Males charged in shell firm inventory fraud scheme, used SEC filings

Three men engaged in a brazen scheme to “surreptitiously hijack” and take over dormant shell companies, whose stock they then fraudulently inflated to dump to unwitting investors, according to charges in an indictment that was unsealed Friday.

The men from 2017 through 2019 allegedly used fake resignation letters to seize control of four shell companies and then used the Securities and Exchange Commission’s EDGAR public filing system and bogus press releases to fraudulently “pump up” their share prices by claiming new business opportunities, the indictment says.

Millions of shares of those stocks, which the defendants had bought in many cases for less than 1 cent per share, then were sold on the over-the-counter market by the men and others for profits of as much as 900%, according to the court filing.

The defendants — Mark Allen Miller, Christopher James Rajkaran and Saeid Jaberian, also known as Andre Jaberian — are charged with 15 criminal counts of securities fraud, conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud.

The indictment says that Minnesota residents Miller and Jaberian, as well as an unidentified person who is a relative of Miller, actually became the nominal CEOs and presidents of companies targeted in the scam.

Prosecutors believe the men made hundreds of thousands of dollars in illicit profits just from the conduct detailed in the indictment, according to a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota.

The indictment, which was filed in U.S. District Court in Minnesota, was first reported Friday by the Twitter account of Seamus Hughes, deputy director of the Program on Extremism at George Washington University.

Hughes regularly trawls the PACER online federal court filing system for interesting criminal and civil case documents that have not been previously reported.

The Securities and Exchange Commission did not immediately respond when CNBC asked whether the agency had taken any action against the defendants and whether it has made any changes to the EDGAR filing system to prevent its manipulation by alleged fraudsters.

None of the defendants could be reached for comment.

Rajkaran, a resident of Queens, New York, and Guyana, was ordered detained as a possible flight risk after appearing in court in Brooklyn, New York, on Friday.

The other two defendants, Miller and Jaberian, are due to appear in Minnesota federal court on July 2.

The four shell companies targeted by the alleged conspiracy were Digitiliti, Encompass Holdings, Bell Buckle Holdings and Utilicraft Aerospace Industries.

While the companies had purported business operations — online data protection services, computer software, debt collection and aerospace, respectively — all were actually dormant shell companies “without any significant operations or revenue,” the indictment says.

The companies all had stopped filing required documents with the SEC and secretary of state offices, but their stocks were traded publicly on the over-the-counter market.

After identifying the quartet of companies, “The conspirators then bought stock in the dormant public shell companies at low prices in the OTC market,” the indictment said.

“The conspirators were able to obtain hundreds of thousands or even millions of shares because the stocks traded at only a fraction of a penny per share.”

In the case of Digitiliti, the indictment said, Miller in September 2017 drafted a fake resignation letter and board minutes falsely stating that the company’s prior CEO had resigned and that Miller had been appointed president and CEO.

Miller then submitted to the SEC paperwork that falsely identified himself as the new boss at the company and asked for “the filing codes allowing him to access the company’s SEC EDGAR filing account.”

That in turn “allowed Miller to make public filings with the SEC on behalf of the company.”

The EDGAR system is used by public companies to disclose material events, including quarterly and annual financial results, changes in executive leadership, and sales and purchases of significant amounts of company stock by insiders and others.

The indictment says Miller in November 2017 bought 50,000 shares of Digitiliti stock.

“After hijacking Digitiliti, defendant Miller used his control over the company to issue a false and misleading press release on behalf of the company,” the indictment says.

“On or about JuIy 9, 2018, Miller issued a press release falsely claiming that Digitiliti had ‘entered into negotiations’ with a private company looking to ‘buy-out’ Digitiliti.”

The release also falsely claimed that the private company “has a proven track record of revenue generation and success in a highly desirable market sector,” according to the indictment.

Miller sold his 50,000 shares of Digitiliti three weeks after that.

During the alleged hijacking of Encompass Holdings from June through November 2017, Miller and Rajkaran together purchased more than 40 million shares of the company’s stock at low prices, the indictment says.

Miller, as he did with Digitiliti, claimed in a false resignation letter and board minutes that he had become president and CEO, the indictment says.

Rajkaran then began posting about the company on investorshub.com in an effort “to promote and inflate the price of ECMH stock,” the indictment says.

“For example, he posted that the new CEO was ‘probably worth close to 20 million in real estate holding[s] and construction equipment … heard he owns several stripmalls in mn,'” the indictment says.

Miller then issued a press release that falsely claimed Encompass “had signed a letter of intent to acquire the assets of DDG Properties that were worth approximately $6.4 million. The press release further claimed that Encompass would be assuming DDG Properties’ gross revenues of $534,000,” according to the indictment.

“None of this was true.”

The stock price rose in reaction to the claims, and Miller shortly after sold 12 million shares of company stock at fraudulently inflated prices, earning a profit of more than 300%, the indictment says.

Rajkaran earned a return of about 150% in profits after dumping more than 34 million shares, according to the indictment.

LeBron James places NBA’s pandemic enterprise again within the highlight

LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers at a game against the LA Clippers at ESPN Wide World Of Sports Complex on July 30, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

Mike Ehrmann | Getty Images

The biggest star in the National Basketball Association isn’t happy about the current state of the league.

LeBron James used social media this week to express his frustration about the injuries the NBA is experiencing during its 2021 postseason. Superstar players including James Harden, Kevin Durant, Kawhi Leonard and James’ teammate Anthony Davis suffered key injuries in the NBA’s 72-game campaign and postseason. James suggested in his Twitter posts that the decision to start the 2020-21 season last Christmas is the culprit.

Without proper recovery, players can fall victim to soft tissue injuries due to muscle overuse. The wear and tear was a reason the NBA considered starting a new season in January, perhaps on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, after it finished the 2019-20 season last October due to the pandemic.

James used Twitter to apologize to NBA fans missing out on seeing the star players, including him, as the Los Angeles Lakers were eliminated by the Phoenix Suns. And Davis’ injury may have cost him a chance at a repeat. James then tweeted: “And I know all about the business side too/factors so don’t even try me! I get it.”

But the “business side” is the real culprit. James is a part of the NBA, and it needed to be saved to protect media rights.

Money rules everything 

In NBA circles, few disagree with James and note his points are valid, though some suggest grandstanding. Again, James is out of the playoffs, and remaining in the spotlight, especially with his new “Space Jam” movie on the horizon, can only help.

Still, James has the clout to gripe about NBA affairs on social platforms, and few in the league office will challenge him publicly.

Defending the league’s stance on the matter in a statement, NBA spokesperson Mike Bass noted injury rates “were virtually the same this season as they were during the 2019-20 season while starter-level and All-Star players missed games due to injury at similar rates as the last three seasons.”

Looking back on the NBA’s decision to return so quickly, one league executive pointed to the future impact of the NBA’s media rights.

Disney and AT&T’s WarnerMedia pay the NBA roughly $2 billion per year, and the Christmas Day package is a premium asset to leverage to advertisers. Hence, losing those games on that day would be costly. If the NBA didn’t play, the networks would distribute “make-goods” to marketers. That means networks would provide extra ad inventory to make up for the lost opportunity.

Also, networks could request rebates on fees they pay the NBA due to the lost content. And come renegotiation time, they’ll calculate those make-good losses and trim the NBA’s money. And if that happened, the league would eventually feel the financial pain.

The NBA will seek significant increases in rights, perhaps up to $75 billion, when its deal is up after the 2024-25 season. So, sacrificing content and losing fan engagement is risky. And the league was already missing 40% of its revenue with no fans in arenas due to the pandemic. Hence, it knew the consequences and valued the health of its business more than James’ concerns.

“[The NBA] allowed the networks to say, ‘We can afford to give you a lot more if you start earlier,'” said former National Basketball Players Association executive Charles Grantham.

The players lost about 20% of their paychecks due to the shortened season. That could have increased to 25% had the NBA started in January with 62 games. Not many players can afford that loss or have James’ resources to sustain their lifestyles.

James has made over $340 million in NBA contracts throughout his career, including $39 million this season, the sixth-highest in the league. Include the $65 million annually in endorsements, and the overall compensation figure is even higher, according to Forbes.

The average NBA player’s salary for the 2020-21 season was $7.4 million. And of the roughly 513 contracts, only 20 players made more than $30 million, according to basketball-reference.com.

Viewership is too important

But Grantham, now the director of the sports management program at Seton Hall University, agreed with James’ frustrations. He noted team owners used scare tactics, mainly the force majeure clause, which threatened to decimate the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement with players.

Grantham then pointed to team values staying afloat during Covid-19 and questioned why players should suffer any losses. The Utah Jazz sold for $1.6 billion days after the NBA’s bubble season ended last year. And in March, the Minnesota Timberwolves agreed to sell at a price of a little over $1 billion.

The NBA loves bragging about increasing team values since Steve Ballmer inflated the market in 2014 with his purchase of the Clippers. Before then, few were interested in buying an NBA team, noted respected marketing executive Tony Ponturo. But player unions receive none of the money from those franchise transactions.

Asked if NBA owners would have sacrificed the CBA — and risked team values — if players resisted a December return, Grantham responded: “I don’t think the owners would’ve done it.”

And on the networks side, “The advertisers would adjust,” said Ponturo. “It was great for the NBA and broadcasters to have the Christmas games, but with the NFL so strong, the advertisers would be fine.”

Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James holds his ankle after going down with an injury during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Atlanta Hawks Saturday, March 20, 2021, in Los Angeles.

Marcio Jose Sanchez | AP Photo

Some of the frustration derives from players being told a December return was initially off the table. And NBA Commissioner Adam Silver floated January as a return last September when Covid-19 was still spreading. The thing is, networks know consumers rarely watch TV in the summer. And this year, especially, going up against the Tokyo Olympics isn’t favorable to the league, ESPN or Turner Sports.

So the NBA pivoted, and it may have saved its viewership.

Overall, the NBA averaged 1.3 million viewers throughout its national games on ESPN, ABC and TNT this season. Media executives suggest those numbers are down. But though injuries play a factor, viewership in the more profitable postseason is up — at least in the first round.

The league said it averaged roughly 3 million viewers in the first round, which is up 3% when compared with the 2019 postseason. And the NBA’s play-in tournament helped with fan engagement entering the playoffs. James and fellow NBA superstar Steph Curry averaged 5.6 million for the Lakers versus Golden State Warriors play-in game. It was the most-watched contest on ESPN since the 2019 Western Conference round.

When viewership is strong, networks pay more. Now the NBA should hope for a big-market Finals match, as a Milwaukee Bucks vs. Jazz match-up wouldn’t exactly be a ratings draw.

But so far, without James, younger stars, including Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young, are helping the NBA stay relevant. The Philadelphia 76ers are near a collapse in Doc Rivers’ first year. The Phoenix Suns are a success story. Mark Cuban’s Dallas Mavericks are a mess. And Durant is keeping fans engaged.

Even James took notice of Durant’s performance in Game 5 against the Bucks.

The NBA, though more profitable and exciting with James, is surviving without him. Injuries are always bothersome, and fans do favor the stars playing. But this is entertainment, and the show goes on. Next season should help, though. The Warriors will be back; James and the Lakers, too.

Most importantly, stars will have normal time to rest and recover as they return to business.

Trina delivers the “receipts” within the newly launched track after Battle Towards Eve

Roommate, if you’re a Trina fan you’re probably still in a frenzy from her recent ‘Verzuz’ fight with Eve, and maybe expected that interest in her music would be at an all-time high by now, she decided something to drop new heat. Trina wants to make the “Receipts”, as her brand new single is called, available to the fans in time to start the race for the 2021 summer anthem.

It’s been a minute since Trina released new music, and there’s no better time than now as she just rocked the stage in her hometown of Miami during her battle with rapper Eve. On her new single, Receipts, Trina is back in her worst chick status as she raps about who is really running Miami.

Some of the outstanding lyrics of “Receipts” are:

“Look, if you put the tab down, I’ll grab it in front of the n *** a. Because you’re fucking a rich bitch, that p *** y seven-figure … Yeah, bring the rose in, bring the rose in. When I get through the building bring the h *** s in black, white, Spanish, Asian. You’re not welcome in Miami unless you’re fucking a Haitian. “

On other Trina news, fans are wondering if she will be returning to VH1’s hit reality series “Love & Hip Hop Miami,” which will resume later this year after a hiatus after production stoppage due to the COVID-19 pandemic should.

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Jim Cramer says the ‘Ark Make investments phenomenon’ seems to be over for now

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Friday that Ark Invest’s stock-moving influence appears to be waning — at least for now.

Ark Invest’s family of exchange-traded funds were some of the best performers on Wall Street last year, but have not fared well in 2021 as investors rotated away from high-growth stocks and into economic recovery plays.

The “Mad Money” host said as the funds run by star money manager Cathie Wood’s firm struggled, the amount of outflows started to pick up. That has implications for the stocks that are components of the ETFs, Cramer said.

“It seems pretty clear that the Ark Invest phenomenon is no longer in play,” Cramer said. “We’re not seeing major outflows here, but the era of Cathie Wood propping these stocks up with her own buying bazooka, I think, it appears to be over.”

The opposite was true last year as investors started to notice how well Wood’s family of funds was performing, Cramer said, leading the firm to see a massive wave of inflows and new firepower to deploy into the market.

Cramer noted that Ark’s flagship ARK Innovation ETF have started to perform better recently as growth stocks returned to favor. Indeed, the fund is up about 2.4% over the past 5 days, while the S&P 500, by comparison, is down 1.9%.

ARK Innovation also rose 6% between June 7 and June 11.

“Here’s the bottom line: when you look at the fund flows, Ark Invest’s no longer propping up the turbo-charged growth stocks, which makes their recent rebound feel a lot more significant to me,” Cramer said.

“Maybe if this group keeps climbing, Cathie Wood can get her bazooka back, but until then the ‘WoodStocks’ will rise or fall on their own.”

Towards the background of uncertainty, Ethiopia goes to vote for the ballot

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia – Supporters of the Balderas party, one of the largest opposition parties, are taking part in an election campaign in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on June 16, 2021.

Michael Tewelde / Xinhua via Getty Images

Ethiopians will vote on Monday. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is campaigning for a message of unity amid conflict and looming famine in the north of the country.

The national elections, in which 547 members of the federal parliament will be elected and the chairman of the winning party becomes prime minister, should take place in August 2020, but have been postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Abiy, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for his work in ending a 20-year post-war territorial dispute with Eritrea, called on the Ethiopians earlier this week to ensure “the first free and fair elections in the country”.

Monday is his first election test since taking office in 2018 due to mass protests against the former coalition government dominated by the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

But despite Abiy pursuing a bold reformist agenda that included crackdown on corruption and the release of political prisoners, Abiy conducted military operations against the TPLF in the northern Tigray region last year after it seized military bases.

The ensuing conflict has resulted in mass casualties and displacement, although no formal death toll has been recorded, and has brought the region to the brink of famine, according to the United Nations. Meanwhile, allegations of human rights violations have tarnished the German government’s international reputation. The African Union opened an investigation this week to investigate these allegations.

Troubled polls

The legitimacy of the election was also called into question after parties in Oromia, Ethiopia’s most populous region, where Abiy is from, announced they would boycott it on allegations of government repression.

The Oromo Liberation Front announced in March that it would withdraw after the detention of party leaders and the alleged closure of their national offices. The Oromo Federalist Congress withdrew for similar reasons when prominent figures were jailed on terrorist charges.

The deductions coincided with a surge in deadly attacks in Oromia and parts of the northwestern Amhara region, attributed to a militant offshoot of the OLF.

Amhara militiamen who are fighting against the northern region of Tigray together with federal and regional forces will receive training on November 10, 2020 on the outskirts of the village of Addis Zemen north of Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.

EDUARDO SOTERAS / AFP via Getty Images

The TPLF is now officially referred to as a terrorist organization whose leaders are either arrested, waging guerrilla warfare in Tigray or on the run.

“The biggest challenge for the elections is the uncertainty, especially in the west and south of Oromia, where the activities of ethnic militias are very much aimed at undermining the electoral process itself,” said Louw Nel, senior political analyst at NKC African Economics, in a Research note Thursday.

“Ethiopian security forces have tried to create the conditions for free and fair elections in the hardest hit areas and have been embroiled in abuses of their own.”

Uncertainty is also a cause for concern in the western region of Benishangul-Gumuz, fueled by competition for resources and long-standing ethnic animosities, stressed Nel.

Although dozens of parties have put forward candidates, only Ethiopian citizenship for social justice has a party leader with a sizable national profile – Berhanu Nega, who was elected mayor of the capital Addis Ababa in 2005 before being ousted by the TPLF-led government, and locked.

The National Electoral Body of Ethiopia announced on June 10th that elections in the Harar and Somali regions would no longer take place, along with a referendum on the establishment of a new state from several districts of the Southern Nations, Nationalities and People’s Regional State.

This is in addition to the 40 constituencies and six regions where May elections were postponed due to disruptions in voter registration. While these polls are now scheduled for September 6th, the elections in war-torn Tigray will be postponed indefinitely, which, according to a recently published report by the political risk consultancy Pangea-Risk, “5.7 million people who mainly oppose the federal government, effectively disenfranchised.

Reputational risk

Abiy claimed victory in Tigray in November 2020, and the region is now under interim administration after the government declared TPLF prime ministry illegal. However, it is still battling a low-level insurrection, which the Pangea Risk report increases the risk of disproportionate war tactics by rebel groups.

“Persistent uncertainty, delayed elections and a seemingly botched round of telecommunications licenses are all signs of concern as Ethiopia struggles to recover from the pandemic and the economy slows to its lowest growth rate in nearly 20 years,” the report said .

The conflict in Tigray has damaged global reputations that could affect interest in the land as an investment location, a key tenet of Abiy’s privatization and economic liberation drive.

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia – People listen as employees of the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) explain how to vote under an overpass in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on June 17, 2021 in the upcoming general election on June 21, 2021.

YASUYOSHI CHIBA / AFP via Getty Images

“Companies that were once encouraged by the prospect of investing in a country led by a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who wanted to open it to the world are now at reputational risk when investing in a country plagued with war crimes and famine Connection, “said NKC’s Nel.

The government is currently planning to auction a 40% stake in Ethio Telecom, which is still attracting interest, with the ultimate goal of generating revenue through partial privatization and new licensing tenders while reducing the debt burden, partly through state-owned companies like Ethio Telecom .

“A relatively peaceful election will help rehabilitate Ethiopia and Mr. Abiy’s image,” said Nel.

“Violence before and after the elections will do the opposite, expose the country as broken and accelerate its isolation.”

Biden says delta Covid variant is ‘notably harmful’ for younger individuals

President Joe Biden speaks about reaching 300 million COVID-19 vaccination shots, in the State Dining Room of the White House, Friday, June 18, 2021, in Washington.

Evan Vucci | AP

President Joe Biden on Friday doubled down on his administration’s plea to Americans to get vaccinated against Covid-19 as quickly as possible, warning the highly transmissible delta variant appears to be “particularly dangerous” for young people.

“The data is clear: If you are unvaccinated, you’re at risk of getting seriously ill or dying or spreading it,” Biden said during a news conference from the White House.

Delta, the Covid variant first identified in India, “will leave unvaccinated people even more vulnerable than they were a month ago,” he added. “It is a variant that is more easily transmissible, potentially deadlier and particularly dangerous for young people.”

Biden said the best way young people can protect themselves is to get fully vaccinated.

“Please, please if you have one shot, get the second shot as soon as you can,” he said.

The president’s comments come as his administration’s latest goal – to get 70% of U.S. adults partially vaccinated by the Fourth of July – is on track to fall short as the pace of inoculations slows.

The World Health Organization’s chief scientist said earlier Friday that delta is becoming the dominant strain of the disease worldwide. That’s because of its “significantly increased transmissibility,” Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, the WHO’s chief scientist, said during a news conference.

Studies suggest delta is around 60% more transmissible than alpha, the variant first identified in the United Kingdom that was more contagious than the original strain that emerged from Wuhan, China, in late 2019.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky also said Friday that she expects delta to become the dominant variant in the United States and urged people to get vaccinated. The variant now makes up 10% of all new cases in the United States, up from 6% last week, according to the data from CDC.

“As worrisome as this delta strain is with regard to its hyper transmissibility, our vaccines work,” Walensky told the ABC program “Good Morning America.” If you get vaccinated, “you’ll be protected against this delta variant,” she added.

Health experts say the delta strain is particularly worrisome for young people, many of whom have yet to get vaccinated. While scientists still don’t know whether delta causes more severe symptoms, there are signs that it could provoke different symptoms than other variants.

Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, said the delta variant has essentially replaced alpha, the variant that swept across Europe and later the U.S. earlier this year. He said as the virus continues to mutate, the U.S. will need a higher percentage of the population vaccinated.

“How much more information do we need to see that this virus mutates and creates viruses that are more contagious?” said Offit, also a member of the FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee. “We need to vaccinate now. Get everyone vaccinated now.”

As of Friday, more than 176 million Americans, or 53.1% of the population, have had at least one shot, according to data compiled by the CDC. More than 148 million Americans are fully vaccinated, according to the agency.

States have offering incentives ranging from free beer to $1 million lotteries to try to convince Americans to get jabbed. 

On Friday, Biden touted some of those incentives, including that most pharmacies are offering 24-hour services on select days for the month of June.

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From gripping thrillers to novel coms to friendship stories, we’ve rounded up some of our all-time favorite summer readings, including some classic celebrity book club picks. Whether you prefer Print, Audible, or Kindle, they’re all available at prices where you can stock up on several – or try Kindle Unlimited. Happy reading!

Fixing international delivery delays “could take some time”

Ryan Petersen, CEO of Flexport, told CNBC on Friday that there is no single solution to address the shipping delays that have disrupted the global economy.

That’s because a main reason for it – consumers who buy more physical products during the Covid pandemic because they spent less on services – won’t return right away, Petersen said in an interview with Mad Money.

“The real solution here is probably: wait and see. Nobody likes to hear that,” said Petersen, whose company is a freight forwarder that uses cloud computing and machine learning to modernize the global shipping industry. Privately owned Flexport was # 41 of CNBC’s Disruptor 50 in 2021.

“I think you will see the dollars shift back [to services] and the decline in goods, but it may still take a while, especially when the holiday season is approaching, “Petersen said.

Numerous challenges have arisen during the coronavirus pandemic – from congestion in ports to bottlenecks in shipping containers – which have resulted in higher costs and delays. Home Depot even bought its own container ship to alleviate the problems.

It is unlikely that demand for goods returning to normal pre-Covid levels will be enough to give the shipping industry respite, Petersen said. “Until we somehow bring the flow below normal it will be really very difficult to resolve,” he said.

Petersen said some short-term improvements could be made, adding that Flexport’s technology is designed to do just that.

For example, he said the company recently used machine learning to analyze the 400,000 or so containers it was shipping and found that “they’re only 70% full.”

“So we can put more containers in the containers. Very simple solution. We work with our customers to say, ‘Hey, fill this thing up because I can’t put any more containers on the ship, but I can do more. ” Things in the container. “

Nvidia, Lennar, Adobe and extra

A sign will be posted outside NVIDIA headquarters on May 10, 2018 in Santa Clara, California.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Check out the companies that are making the headlines in midday trading.

Nvidia – Nvidia stock rose 2.3% at noon, then closed 0.21% after Bank of America raised its target price on the stock from $ 800 per share to $ 900 per share. The bank said, “The rise in AI adoption and the expansion of use cases across the cloud, enterprise, edge, and telecommunications can help NVDA double its content and triple its data center revenue over the next few years.”

Lennar – Lennar stocks rose 3.7% after JPMorgan raised the homebuilder from neutral to overweight. JPMorgan said Lennar stock is “attractive compared to its peers and does not effectively reflect the company’s significant and ongoing business transformation.”

Adobe – Shares in the digital cloud giant traded nearly 2.6% higher on better-than-expected quarterly numbers. Adobe reported earnings per share of $ 3.03 on sales of $ 3.84 billion. According to Refinitiv, analysts expected earnings of $ 2.81 per share on sales of $ 3.73 billion.

Smith & Wesson Brands – The gun manufacturer’s stock rose 17.4% after the company’s quarterly results beat analysts’ expectations. Smith & Wesson’s earnings per share of $ 1.71 exceeded Refinitiv’s forecasts by 69 cents. The company’s revenue of $ 322.9 million also topped the estimate of $ 259.8 million. Smith & Wesson also increased its dividend by 60% and approved a $ 50 million share buyback.

Orphazyme – Orphazyme shares fell nearly 50% after U.S. regulators rejected their application for a drug to treat Niemann-Pick type C disease.

Fox Corporation – Fox shares rose 1.3% after the company increased its share buyback program by $ 2 billion to a total of $ 4 billion.

Citigroup – Bank shares fell 1.8% at noon, their 12th consecutive day loss. Citigroup stocks are down more than 11% this week.

– CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel contributed to the coverage

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Eva Marcille Defends Michael Costello Amid Bullying Allegations: ‘Loyal 10 Toes Down’

Eva Marcille is standing beside her friend.

On Thursday, Eva Marcille posted a message to Michael Costello, who has been in the news recently for bullying.

Several people, including a boutique owner, accused him of bullying and even saying a racial slur. 

Eva took to social media and defended her friend. She stated that she knows him and not to let a headline fool you. Eva stated, “With my love #michaelcostello and my Cuzzo @terrellmullin I am not here for the cancel culture but I am here for loyalty in those that have supported you and loved on you no matter what. I know my friend Michael I know who he is I know his heart and #MichaelCostello is my GOOD FRIEND. Don’t let a headline or an out-of-context message allow you to be judge someone’s intention as if we are a God or furthermore cancel someone as if they are not a person. Loyal 10 toes down, Michael you’re my baby.”

As you know, Michael Costello spoke out and stated he was bullied by Chrissy Teigen and wanted to commit suicide because of it.

In a detailed post, Michael released alleged messages between Chrissy and himself, in which she allegedly told him he deserved to die and suffer because he was a racist.

In the alleged exchange between Chrissy and Michael, the screenshots showed Michael asking Chrissy to call him. She reportedly replied, “No! I do not have anything to say to you. You will get what’s coming to you.”

As you know, Chrissy lost her partnership with Macy’s & Bloomingdale’s as her bullying past resurfaced.

On Monday, Chrissy shared a more detailed apology about the whole matter and said, “I’ve apologized publicly to one person, but there are others — and more than just a few — who I need to say I’m sorry to. I’m in the process of privately reaching out to the people I insulted. It’s like my own version of that show My Name is Earl! I understand that they may not want to speak to me. I don’t think I’d like to speak to me. (The real truth in all of this is how much I actually cannot take confrontation.) But if they do, I am here and I will listen to what they have to say, while apologizing through sobs.”

Chrissy continued to say, “I was a troll, full stop. And I am so sorry. I want to go a little further here, thinking of those I’ve hurt and friends I’ve disappointed.”