VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire
- Nov. 19, 2009) - The British Columbia Securities Commission has
settled with a retired teacher who admitted to helping illegally distribute
approximately $475,000 in securities.
In the BCSC settlement agreement, Gaele McErvel, 66, a
retired teacher from Golden, B.C., admitted that she helped Solara Technologies
Inc. distribute securities to approximately 34 investors, some of whom were her
friends or acquaintances. At the time, McErvel was not registered to trade securities.
Solara has never filed a prospectus to distribute
securities, and for the purposes of settlement, McErvel agreed that the
exemptions Solara claimed to rely upon to allow for the distributions did not
apply in the circumstances.
McErvel and her family invested approximately $213,000 in
Solara and its predecessor companies, and did not recover any of that
investment. She did not receive any benefit for her involvement, and came
forward with her concerns regarding the company's conduct.
Under the settlement agreement, McErvel is prohibited for
three years from acting as a director or officer of any issuer, acting in a
management or consultative capacity in connection with activities in the
securities market, and engaging in investor relations activities. She is also
banned for three years, except in limited circumstances, from trading in and
purchasing any securities.
A
hearing into similar allegations against William
Dorn Beattie and Solara is scheduled to begin on Nov. 23, 2009.
The B.C. Securities Commission is the
independent provincial government agency responsible for regulating trading in
securities within the province. You may view the settlement agreement on our
website www.bcsc.bc.ca by typing in the
search box, Gaele McErvel or 2009 BCSECCOM 625. If you
have questions, contact Ken Gracey, media relations, 604-899-6577.
Learn
how to avoid investment fraud at the BCSC's investor education website: www.investright.org.