Re: Incredible News from South Africa about Oleander!
The scam was the company Shimoda-Atlantic Oncology Biosciences. They exist only on the web and in the mind of thrice-convicted felon Jim Bolt and his cronies. Let me correct that, I found that they did at one time have a dinky breezeway office in a strip center in Springdale, Arkansas next to an Hispanic AA meeting room - but nothing like the string of facilities and "Class 10 Lab" they claimed. You can still see their realistic looking website at
http://shimoda-atlantic.com/
The bogus drug, Xenavex, never made it to FDA trials - and indeed was never intended to, despite their bogus posting to that effect. The whole website and scam was intended to bilk investors out of $15 Million or do, but alas, Bolt tripped over me in an alternative cancer forum and proceeded to attack me because he thought my home remedy and forthcoming book represented a threat to his fake drug (which turned out to be an impotent oleander extract - missing key polar compounds insofar as cancer treatment is concerned - imported from Russia where it is used to treat heart conditions and vertigo).
I did a bit of checking and made a reply post to the effect that I had heard that his company was less than legitimate. The following week, two hired thugs showed up at my old office looking for me, one of whom posed as a U.S. Marshall and the battle was joined. I ended up furnishing information to a virtual alphabet soup of agencies and, whatever role I may have played, the end result of a multi-agency probe was an indictment against Bolt and his gang and the evidence against them runs 1500 pages. The trial is scheduled to begin March 9th and will likely result in a return trip for Bolt to the accomodations he is well familiar with.
As a side note, Bolt is a member of a white supremicist group in Arkansas and is wanted to this day on a bench warrant out of Oklahoma City for failure to appear in the Terry Nichols trial after he gave testimony that he saw images on his cohorts computer of the van driving up to the Murrah Building, a glow beneath the van, and the subsequent explosion - testimony corroborated by a Dallas attorney who also saw the images. Bolt fled back to Arkansas after the first day he testified, claiming a heart condition, and never returned.
Previously, he was twice convicted of impersonating law officers and he was also convicted of operating a shell company with non-existent facilities and non-existing products. Besides his attacks on me, my greatest grievances against Bolt are that he convinced a good internet friend of mine to switch from an experimental oleander drug which had been the only thing that ever worked for his small cell lung cancer to the bogus Xenavex, after which the cancers re-appeared and never stopped growing until my friend's death, and then Bolt sent emails to various drug oriented youth forums telling them that my site was a thinly disguised site about a drug you could make, mix 50-50 with vodka and mainline it, in order to lure them to their probable death just to discredit me. Fortunately, I was tipped off in the nick of time, corrected the damage and changed the forum to a moderated one so I could screen members.
The other cancer scam shutdown I played a role in was the fake cancer websites and the FluFighters website of the deported prostitution and p 0 r n king of Dade County (Miami) Florida, Arthur VanMoor. Mainly all I did there was do a bit of checking around after a tip I recieved and then pass on some information and get the ball rolling. An expose was later run by Minnesota Wellness, picked up on by Dr. Ralph Moss and then picked up by Fox News - who took all the credit!