Chris Carey
Christopher Carey is editor and president of Sharesleuth.com. He's been a business reporter for more than two decades, most recently at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, where he produced a series of articles on global stock fraud (www.stltoday.com/stockfraud). He specializes in digging through SEC filings, court records and other documents to find information that companies try to bury, and in tracking the activities of known securities-law violators.
Contact Chris Carey at chris@sharesleuth.com.
Recent stories from Chris Carey:
» Chinese coal company's share placement produces interesting collection of investors
» Houston American presses bet in Colombia
» More disclosure questions at China Fire & Security Group
» SEC investigating Mesa Energy Holdings
» Chinese company has growing receivables issues
» Former head of Florida company becomes first person sentenced in insurance fraud case
» Surge in Chinese coal company's shares produces quick gain for private placement investors
» Rockwell Medical Technologies has close ties to financier facing SEC charges
» Xethanol Corp. founder creates new public company
» Chinese coal company's share placement produces interesting collection of investors
» Houston American presses bet in Colombia
» More disclosure questions at China Fire & Security Group
» SEC investigating Mesa Energy Holdings
» Chinese company has growing receivables issues
» Former head of Florida company becomes first person sentenced in insurance fraud case
» Surge in Chinese coal company's shares produces quick gain for private placement investors
» Rockwell Medical Technologies has close ties to financier facing SEC charges
» Xethanol Corp. founder creates new public company
more from Sharesleuth
from bailoutsleuth.com
- » Did Goldman Sachs executive lie to government panel? - News
- » Illinois bank failure brings the total for year to 26 - News
- » TARP oversight panel is critical of Treasury to the end - News
- » Barofksy's departure pleases some at Treasury Department - News
- » Bridge Bank set to repay nearly $24 million in TARP money - News
from junketsleuth.com
- » NASA official pleads guilty to making false travel claim
- » The 10 most expensive trips taken by employees of the federal agency that oversees the nation’s historical records were not to American research sites
- » FDIC refuses to release employee travel records; agency responds to Freedom of Information Act requests by saying that it doesn’t “maintain a travel database” and that other records of travel spending by top officials are not available to the public
- » Government official takes "business" trips in his own hometown; goes to prison for embezzling more than $60,000 in taxpayer money
- » Freedom of Information requests raise questions about government’s commitment to openness
