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To Steve Simanonok, EPS
5 31 06
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From
Environmental
Protection Agency
5 31 06
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To Storey County Sheriff
11 1 05
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To Storey County Sheriff
10 27 05
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To Storey County Sheriff
10 24 05
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To Nevada Div. of Minerals
5 19 04
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To Idaho Salvage
5 6 04
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To John Unverzagt
4 26 04
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To Storey County
4 26 02
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Motion to Show Cause
3 26 02
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Order to Show Cause
3 25 02
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Affidavit of Alan Coyner
3 17 02
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To Alan Coyner &
Doug Driesner
9 24 01
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To
Attorney General
DelPapa
8 23 01
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To Alan Coyner,
Leo Drozdoff & Janet Hess
3 26 01
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To Doug Driesner
2 19 01
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Judgment
5 4 00
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Offer of Judgment
4 10 00
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Offer
of Judgment
3 6 00
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From Cameron Adams
5 25 95
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The
tailings of the heap were of such low grade that leaching them would
not be economical, yet, because of their quantity, it continued to
shed gold and silver from rain and snow melt. The solutions pregnant
with gold and silver would then collect in the preg pond and be pumped
from there to the mill for collection in the carbon circuit and
shipped out for extraction and smelting and, therefore, on to cash
flow. This operation was easily closed down during cold weather, but
was expected to develop a stream of income ranging between $150,000 to
as high as $300,000 per year from full containment, all approved by
previous environmental authorities.
So,
what happened that interfered with operations?
In a
Reno Gazette article in July, 1998, five years after Pallas' purchase
of the Gooseberry properties, Asamera would gloat that since it had
"no mineable" reserves, it was changing its focus from
mining to that of real estate development. The announcement was made
that a "developer group" was buying all of Asamera's
remaining 104,000 acres, now being called the Asamera Ranch property,
as the name of Nevada Gold Project had been dropped. This new group
came on with much publicity claiming among other things, that it was
going to develop the "largest industrial real estate complex in
the world" on the Asamera Ranch properties. At the time, this was
good news for Pallas, and it is even more so today, if certain
problems are overcome.
Let us now go
to Bill Jordan material that reports actions by "creditors"
determined to destroy Pallas. This includes the hostile and illegal
takeover of Athena Gold and the nearby Talapoosa Mine Property from
which huge profits were made by Scientology members and their lawyers.
There
is no way that Pallas Resource Corporation, its corporate officials,
or anybody with a vested interest in the company authorized the
destruction of its utility system; thefts or damages to any of its
properties in the name of a reclamation bond scam (or "offer of
judgment"); or to change its management of its personal
properties from "care and maintenance" to that of looting
and plundering. And Pallas was responsibly seeking an appraisal to
incorporate into its finances for a stock offering. Proceeds from the
stock offering and the sale of selected items/assets were more than
adequate to pay its outstanding 1999 property tax bill to Storey
County of only $12,452.82, and thus head off the tax scam that was in
the making. To do otherwise would be to nullify the very long-range
purposes of its business pursuits and opportunities!
Responsible
officials, lawyers and judiciary had plenty of time to mend their ways
as the general looting and plundering of the properties occurred over
six or more years. The recurring felonies indicate serial thieves at
work whereby a major investigation called for by the company, but
covered up to date, is certainly justified!
The
criminally destructive activities presented in [the lawsuit filed by
Pallas on 11-2-07] represent new twists of environmental techniques
that are custom designed by the "creditors" as they created
all-out war to win Pallas' private properties for themselves and their
cronies and get rid of Pallas and Jordan once and for all. With their
political and judicial clout, it was easy to set aside regulations and
Constitutional rights. As Judge Gregg Zive stated in February 27,
2007, as he was converting Pallas' case from Chapter 11 to Chapter 7,
"Pallas has no business, so all its assets can be liquidated to
pay these creditors with interest! And if that's not enough, Mr.
Jordan will have to pay the balance!"
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