Monday, 15 June 2015

Anton "no balls" Billis


Anthony Billis
Anthony Billis, also known as Anton, serves as the Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of Tribune Resources Limited. Mr. Billis has 25 years experience in gold exploration within the mining industry in Western Australia. THE FAT WALLET MOB.
"I keep looking for gold miners and all I end up finding are IMO money-launderers. Anton must be best friends with ASIC by now.

Looks cheap based on the inventory numbers and future production, but the real question is will Anton, Otakar & co share the funds with fellow shareholders or just divert the company assets to self-owned companies."
Anton is the managing director of gold producer Tribune Resources and he is sitting on a $180 million stack of cash and bullion at the Perth Mint. It is not easy to work this out as Anton books his gold at cost rather than at market value.

And what a tight ship he runs. Tribune and its sister company Rand Resources rarely issue shares or options, they never boast about the swelling $400 million value of their half stake in the fabulous East Kundana Joint Venture and the fact they will soon be churning out a $90 million profit, after costs. Why then are some of his shareholders restless? Who better to manage your company than the successful and parsimonious Anton Billis? The answer to this lies in the identity of some mystery shareholders. This is a clandestine affair. On the face of it, Anton owns just 13,500 shares in Tribune and 14,000in Rand.
But Rand holds 26 per cent of Tribune and Tribune holds 44 per cent of Rand. Then there is the enigma of who is behind other shareholders high on the register, such as Transglobal, Sierra Gold and Resource Capital. Given the cross-shareholdings, were Anton to be a shareholder in these mystery shareholders, he would be in a position to control more than 60 per cent of the stock in both Tribune and Rand. Transglobal Trust, based in Hungary, transferred its 17 per cent of Tribune to Transglobal Capital Ltd based in the idyllic Seychelles while Sierra Gold Pty Ltd (based in Melbourne) transferred its 16 per cent to Sierra Gold Ltd in the Seychelles.


http://www.smh.com.au/business/sharks-circle-but-on-paper-dont-look-so-good-20140718-3c6od.html

Sunday, 7 June 2015

Death of Carl Williams

Carl Williams was a convict who was serving life for his role in a drug and murder ring. Another prisoner, Matthew Charles Johnson has the stem of an exercise bike that he used to beat Williams to death. The above photo is a still from CCTV footage of the murder.
New details surrounding the murder of drug kingpin Carl Williams have emerged, claiming he was bashed to death in jail over fears he was being 'downloaded' by police. Williams, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for playing his part in the murder of four people, was murdered at Barwon prison in April 2010.

Reports have surfaced that Williams was being used by police as a source of information on unsolved gangland crimes in Victoria and crooks were becoming increasingly worried about what he would reveal.

Matthew Johnson in 2010. Johnson was sentenced to a minimum of 32 years in prison for the gruesome murder.
Williams, known as the baby-faced killer, was a key figure in Melbourne's brutal underworld war of the 1990s and immortalised in the popular TV series 'Underbelly'. He was a central figure in Melbourne's violent criminal war which began in the late 1990s and eventually claimed more than 25 lives, with a sentencing judge describing him as a 'puppet master' who decided who lived and who died.



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2936151/Underbelly-boss-Carl-Williams-bashed-death-crooks-feared-going-reveal-killed-Melbourne-gangland-wars.html