Aha!
If you want to read about a mention of naked short sales read an article in the beginning of the recent edition of Forbes magazine.
Its called "Sinking Fund- Startups taken by convertible securities schemes fght back." June 10th 2002
I would post a link but you would have to sign up to see it so just take a look at the hardcopy.
Here's an excerpt:
It's on this very point that one alleged victim has decided to fight back. Gary Valinoti, chairman of JagNotes.com, a tiny media company, needed cash to build a TV station for his online stock-news service. So he agreed to take down $10 million in convertible preferred financing. It seemed to be a better deal than selling common at $3 a share.
As soon as JagNotes booked the investment, the share price began to fall. Much to Valinoti's puzzlement, the stock continued falling, in good times and bad. He was further baffled by the list of large shareholders, required to disclose their holdings each month, which showed no selloffs. And yet by February 2001, the stock was trading at 10 cents. "Everybody I knew was buying, but who the hell was selling?" Valinoti wondered.
He concluded it had to be naked short-sellers. Instead of suing his tormentors, Valinoti decided to call their bluff. In February 2002 he announced a recapitalization plan, reconstituting JagNotes common stock into new Class A and B shares. To receive new issues, shareholders had to hand in their old stock certificates.
The recap took effect Apr. 8. As brokerages began sending in certificates on behalf of their clients, gaps appeared. Citibank's beneficial holder list, for example, accounted for 6,300 shares; one investor claimed he owns 1.2 million shares through his Citibank account.
Brokerages that didn't bother to demand certificates when clients bought JagNotes shares are in a jam. Morgan Stanley has a deficit of 500,000 shares, reports JagNotes. UBS Paine Webber seems to be missing 252,000 shares. Eventually brokers must collect from whoever sold them the phantom shares. Meantime they may have to buy on the open market to cover their clients' positions. That should drive up the shares of JagNotes and generate a windfall for Valinoti, who owns 5 million shares. Recent price: 39 cents.