Bury CHAU, You sick, twisted, and evil bastard. We all know what you are trying to do you SOB. Associating the FulBright program for cambodians with articles which are totally different about non-khmer who stoled identity...blah...blah... How could you, you idiot?
Monitor please delete Bury Chau's posts now. On Oct 18, 6:59 pm, Bury Chau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > RE: Identity Theft:Cambodian Student Selected As A Fulbright-Lehman Brothers > Scholar > > Lehman's Collapse, Stock Sale Probed by Three U.S. Prosecutors. > THE UNITED NATIONS SAY THIS :Oct. 21, 1986 The UN General Assembly adopted a > resolution A/RES/41/6, by vote of 116-21 with 13 abstentions, calling for a > withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from CambodiaTHE US COURT IN CALIFORNIA MUST > READ THIS TOO .PRESIDENT REAGAN INSISTS THROUGH 10 UN RESOLUTIONS1. that the > KR regime must not allowed to come back to power in Cambodia2. that Vietnam > cease her occupation of Cambodia followed by total withdrawal of Viet troops > from Cambodia. TO ALL VIETNAMESE INVADERS AND ILLEGAL VIET SETTLERS , IT'S > LEGAL TO RETURN TO VIETNAM AND COMPLY TO THE UN CHARTER . PM HUN SEN 'S WIFE > , MRS BUN RANY,"Tôi là nguoi Viet Nam!" a Vietnamese Vietcong from Memot , > Kg Cham is now Hun Sen's wife. It's an interesting case .THE FBI IS RELYING > ON HOK LUNDI 'S INFO SHARING THAT ENDED UP WITH THE ARREST OF THE FORMER > ALLIED OF AMERICA DURING THE VIETNAM WAR, SUCH ARE THE HMONG ARREST IN THE US > AND ELSEWHERE ? THESE ARE THE VIETNAMESE : PHONY "CAMBODIANS" OR Identity > Theft:HOR NAM HONG , MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS , A SON OF VIETMINHHOK LUNDI > ,FORMER VIETCONG UNDER THE NAME OF NGUYEN VAN SON, HEAD OF CAMBODIA POLICE. > BOTH HAVE ISSUED MILLIONS OF FALSE "CAMBODIAN" IDENTITY, NAMES, BIRTH > CERTIFICATE , PASSEPORTS, TO ILLEGAL VIENAMESE SETTLERS FROM 1993-2008. > By Linda Sandler and Christopher Scinta > Oct. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. is the subject of three > federal criminal probes and at least 12 subpoenas of individuals to testify > before grand juries, according to a lawyer for the bank that last month filed > the largest bankruptcy in history. > Lead Lehman bankruptcy lawyer Harvey Miller said Oct. 16 in federal court in > Manhattan that the investigations were launched by New York U.S. attorneys in > Brooklyn and Manhattan as well as in Newark, New Jersey. They are focusing in > part on Lehman's role in the $330 billion auction-rate securities market and > possible crimes associated with its $6 billion June stock issue, according to > a person familiar with the case who requested anonymity. > ``It's clear they have given it some urgency and priority,'' former Justice > Department attorney Robert Plotkin said. ``Given the notoriety and the > headlines, this would be one of the ones that would be on a faster track,'' > said the lawyer, who now handles white-collar defense cases at Richmond, > Virginia-based McGuireWooods. > The demise of Lehman, which sought court protection Sept. 15, accelerated a > global credit crisis that has wiped out $30 trillion of equity value in the > past year. The U.S. has begun investigations of mortgage lending, > securitization and failed banks including New York-based Lehman. The Federal > Bureau of Investigation is looking into 26 firms, including American > International Group Inc., a senior law-enforcement official said. > `An Outcry' > ``There's been an outcry from people in the streets, and that puts pressure > on prosecutors to do something,'' said Todd Harrison, a former New York > federal prosecutor now with Washington-based Patton Boggs. ``They're going to > be looking at all aspects of the credit crisis, including the rating agencies > and the mortgage lenders who packaged and sold securities.'' > The New York Post reported yesterday, without saying where it got the > information, that Lehman Chief Executive Officer Richard Fuld, 62, is among > the 12 subpoenaed. CNBC, also without attribution, reported former Lehman > Chief Financial Officer Erin Callan, 42, now Credit Suisse's global hedge > fund chief, was subpoenaed as well. > Fuld's lawyer, Patricia Hynes of London-based Allen & Overy, declined to > comment. Callan didn't return calls seeking comment. > ``It could be an early notice to him not to destroy any documents, obstruct > the investigation or talk to witnesses out of school,'' Plotkin said of the > reported subpoena of Fuld. ``They also might want to get him in there and > nail down his story before he has a chance to talk to advisers.'' > June Stock Sale > Investigators have subpoenaed Ernst & Young LLP, Lehman's auditor; U.K.-based > bank Barclays Plc, which bought Lehman's North American brokerage; and the > New Jersey Division of Investments, which runs a pension fund that lost > $115.6 million on a $180 million investment in the June stock sale, according > to people familiar with the case. > Miller, 75, of New York-based Weil, Gotshal & Manges, also said in court that > a state attorney general is probing Lehman, without elaborating. > Yusill Scribner, a spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia in Manhattan, > and Robert Nardoza, a spokesman for Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Benton Campbell, > declined to comment. > Garcia, Campbell and Newark, New Jersey U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie > have increased their resources to prepare for possible prosecutions > associated with the credit crisis and bank failures. > Christie, 46, has subpoenaed documents to determine whether Lehman failed to > fully disclose its eroding financial condition at the time of the $6 billion > stock offering, according to people familiar with the matter. > Opened Inquiries > Campbell has opened inquiries into whether Lehman executives misled investors > about the firm's financial health and whether Zurich-based UBS AG lied to > investors about securities backed by subprime mortgages, according to a > person familiar with the case. > Federal prosecutors, according to the people, also subpoenaed Putnam > Investments LLC, the Boston-based mutual fund firm that oversees about $163 > billion and bought Lehman bonds and shares; New York-based fund manager > BlackRock Inc., a Lehman creditor; AIG, once the world's largest insurer; and > New York- based C.V. Starr & Co., run by ex-AIG CEO Maurice Greenberg. > The grand jury probes follow not only the implosion of Lehman, but the > collapse of New York-based Bear Stearns Cos. this year, the U.S. government > takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the rescue of New York-based AIG. > Auction Rate Securities > On the issue of auction rate securities, the grand juries may be exploring > whether Lehman misled investors about the viability of the securities. The > market collapsed in February after demand for the debt dried up. Banks paid > to manage bidding on the debt abandoned the market and stopped acting as > buyers of last resort. That caused rates to rise to as high as 20 percent. > Last month, Brooklyn prosecutors charged two former Credit Suisse Group Inc. > traders with fraudulently selling corporate clients more than $1 billion of > auction-rate securities linked to subprime mortgages, which they claimed were > backed by U.S.- guaranteed student loans. > A challenge for U.S. attorneys considering prosecutions based on the collapse > of the subprime or auction rate markets will be to distinguish normal > business activities from fraud. > Prosecutors may rely on e-mails obtained through subpoenas, interviews of > employees and forensic accounting to build a case. The U.S. House of > Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government Reform released several > e-mails it obtained from the bank as part of a hearing Oct. 6 in Washington. > Bear Stearns > Campbell, who obtained indictments of former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers > Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin in June, cited e-mails showing their > disparagement of the securities they were touting to clients. The defendants, > who pleaded not guilty, face fraud charges for cheating investors out of $1.6 > billion. > ``E-mails are a great tool,'' said Christie. ``People seem freer to say > things in e-mails that they might not say otherwise.'' > Prosecutors may seek to bring a securities fraud prosecution if they can show > that Lehman officials sought to mislead investors as to the financial health > of the firm. > ``They'll be looking for any misrepresentation by the heads of the divisions > or anyone working for them,'' said Patton Boggs lawyer Todd Harrison. ``For > an indictment, the misrepresentation has to be material and you need to show > that investors relied on it to invest more money or keep money in.'' > The case is In re Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., 08-13555, U.S. Bankruptcy > Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). > To contact the reporters on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at [EMAIL > PROTECTED]; Christopher Scinta in New York bankruptcy court at [EMAIL > PROTECTED] > > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Identity > Theft:Cambodian Student Selected As A Fulbright-Lehman Brothers ScholarDate: > Sat, 18 Oct 2008 08:46:39 -0700 > > IN CAMBODIA OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM AGAINST 10 UN RESOLUTIONS HERE ARE THE > PROBLEMS OF INDENTITY THEFT . > IT'S A CRIME . > Press Release > Cambodian Student Selected As A Fulbright-Lehman Brothers Scholar > A Cambodian student studying in the United States under the auspices of the > U.S. government's J. William Fulbright Scholarship program has been selected > to participate in the highly competitive Fulbright-Lehman Brothers Scholars > program. Ms. Noun Monisophorn is one of nine students from among Fulbright > Scholars across the United States chosen for this highly selective program. > For further information, see:www.fulbrightonline.org. Since 1994, 84 > Cambodian students have been awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to pursue their > graduate studies in various fields in the U.S.Released May 18, 2007. Common > Identity Theft/Fraud Scams.READ THIS STORY. sentenced to 5 years > By MARYCLAIRE DALE, Associated Press Writer Maryclaire Dale, Associated Press > Writer – Fri Oct 17, 12:58 pm ET > AP – In this undated file photo released by the Philadelphia Police > Department, shown is Jocelyn Kirsch, a … > PHILADELPHIA – A college student who with her boyfriend stole the identities > of friends and neighbors was sentenced Friday to five years in prison and > ordered to pay more than $100,000 in restitution.Jocelyn Kirsch, a ... > > read more » --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group. This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

