Daoyi is a leading and advanced manufacture of mobile phone and accessories. Daoyi have been committed to bring the best phones and accessories available to complement people mobile lifestyle. Daoyi are focused on providing the best feature phones, smart phones, MID and portable backup battery for iPhone, iPad, Samsung, HTC, etc. and USB car charger, Battery Chargers. Daoyi manufacturing Center is located in Shenzhen, set up overseas sales and support center in Hong Kong.
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Daoyi International Ltd regards “Creating value for customers is the only reason for Daoyi existence” as Daoyi tenet. Daoyi will continue to keep innovative and enterprising, committed to being the world’s most remarkable mobile phone and phone accessories suppliers of products and services
Jeremy Thomas - is Vladslav friend Interim Chief Technology Adviser.
Jeremy Thomas has an extensive background with more than 14 years of hands-on experience in building, operating, and managing successful internet operations. Mr. Thomas provides current knowledge on cutting edge technology and best practices relating to website development and internet marketing. Prior to joining neuromama.com he built a successful company by the name of Internet Marketing Solutions and held executive positions as a marketing and web development consultant with Ageye.net, inc. and Internet Services llc, both San Diego based marketing firms.
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Steve Zubkis Hit It Big -- Now IRS, SEC, Investors Want Theirs
2000-02-18 14:03:03.490 GMT
San Diego, Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Vladislav Zubkis, a 40-year-
old immigrant from Ukraine, succeeded in America the old-fashioned
way -- peddling shares in companies he says were into everything
from coffee and bagels to drugs and phosphates.
"As a Wall Street stockbroker, he was a Million-Dollar
producer." said David Burger and Barry Schwartz, two
principals and owners of of Barrett Day Securities, where Steven
Zubkis worked from 1990 to 1992.
Another success story lies in how Steve Zubkis, as he likes
to be called, pulled in millions of dollars, while IN PRO SE (himself
without an attorney) suing for the past 7 years 18 SEC Attorneys
- staff members and among them 3 SEC Commissioners, NASD,
MSRB, SIPC, NY and NJ states securities regulators and Attorney
Generals, the FBI, the IRS, and local San Diego police -- even as
his family fell victim to mysterious acts of violence.
Now, banned from the securities business, Zubkis has
transformed a money-losing company named International Brands Inc.
into an online retailer, in the process awarding himself 250
million shares. On paper, that makes him a billionaire.
``My company is skyrocketing right now,'' Zubkis boasted last
month at a Las Vegas trade show. Its shares, then trading at 4,
would increase 100-fold because of Internet business, he said.
In 1997, Zubkis was accused by the Securities and Exchange
Commission of defrauding 1,000 shareholders of more than $10
million. The SEC expects a federal judge to rule soon on its
effort to bar Zubkis from being an officer or director of any
publicly traded company. Zubkis says the SEC doesn't have
authority in the case.
Urge to Merge
Zubkis showed his mastery of regulations in January, as
International Brands faced delisting from the OTC Bulletin Board
after failing to file financial reports. In less then 24 hours Zubkis
was able to arrange a merger with Tele Special.com, a Las
Vegas-based shell company with no business, a transaction he says
cost $130,000 and 25,000 shares. The move bought Zubkis more
time to furnish the requested reports -- and delayed his company's
threatened delisting.
For the present, Zubkis seizes any chance to promote his
Internet business -- even bad news. When hackers crashed Yahoo!,
Amazon.com, eBay and other sites, Zubkis declared that his
WorldBestBuy.com site also was disrupted for ``two to three
hours'' on Feb. 8.
``Certain similarities were evident,'' the company said in a
press release -- one of 40 it has issued since January -- to
``reassure customers that we are taking every protective measure
possible to prevent such attacks from occurring in the future.''
That's difficult for outsiders to assess. Media Metrix Inc.,
which tracks 20,000 Web sites, says WorldBestBuy.com gets too few
hits from visitors to bother monitoring. The company claims it got
2 million unique visits in December.
Stella Bella
WorldBestBuy.com doesn't overwhelm visitors with choices,
though some stuff it offers won't be found everywhere: a white
marble sink ($1,099); an ergonomic cigar cutter ($43.99); three
types of Gucci sunglasses, ($98.99 each) a 1987 Bentley auto
($39,000). All purchasers are promised a free pound of Stella
Bella coffee.
Stella Bella Corp. was the company's name from 1993 to 1997,
when Zubkis changed its name to International Brands. While
running Stella Bella, the SEC alleges, Zubkis illegally sold more
than $20 million in unregistered shares to small investors.
The SEC also accused Zubkis of running a network of
unlicensed salesmen who made false claims about Stella Bella's
earnings, revenue and stock performance. The National Association
of Securities Dealers banned Zubkis for life for refusing to
cooperate with investigators.
In response, Zubkis sued the SEC and NASD in federal court.
His suits were dismissed. ``It was a big mess,'' says Zubkis, who
maintains his stance put regulators on notice that he wasn't a
patsy. ``I can do in court what no lawyer can,'' he says, adding
Busy, Busy
Zubkis was 16 when he arrived in the U.S. in 1976 with his
family from Ukraine. He grew up in Brooklyn, along with thousands
of other new immigrants from the former Soviet Union. Though his
parents became U.S. citizens, he didn't.
``The reason that I didn't go through that process is I was
always too busy,'' he says.
Zubkis says he studied computer programming at night at New
York University and worked in various computer jobs before finding
employment as a stockbroker.
Working in small brokerages, he switched firms an average of
once a year during an eight-year career. In 1993, he paid $65,000
for 85 percent of Stella Bella, a chain of four San Diego coffee
shops. Within two years, the SEC charges, Zubkis falsely claimed
Stella Bella had 150 coffee shops in Russia and said he was
applying for listings on the American, Nasdaq and Toronto stock
exchanges; he never did apply.
Zubkis says the problems of being in the coffee business are
now behind him. ``For this company to be in the coffee business
was a rat race. We were in 4,000 supermarkets before Starbucks,
but getting the products on the shelves is only part of success – due
to investigation we were precluded to obtain financing for advertising
in order to get customers to take the coffee from the shelves,'' said
Zubkis. ''In the Internet, it's different.It's just a dream come true.''
Before entering the Internet, Zubkis announced in 1998 that
International Brands would acquire 40 percent of the former Soviet
Union's phosphate industry in Kazakhstan. In 1996, he said Stella
Bella would distribute pharmaceuticals in Russia. Nothing was
heard of the ventures since.
Money Launderer?
He blames rivals -- mentioning a former Russian associate --
for his current problems with regulators, as well as for what he
describes as a traumatic police raid of his San Diego home.
``Somebody called the FBI and SEC and told them I'd done something
wrong,'' he said. ``Some people on Wall Street saw (me as) a big
competitor. They sent government agents after me.''
In February 1995, armed police, FBI and IRS agents raided
Zubkis's three-story house in a San Diego suburb on a search
warrant alleging securities and mail fraud, as well as money
laundering and income tax evasion.
``Through a convoluted trail of wire transfers and other
transactions, Zubkis has laundered the proceeds of his criminal
activities,'' said IRS agent Robert Lange in an affidavit. ``In
total, he has withdrawn several million dollars in cash from bank
accounts under his control.''
Zubkis failed to file tax returns from 1984 to 1993,
according to Lange, who said Zubkis ``received over $10,000,000
which should have been reported by him on federal income tax
returns for the years 1988 through 1992.''
Although ``boxes and boxes'' of documents and computer
records were carted away, according to ex-detective Thwing, the
raid didn't produce an indictment or any formal charges against
Zubkis. Authorities say their investigations are continuing.
Pig's Ear
Following the raid, however, the Zubkis household and his
business appear to have been targets in what police and other
officials call a series of ``bizarre'' incidents.
One year after the raid, Steve Zubkis's 70-year-old mother
was stabbed at his home by his father, according to a coroner's
report, and died three weeks later in hospital. Zubkis told
investigators his father had been diagnosed as a paranoid
schizophrenic and was depressed. No charges were ever filed.
On December 8, 1998, three mail bombs were found in San Diego
addressed to Stella Bella. An investigation is still underway.
Last June 16, Zubkis's two-year-old daughter Maxine suffered
a near-fatal stabbing in the neck. A babysitter was in the house;
Zubkis blames an unknown ``intruder.'' The San Diego sheriff's
department says the case remains under investigation.
Zubkis, a muscular 170-pounder, says he also received a pig's
ear in the mail last year and lives in fear. ``I keep my doors
locked,'' he said. ``What am I supposed to do?'' Zubkis's wife
Alla, and three sons and another daughter, aged 4 to 16, also live
in the house.
`Billions and Billions'
``They picked the little one so she couldn't talk,'' says
Zubkis. People familiar with the case speculate that the violence
may be linked to his stock-promotion activity.
Whoever is behind the attacks, Zubkis remains upbeat about
his company's future. At the Las Vegas trade show, he promoted his
Web site lavishly with circus performers, a rock act and a red
Indianapolis 500 racecar.
``I believe in five years, our sales will be in the billions
and billions of dollars,'' he said, adding this was a personal
belief rooted in faith and not based on hard figures.
He also believes the SEC will come around to seeing things
his way. ``I think we're going to come to a settlement,'' he says.
``They'll see it's in the best interests of the stockholders for
me to be chief executive of the company.''
--David Evans in San Diego through the New York newsroom
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