Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two Men Who Broke B.C. Securities' Laws Penalized, Face Trading Bans

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2016 11:47 AM
    VANCOUVER — Two men have been ordered to pay the British Columbia Securities Commission a total of $278,000 for breaking provincial trading rules.
     
    Alexander Downie was the founder and director of HRG Healthcare Resource Group Inc., and Daniel Mohan served as director and CEO.
     
    The company was developing a web-based, bedside medical records and entertainment system for hospital patients, but neither man was registered to sell securities in B.C.
     
    The commission says the company distributed millions of dollars in securities to investors and filed false reports to the independent agency.
     
    It says the men who raised $4.45 million from 123 people who lost all their money have now been banned from trading or buying securities for seven years.
     
    Mohan and Downie have been ordered to each pay $75,000 in penalties, but Mohan must also pay $103,530 in commission he received during the company's capital-raising efforts.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Case Of Marco Muzzo Accused In Alleged Drunk Driving Crash That Killed 4 Put Over To Jan. 6

    Case Of Marco Muzzo Accused In Alleged Drunk Driving Crash That Killed 4 Put Over To Jan. 6
    Marco Muzzo appeared via video link at a courthouse in Newmarket, Ont., on Thursday, where his case was put over to Jan. 6.

    Case Of Marco Muzzo Accused In Alleged Drunk Driving Crash That Killed 4 Put Over To Jan. 6

    Harjit Sajjan Non-Committal On Afghan Security Funding Renewal In Wake Of Kandahar Attack

    Harjit Sajjan Non-Committal On Afghan Security Funding Renewal In Wake Of Kandahar Attack
    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan was non-committal Wednesday about renewing Canada's $300 million support for Afghan security forces, despite a deadly attack at Kandahar Airfield that left dozens dead.

    Harjit Sajjan Non-Committal On Afghan Security Funding Renewal In Wake Of Kandahar Attack

    B.C. Signs Pledge To Join Global Race Towards Zero-emission Vehicles

      VICTORIA — British Columbia has joined a global team aiming to fill highways and city streets with zero-emission vehicles over the next 35 years.

    B.C. Signs Pledge To Join Global Race Towards Zero-emission Vehicles

    University Of Northern B.C. Board Failed To Consult On James Moore: Senate

    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — The University of Northern British Columbia's senate is formally opposing the process by which former Conservative MP James Moore was selected as chancellor.

    University Of Northern B.C. Board Failed To Consult On James Moore: Senate

    First Flight Of Syrian Refugees Now Headed To Toronto From Beirut

    First Flight Of Syrian Refugees Now Headed To Toronto From Beirut
    OTTAWA — They escaped a civil war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced millions more, leaving behind homes that have been bombed to pieces, their livelihoods and future hopes in tatters.

    First Flight Of Syrian Refugees Now Headed To Toronto From Beirut

    ISIL Cyberattack On Airplane Unlikely, Federal Intelligence Analysts Reported

    ISIL Cyberattack On Airplane Unlikely, Federal Intelligence Analysts Reported
    The prospect of a terrorist cyberattack on an airplane struck federal intelligence analysts as more pie-in-the-sky than a real possibility, newly released documents show.

    ISIL Cyberattack On Airplane Unlikely, Federal Intelligence Analysts Reported