Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Residents Fined $28.8 Million In Stock Manipulation Scheme By BCSC panel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2015 01:49 PM
    VANCOUVER — Securities regulators in British Columbia have issued fines and penalties totalling almost $29 million against a group of five B.C. residents for manipulating a stock on the TSX Venture Exchange.
     
    In addition to the fines and penalties, a British Columbia Securities Commission panel also permanently banned all five from the province's capital markets.
     
    In September 2014, the panel found that between September 2007 and March 2009, Thalbinder Singh Poonian, Shailu Sharon Poonian, Robert Joseph Leyk, Manjit Singh Sihota and Perminder Sihota manipulated the share price of OSE Corp.
     
    The Ontario company, whose shares traded on the TSX Venture Exchange, had its head office at a property owned by Perminder Sihota in Delta, B.C.
     
    In its decision, the panel found that the respondents obtained more than $7 million by selling OSE shares to unsuspecting buyers, including clients of Phoenix Credit Risk Management Consulting Inc. and its affiliates, a company based in Richmond Hill, Ont.,  that provided debt management services. Phoenix and its principals were paid commissions ranging from 10 to 28 per cent each time they arranged for a Phoenix client to buy OSE shares.
     
    "While the respondents' roles in conducting the manipulation varied, each respondent was directly involved in and contributed to the manipulation," the BCSC said in a statement issued Wednesday.
     
    "However, the panel found that Thalbinder Poonian was the mastermind of the scheme and that his conduct was the most egregious,"  
     
    Among penalties, the panel also ordered the respondents be jointly and severally liable to pay to the commission $7,332,936 obtained as a result of their misconduct.
     
    Individually, they were ordered to pay administrative penalties ranging from $10 million by  Thalbinder Poonian, to $3.5 million by Sharon Poonian, Robert Leyk and Manjit Sihota pay to the commission an administrative penalty of $3.5 million and $1 million by Perminder Sihota.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. terror suspects build bombs ahead of alleged Canada Day plot: trial

    B.C. terror suspects build bombs ahead of alleged Canada Day plot: trial
    VANCOUVER — Just days ahead of an alleged bomb plot, a British Columbia man grew fearful that he and his wife would be forced to "take the fall" if they became a liability to an Arab businessman they believed was helping them carry out their planned Canada Day attack, their trial has heard.In a video played at the couple's terrorism trial Monday, John Nuttall confides in his wife, Amanda Korody, that he believe they could be killed by shadowy figures up the chain of command. 

    B.C. terror suspects build bombs ahead of alleged Canada Day plot: trial

    Police say nurse injured, patient facing arrest after attack at B.C. hospital

    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Police say a nurse is injured and a patient is facing imminent arrest after an attack at an Abbotsford, B.C., hospital.Const. Ian MacDonald says a 39-year-old nurse was suddenly struck several times while he was providing treatment to a 23-year-old patient over the weekend.

    Police say nurse injured, patient facing arrest after attack at B.C. hospital

    Come Prepared to Laugh: Die Fledermaus Review

    Come Prepared to Laugh: Die Fledermaus Review
    Big on farcical plot twists, Vancouver Opera’s production of Die Fledermaus is deliciously funny.

    Come Prepared to Laugh: Die Fledermaus Review

    Vancouver police warning campaign targets fentanyl in street drugs

    Vancouver police warning campaign targets fentanyl in street drugs
    Vancouver police and B.C. health agencies are launching a campaign to warn drug users about the presence of the potentially fatal narcotic fentanyl in heroin and other street drugs. Const. Sandra Glendinning says the campaign has been prompted by an increase in the number of deaths caused by fentanyl throughout the Vancouver area and on southern Vancouver Island.

    Vancouver police warning campaign targets fentanyl in street drugs

    Sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle arrested in rape case: Sheriff's office

    Sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle arrested in rape case: Sheriff's office
    SEATTLE — A high-risk sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle has been arrested in the rape of a 69-year-old woman, authorities said Monday.Michael Sean Stanley, 49, made news reports in 2013 when he cut off an electronic-monitoring ankle bracelet and crossed the U.S. border unchallenged. He's a U.S. citizen, and American authorities said they had no reason to arrest him. Canada decided not to ask for his extradition, and he registered in Seattle as a sex offender.

    Sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle arrested in rape case: Sheriff's office

    Men who built Toronto mystery tunnel wanted place to 'hang out,' police say

    Men who built Toronto mystery tunnel wanted place to 'hang out,' police say
    A copy of a Toronto Police photo of the site of the tunnel found near one of the venues for this year's Pan American games is shown during a press conference in Toronto on February 24, 2015. Police say they have identified and interviewed two men who built a tunnel near a Pan Am Games venue in Toronto and have determined there is no criminal intent or threat. Investigators say they received information on Friday that helped them to identify two men. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO - Toronto Police

    Men who built Toronto mystery tunnel wanted place to 'hang out,' police say