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  • Report:  #877460

Complaint Review: Alvin Donovan and Equity Partners Fund

Alvin Donovan and Equity Partners Fund Fraud, Fail to Fund, Scam Internet

  • Reported By:
    Jessie — Canberra Internet Panama
  • Submitted:
    Thu, May 03, 2012
  • Updated:
    Mon, July 09, 2012

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/business/the-guru-who-surfs-the-web-to-make-a-fast-buck-20120303-1u9nu.html

The guru who surfs the web to make a fast buck

Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/business/the-guru-who-surfs-the-web-to-make-a-fast-buck-20120303-1u9nu.html#ixzz1tmEHNN8C

Self-proclaimed investment whiz Alvin Donovan trawls sites such as LinkedIn to find entrepreneurs desperate to raise capital for their ventures. Once his clients sign up, they often wish they hadn't, write Su-Lin Tan and Michael West.
Alvin Donovan is a very accomplished man. In his own assessment, he is not only a ''pioneer of the global hedge fund
industry'' but also an investment banker and a marketing, IT and property expert - not to mention bestselling author and philanthropist.

He also claims to speak seven languages, finds time to consult the world's leading companies and has contributed to the No.1 international bestseller Wake Up Live the Life You Love with Deepak Chopra and Mark Victor Hansen. It wasn't his only bestseller. He also penned Make More Money Now.Went public but cash never camePaid $15,000, got nothing

Then there's his athletic prowess. The self-professed ''big wave charger'' reports surfing 15-foot barrels in Bali; but not
only that, he is also a ''yellow bamboo master'' whose dexterity in the martial arts, he boasts, is lethal. Once he was approached by no fewer than four assailants. ''Before I knew it, the four men were writhing on the ground in pain!'' wrote Donovan in a blog about his journey of spiritual exploration.
Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/business/the-guru-who-surfs-the-web-to-make-a-fast-buck-20120303-1u9nu.html#ixzz1tmEMqxZm

The guru who surfs the web to make a fast buck

March 4, 2012

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BUSINESS INVESTIGATION
Helping out ... Donovan says he's helped companies all over the world.

Self-proclaimed investment whiz Alvin Donovan trawls sites such as LinkedIn to find entrepreneurs desperate to
raise capital for their ventures. Once his clients sign up, they often wish they hadn't, write Su-Lin Tan and Michael West.
Alvin Donovan is a very accomplished man. In his own assessment, he is not only a ''pioneer of the global hedge fund
industry'' but also an investment banker and a marketing, IT and property expert - not to mention bestselling author and philanthropist.

He also claims to speak seven languages, finds time to consult the world's leading companies and has contributed to the No.1 international bestseller Wake Up Live the Life You Love with Deepak Chopra and Mark Victor Hansen. It wasn't his only bestseller. He also penned Make More Money Now. Went public but cash never camePaid $15,000, got nothing

Then there's his athletic prowess. The self-professed ''big wave charger'' reports surfing 15-foot barrels in Bali; but not
only that, he is also a ''yellow bamboo master'' whose dexterity in the martial arts, he boasts, is lethal. Once he was approached by no fewer than four assailants. ''Before I knew it, the four men were writhing on the ground in pain!'' wrote Donovan in a blog about his journey of spiritual exploration.

Advertisement: Story continues below

Raising hope ... Alvin Donovan's book of advice on getting rich quick.

It is in the business of raising capital though - or at least the business of marketing his capital-raising services - that
Donovan, who lives on a sprawling estate in Pullenvale, near the Brisbane River in Queensland, has been most active.

He claims to have ''raised over $1.5 billion for new ventures''. He also claims to be backed by a Chinese bank, Zigong Bank,
an institution that The Sun-Herald has been unable to locate.

In an investigation of Donovan's activities, however, The Sun-Herald found that it has been his clients, rather than his assailants, who have suffered pain.

The investigation failed to find a single example of a successful capital raising - despite the slew of hyped-up media releases online touting billions of dollars in deals.

Luke Bracken, from a small mining company, claims he was taken for a ride with promises of financing. ''He would have made millions just by signing up countless companies at $15,000 a pop.''

Another client left in the lurch is Jacques Blandin, chief executive of the IT company Firmware Technologies. ''We never saw a cent of the drawdown when we needed it,'' Blandin says. He says  Donovan claimed the company at the heart of his empire - Equity Partners Fund - had $US3 billion to invest.

When contacted, Donovan declined to respond in detail.

''All of our transactions are commercial in confidence,''
Donovan responded in an email. ''Therefore, we are unable to discuss any specifics with any of our deals.''

Many former clients, however, were happy to talk about Donovan, most describing him as charismatic.

Kim Cox, a former marketing agent who worked for Donovan finding prospective clients for financing deals, says: ''The guy is a bit of a loose cannon.

''To every client I presented him, he would say, 'Yeah, yeah, they're all right. Sign them up, sign them up.' Some of these
companies looking for funds have not even broken dirt yet or don't have any capital at all.

''And he would still tell me, 'Sign them up!'''

Despite the bonhomie, Cox says that Donovan sometimes appeared worn down, constantly pursued by angry clients looking for their money back. In the meantime, Donovan had already secured his fees.

Dr Alvin G. Donovan III, as he has also dubbed himself online, is at the sharp end of a new generation of cyber-marketers,
stalking the corridors of the internet looking for investors, scouting out companies desperate to raise money for their business.

The tools of his trade are social media and business networking websites such as LinkedIn and FinRoad and free public
relations sites such as PR Newswire and Newsmaker.

''Lead, follow, or get out of the way!'' is Donovan's catchcry on LinkedIn.

And his operation is global. The Sun-Herald tracked companies in South Africa, Hong Kong and the United States, all
of which Donovan claimed to have assisted to raise large amounts of capital - all of which came to a dead end.

Some deals have been announced with much fanfare, only to then go very quiet. Renaissance Financial Holdings, listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange in South Africa, claimed in October it was teaming up with Donovan to raise $US1.5 billion. Nothing has been reported since. Renaissance could not be contacted for comment.

Donovan also claimed via PR Newswire in September to have undertaken a 500 million capital injection for Zfere, a mobile
ecommerce company in the US. Nothing has been heard since.

Things have gone awry for the entrepreneur more recently. Late last year, a key associate was slapped with a ''cease and desist'' order by the US Securities and Exchange Commission. Joseph B. LaRocco, general counsel to the company at the heart of Donovan's empire, Equity Partners, was accused of deceiving 12 investors through a ''purported hedge fund''.

LaRocco, a 53-year-old New York attorney who lives in Connecticut, is a principal of LeadDog Capital LP. The SEC orders
describe LeadDog making ''reckless misrepresentations'', ''deliberately concealing'' information from investors, preying on the elderly and lying to its auditors. This venture, the SEC found, was a ''tangled web of related parties and conflicts of interest''.

Donovan doesn't see it that way.

''Joseph LaRocco is a highly valued partner and legal adviser to [Donovan's head company] EPF and neither he nor us can
comment on the status of that matter, which is administrative in nature, which EPF considers to be a minor administrative chatter,'' Donovan told The Sun-Herald.

According to the SEC, however, LeadDog spent its investors' funds buying shares in micro-cap companies owned or
controlled by LeadDog principals LaRocco and his partner Chris Messalas - all unbeknown to fund investors.

LaRocco does the legal work for Donovan's Equity Partners Fund. Equity Partners claims to ''provide fast, efficient and
inexpensive access to equity capital''. But the claim is proving a long distance from the reality.

Lately, even the claims themselves have become harder to find. Over the past four months since The Sun-Herald began investigating, many of the web pages put up by Donovan and his cohorts to attract clients have been taken down.

Although the lively entrepreneur has approached at least  one ASX-listed company as large as $150 million by market value,  Donovan's stomping ground remains small companies and start-ups. These  are invariably in need of cash and are interested in anyone who claims they can raise it cheaply and easily.

Another client, with a private company in fibre optics, who asked for its identity to remain confidential, also paid a fee to
Donovan to raise money but was later told to raise the $200 million himself.

A common practice is to encourage the client to float the company on the lowly regulated Frankfurt Stock Exchange. There is a fee in this for the promoter. Donovan's real bread and butter, though, is ''equity line financing''; that is, a promise of instant funds akin to a very expensive overdraft.

Often the funds are not delivered. Even if they are,  equity lines are an expensive form of funding and can lead to sharp
losses in a company share price.

Not all Donovan's clients are critical. One, Simon St  Ledger, the principal of the weight-loss supplement distributor Rapid
Nutrition, recently announced a ''$50 million joint venture'' with Equity Partners Fund.

''This transaction was facilitated by the Singapore-based Equity Partners Group, who have developed an exemplary track record with total transactions completed in excess of $US4.5 billion,'' St Ledger wrote on his website.

Contacted by The Sun-Herald, St Ledger said he had not yet drawn down the $50 million. He did say, though, that he
believed that Donovan and Equity Partners did have $US4.5 billion in funds.

Donovan himself disagreed with this. He said via email to The Sun-Herald that he and his associates did not provide investment funds, only equity line financing.

Notwithstanding Donovan's mission statement - ''Lead, follow, or get out of the way'' - many of his clients, with the benefit
of hindsight, wish they had selected the latter course of action.

Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/business/the-guru-who-surfs-the-web-to-make-a-fast-buck-20120303-1u9nu.html#ixzz1tmESC6jA

3 Updates & Rebuttals


Regina Westlake

United Kingdom

google shows that at least one company DID get actual funding from this investor and many others also had very good things to say about the MD of the investor arrranged for other investors and acquis

#4Consumer Comment

Mon, July 09, 2012

"Any fool can criticize, condemn and complain and most fools do." 
Benjamin Franklin 


"You have complaints? Good. That means youve stood up for something, sometime in your life."
Winston Churchill 

Having read the rebuttals here on the one hand they do make sense and on the other hand further show the original report for the utter and total nonsense it is.

Firstly, thanks for stating the real facts here and  for pointing out just some of the many obvious factual mistakes
the tabloid made. 

Secondly, a quick check on google shows that at least one company named Worldlink Plc DID get actual funding from 
this investor. google "worldlink update on funding" This company and many others also had very good things
to say about the MD of the investor.

Furthermore, those companies went on to say that the investor also arrranged for other investors and acquisitions as well.

Lastly, this provides reliable independent proof this investor is for real and that the tabloid sensationalist story is 
in reality a lie.

This is an example of the just one of a long line of shoddy mistakes made by either ignoring or not even bothering 
to check out the real facts in the case.

They would not let the truth get in the way of a good story.

Obviously when the companies do what they are supposed to do according to their contract with the investor and proceed in an honest and ethical manner then the investor does what they are supposed to do with respect to the contract.

In this case, this investor is for real as they have invested in at least one company who did the right thing and shows
that Blandin and Brackens story just do not hold water.


marina wolff

Thailand

the results of my own investigation and research. There are several reasons why this article is complete rubbish. I have contacted and spoken to a few people involved

#4Consumer Comment

Mon, July 09, 2012

This post here on ripoff report has been reposted over and over again, apparently by the same person. I would like to add the results of my own investigation and research. There are several reasons why this article is complete rubbish. I have contacted and spoken to a few people involved in this case and here are the facts.  

Luke Bracken or Bracken International Mining, Kim Cox of AWTN and Jacques Blandin of Firmware and Visi Inc Plc. played that poor unsuspecting tabloid journalist at the Enquirer like a banjo and here is how they did it:

1. This company in the report is an equity line funder. This kind of investor obviously wants companies to drawdown so they make money when a company draws down. So if a company puts in a drawdown notice obviously they would fill it, there is no reason not to.

2. In all cases the company signs a legal contract which they must have their lawyer review before signing and the terms are in simple plain English. Nowhere in the article by this tabloid journalist does the journalist refer to the contract or having had any discussions with Brackens or Blandin lawyer. I can only assume there was no discussions with their lawyers .

3. Their website clearly states that the companies pay a third party non- affiliated law firm for legal document preparation.

4. It also clearly states they are not an underwriter and do not provide liquidity, IR or PR.

5. In all cases the company signs a term sheet which is made in simple English any 12 year old can understand.

This type of funding has been around for over 10 years and there are over a dozen firms worldwide offering this type of structure worldwide.

Luke Bracken claims the investor did 100s of deals. Okay but only two companies in Australia seemed to have had a problem. Maybe in Australia they sign term sheets without reading them? And they sign legally binding agreements without reading them?

Jacques Blandin CEO Firmware or VisiInc PLC made an announcement after they signed with the investor, probably used that announcement to entice investors and the investor never heard from them again after the announcement and they never put in a drawdown

But dont believe me- Google the term Jacques Blandin ASIC and you will see that Jacques Blandin of Firmware VisiInc Plc. was banned by the Australian SEC for:

Mr. Blandin, of Dianella, Western Australia, was a proper authority holder with Australian Financial Securities Pty Ltd during the period 19 November 1998 to 27 January 2000.

The undertaking was offered following an investigation into the activities of Mr. Blandin, which found that Mr. Blandin had made recommendations to his client that ****she invest $135,000 in companies with which he was associated or had an interest, without properly disclosing that association or interest to the client, in contravention of the Corporations Law.****

ASIC also found that Mr. Blandin did not have a reasonable basis for making those recommendations, and knew that his client would rely upon them.

The conduct of Mr. Blandin ultimately caused his client to sustain a loss of approximately $120,000 due to the insolvency of the company with which Mr. Blandin was associated or had an interest.

My guess is Jacque Blandin Firmware Visi Inc used the announcement of his signing with the investor as a way to entice investors into his sham company and had no intention of ever getting funding from the investor.

One other point that makes no sense whatsoever:  Jacques Blandin of Firmware Visiinc Plc. claims that the investor is just giving you your own money. Yet he claims that the investor did not fulfill the drawdown. If the investor was just giving him his own money then obviously they would have fulfilled the drawdown.

My sources reveal that once Jacques Blandin of Firmware Visi Inc made the announcement, then he fled to the USA to get away from the Australian authorities and never contacted the investor again.
Further proof is that Visiinc plc. that they have been kicked off of the German stock exchange- why?

Now lets focus on Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining-
His company Bracken International Mining appears to have a $500 million dollar market cap as of this posting but it does not have any trading volume? How many companies with that size market cap have no trading volume like this?

Also if you research them further you will see they are trying to raise $500 million dollars. How can a company worth $500 million raise $500 million?

Maybe he just cannot do the math like they just cannot read term sheets and contracts?
Furthermore Google Luke Bracken Ripoff Report  to see his background.  Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining seems even worse than Jacques Blandin of Firmware Visi Inc Plc.

Once again, Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining announced the deal with the investor and then most likely used it to get other investors into his company.

We also have it on reliable sources that Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining was close to roping in Gerry Harvey of Harvey Norman fame into investing but he tried to circumvent the introducer and Norman ran away from Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining as fast as he could. Not to mention that he works out a bedroom in the house of his mother. How is it that the CEO of a 500 million euro market cap does not have the ability to even live in his own apartment- something smells very fishy there.

It looks like both Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining and Jacques Blandin of Firmware Visi Inc pulled one of the oldest tricks in the book- they burn an investor then try to throw dirt on the victim to bury their mis deeds.


Elena Ambrosiadou

United States of America

As a fund manager myself i have read this tabloid journalist and it is an interesting alert about just some of the many of Luke Backen, Bracken International Mining, Kim Cox AWTN and Jacques Blandin F

#4Consumer Comment

Fri, July 06, 2012

As a fund manager myself, I have read this tabloid journalist with great interest and it is an interesting

alert about just some of the many of Luke Bracken  Bracken International Mining, Kim Cox AWTN and

Jacques Blandin Firmware Visi Inc. latest in a  long line of questionable debacles. 

If you Google the term Jacques Blandin ASIC you will get an idea of his character. ASIC reported

in part as follows The undertaking was offered following an investigation into the activities of

Mr Blandin, which found that Mr Blandin had made recommendations to his client that she invest $135,000

in companies with which he was associated or had an interest, without properly disclosing that association

or interest to the client, in contravention of the Corporations Law.

ASIC also found that Mr Blandin did not have a reasonable basis for making those recommendations, and knew that his

client would rely upon them.The conduct of Mr Blandin ultimately caused his client to sustain a loss of approximately

$120,000 due to the insolvency  of the company with which Mr Blandin was associated or had an  interest.

Birds of a feather flock together. It is important for other potential investment firms or private investors to conduct

thorough due diligence on them and their past transactions and know that Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining,

Kim Cox of AWTN and Jacques Blandin or Firmware/Visiinc and their conduct should there be any difficulties arising from

their dealings with them.Let this ripoff report serve as a warning to anyone looking at doing business with Kim Cox

AWTN, Jacques Blandin Firmware Visi Inc or Luke Bracken of Bracken International Mining that  if they sound too good to

be true it probably is and the possible trouble they will cause you if you do business with them. 

 

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