investigation, the company belatedly cooperated with the staff in an attempt to bring it into compliance with the securities laws and to resolve all outstanding enforcement issues. I don't get it. He's already been busted but he gets to keep up the same old BS? Tony |
#35
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Anthony W wrote:
Paul Tomblin wrote: Read the Wikipedia entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moller_Skycar He already settled with the SEC after they sued him in 2003 for civil fraud for making unsubstaniated claims about the performance of the Skycar. He agreed to a permanent injunction and a $50,000 fine. http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr17987.htm Moller, age 64, the company's founder, chief executive office and president, made false and misleading statements about the company's imminent listing on the NYSE and the Nasdaq Stock Market, the projected value of company shares after such listing, and the prospect for Skycar sales and revenue. In September 2001, the company filed a fraudulent registration statement with the Commission that exaggerated the true scope of patents the company held for the Skycar. During the Commission's investigation, the company belatedly cooperated with the staff in an attempt to bring it into compliance with the securities laws and to resolve all outstanding enforcement issues. I don't get it. He's already been busted but he gets to keep up the same old BS? Tony Please note what he got busted for were all SEC violations and they were mostly paperwork issues. He needs to get a civil or better yet criminal charge for fraud slapped on him. |
#36
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In a previous article, Anthony W said:
Paul Tomblin wrote: http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr17987.htm Moller, age 64, the company's founder, chief executive office and president, made false and misleading statements about the company's imminent listing on the NYSE and the Nasdaq Stock Market, the projected value of company shares after such listing, and the prospect for Skycar sales and revenue. In September 2001, the company filed a fraudulent registration statement with the Commission that exaggerated the true scope of patents the company held for the Skycar. During the Commission's investigation, the company belatedly cooperated with the staff in an attempt to bring it into compliance with the securities laws and to resolve all outstanding enforcement issues. I don't get it. He's already been busted but he gets to keep up the same old BS? He's not selling "private" shares any more based on fraudulent statements about "imminent listings" on NASDAQ and/or NYSE. That's all the SEC cares about. His shares are listed on OBB which is the lowest of the low. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ Did you know that "Gullible" is not in the dictionary? |
#37
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![]() "Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... In a previous article, Anthony W said: Paul Tomblin wrote: http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr17987.htm Moller, age 64, the company's founder, chief executive office and president, made false and misleading statements about the company's imminent listing on the NYSE and the Nasdaq Stock Market, the projected value of company shares after such listing, and the prospect for Skycar sales and revenue. In September 2001, the company filed a fraudulent registration statement with the Commission that exaggerated the true scope of patents the company held for the Skycar. During the Commission's investigation, the company belatedly cooperated with the staff in an attempt to bring it into compliance with the securities laws and to resolve all outstanding enforcement issues. I don't get it. He's already been busted but he gets to keep up the same old BS? He's not selling "private" shares any more based on fraudulent statements about "imminent listings" on NASDAQ and/or NYSE. That's all the SEC cares about. His shares are listed on OBB which is the lowest of the low. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ Did you know that "Gullible" is not in the dictionary? And until he sells one of the things, and someone takes a loss, the civil side is pretty much out. The EAA, however, should know better. Al G |
#38
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Al G wrote:
And until he sells one of the things, and someone takes a loss, the civil side is pretty much out. The EAA, however, should know better. Al G I love his balance sheet. Please note ZERO R&D for the last 4 qtrs. http://finance.yahoo.com/q/is?s=mler.ob Yes the EAA should. |
#39
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Gig 601XL Builder wrote:
Al G wrote: And until he sells one of the things, and someone takes a loss, the civil side is pretty much out. The EAA, however, should know better. Al G I love his balance sheet. Please note ZERO R&D for the last 4 qtrs. http://finance.yahoo.com/q/is?s=mler.ob Yes the EAA should. OK so I now get the SEC stuff but now back to my other question. How likely is it that this thing can fly with conventional take off? My guess is not likely. Tony |
#40
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![]() "Big John" wrote in message ... What if he comes to a 50 foot tree? Can't go over and in grond effect runs into it ![]() Big John ************************************************** * Air brakes! (or is it error brakes?) ---------------------------------- DW |
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