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BOARD01932
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Last modified
8/16/2009 3:08:55 PM
Creation date
10/4/2006 7:05:02 AM
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Board Meetings
Board Meeting Date
5/22/2000
Description
Flood Section - Rio Grande Basin - Alamosa River Watershed Project
Board Meetings - Doc Type
Memo
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<br />L<B>and<IB> <B>mine<IB> <br /> <br />Page 12 of20 <br /> <br />selling the stock, even with the Bank of America's name attached to the <br />project. An issue fell through in November 1986, as did plans to sell or <br />merge Galactic with a larger company the following month, <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />Friedland continued to raise money by selling stock based on other Galactic <br />mining projects stretching from the Yukon and South Carolina to the <br />Philippines and China, <br /> <br />"You could always raise money for new projects, not for old ones," said <br />Wyman, the Galactic executive, Sitting in a room in Tucson, where he was <br />deposed by federal attorneys, Wyman added. "Pie in the sky is much more <br />saleable than this table is," <br /> <br />An organizational chart submitted to the U.S, Securities and Exchange <br />Commission in 1988 showed Galactic with 16 corporate subsidiaries, <br /> <br />Some of the projects, including ones in Nevada and South Carolina, saw <br />actual mining, Others, such as one in Bodie, Calif" never got off the ground, <br /> <br />Mostly the new projects called for more money, Wyman said, <br /> <br />"The more deals he made, the greater his need for cash," Wyman said. <br /> <br />Friedland said all of the projects were intended to turn a profit, not just raise <br />more money for Summitville, A project in the Philippines never produced <br />gold for Galactic, but it was sold to another company for more than $30 <br />million, <br /> <br />The money from the Philippines was quickly consumed by Summitville, <br />Friedland said, <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />Eventually, Friedland secured a loan from a Connecticut metals firm to <br />repay most of the Bank of America loan. <br /> <br />Bank officers were much relieved to be out from under such a risky loan, <br /> <br />But others were still holding the bag, including Colorado residents, who had <br />the Alamosa River at stake. <br /> <br />State mining division cut off <br /> <br />By the late 1980s, Colorado officials were becoming alarmed, State mining <br />and clean water officials increasingly worried about chemicals the mine was <br />releasing into Wightman Fork, the creek that feeds into the Alamosa River <br />41/2 miles below Summitville. <br /> <br />Shortly after leaks in the liners were detected, Friedland appeared before <br />the state's Mined Land Reclamation Board, which had the power to halt the <br />project. <br /> <br />"The Summitville heap-leach facility is something that I've been working on <br />now for five years." Friedland said in a somewhat emotional speech, "It's <br />been the focus of my life." <br /> <br />According to a transcript, Friedland vowed to add multiple backup systems <br />to prevent cyanide leaks, like the fail-safe systems in spacecraft, <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />He conceded he didn't know exactly how the system would work, but he <br />added, 'We are now determined to engineer and construct such a backup <br />system," <br /> <br />http://www.denver-mm.com/news/0507smmtl.shtrnl <br /> <br />517/00 <br />
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