Victim of Exmovere
District of Columbia,#2Consumer Comment
Wed, June 22, 2011
Does anyone else see the irony that the very tool the Bychkov-Crow team used to hunt down their victims and lure them in for "the kill" is the same weapon that has brought their dark, filthy scheme out from under a slimy rock into the bright light of truth?
Sucker
Internet,#3Consumer Comment
Mon, June 20, 2011
Bychkov propagated the image of the rich successful entrepreneur Crow as backing for his business endeavor, but also made sure to nurture his eccentric and out of control image, so that he could blame it all on Crow when push comes to shove.
Go get all those women and their money, he cheered!
I wonder why he did not go get the women himself? :)
annonymous
Fairfax,#4UPDATE Employee
Wed, June 15, 2011
Bychkov suffered complete and irreversible amnesia shortly after he made the statement below to CNNMONEY in February 2008:
http://money.cnn.com/2008/02/15/smbusiness/rule_144_small_cap.fsb/index.htm
SEC change helps small-caps raise cash
An SEC rule change that takes effect today will make it easier for small companies to negotiate private investment deals - but could also unleash a small-cap sell-off as investors dump stock.EMAIL | PRINT | SHARE | RSSBy Brandi StewartLast Updated: September 19, 2008: 2:41 PM EDT
(FORTUNE Small Business) -- A tidal wave of small-cap stock liquidity hits today as changes take effect to the Securities and Exchange Commission's Rule 144, shortening the holding period for investors with restricted securities from one year to six months. ...............................................................
............................................................(deleted).....................................................................
"If small companies are not good at managing the cash they bring in through private investments in public equity and don't do things to entice shareholders to stay with them when people dump, you absolutely risk catastrophe," said David Bychkov, CEO of Exmocare, a New York City company that develops medical monitoring technology. "Your stock could drop 85% in one day."Bychkov doesn't expect immediate fallout for his company from the Rule 144 revisions, but the new terms may affect several private placement deals Exmocare is currently negotiating with potential investors."In the past, these small-cap companies had a full year to get their act together," Bychkov said. "Now, you've got six months before you have the risk of someone dumping a very substantial amount of stock. My hope is that this will be a wake-up call to small-cap companies to keep their markets orderly."
First Published: February 15, 2008: 11:51 AM EST
Of course , Bychkov didnt " expect immediate fallout for his company from the Rule 144 revisions" : we all know that the pimp had a special "NEGOTIATING" TOOL with which he lured unsuspecting investors in , namely, Cheyenne Crow. Bychkov you fat little monkey , wake up and smell the coffee: the fallout took two and half years to happen and it didnt happen quite the way the reporter and SEC were thinking , but Bychkov's world is certainly falling apart.