OBAMA-ESQUE APOLOGY FROM C.A.P. MANAGEMENT (Update)
27 February 2009
"I owe you all a huge apology. I screwed up,"
says CAP boss Warren Jolly
Taking a leaf from the book of US President Barak Obama,
the man currently pulling the strings at CAP/AMI/EMG,
Warren Jolly, issued an apologetic communique mid-week
on the furore centred on his companies and past
activities (see previous InfoPowa reports).
Jolly, who so far appears to have out-manoeuvred and
isolated his main partner in the venture, Lou Fabiano,
started out with a lawyer's caveat that informed:
"Please note that the below statements do not represent
anything other than the facts, and/or the opinions of
Warren Jolly. They do not represent the opinions of
Affiliate Media, CAP, or any of its other shareholders
or employees."
Addressing "Dear Clients, Business
Partners, Colleagues, and Friends", Jolly first issued a
personal apology and an admission of a conflict of
interest, writing: "First, and most importantly, I owe
all of you a huge apology. I screwed up. There is no
excuse for trying to cover up my affiliation with
CardSpike, other than I knew there would be a conflict
of interest. I realize that I have betrayed your trust,
and all that I can ask at this point, is that you give
me a chance to rebuild it. Here is the truth, once and
for all."
Jolly goes on to relate the formation
of Effective Media Group with his partner in Affiliate
Media Inc and CAP, Lou Fabiano, with the intention that
it should be an entirely seperate company.
"We
did this for two reasons," Jolly explains. "First, Lou
wanted to manage a company from his home base in
Florida. A new company would provide the revenue stream
necessary to enable that. Lou would have a separate
company to grow and develop, while remaining at CAP as
community administrator, while I handled the day-to-day
business of CAP, PAP (Poker Affiliate Programs), and
Affiliate Media’s other properties from our main
headquarters in California."
This statement
suggests that Fabiano (and presumably the third partner
in AMI/CAP, Raj Lahoti) agreed a division of
responsibilities that effectively gave day to day
operational control of the companies founded by Fabiano
(CAP and AMI) to Warren Jolly.
Jolly continues:
"Second, Lou and I were approached by a group of
investors seeking our help in launching two new online
properties: Absolute Slots, an online casino, and
Cardspike, an online poker website. We set up EMG as a
separate company through which we could offer managed
consultancy operations to these clients as well as
utilize EMG as a vehicle to launch our own affiliate
portals – CasinoFan.com being the first – since that was
our start in this business pre-2000. We did this
together, as business partners."
This is where
the widely criticised conflict of interest comes in,
exacerbated by the fact that the partners did not
declare their intentions until their involvement was
uncovered by third parties when affiliate payments
stalled.
Jolly explains the technical glitch
which he says was the cause of the (in some cases
months) delayed payments to CardSpike affiliates, and
advises that commissions up to January 31st 2009 had
been credited this week, and February commissions would
be paid next week. Six affiliates apparently cannot be
paid because their account information is not available
for some unexplained reason, and these individuals are
urged to get in contact with EMG immediately, or with
tom@cakepokernetwork.net
The payments to
affiliates allegedly started to dry up as far back as
November 2008, and in hindsight this is the spark that
has led to a conflagration that may yet consume
CAP/AMI/PAP and indeed EMG.
It has led to
unseemly incidents of physical confrontation during the
CAP London conference, and massive negative publicity
for both the management and the companies as the
non-payments led to investigations by competitors. These
led to progressive disclosures and forum bannings at CAP
which exacerbated the situation and resurrected previous
CAP member complaints on other fora.
More
recently, the wide forum postings by Fabiano outlining
the background to the CardSpike related issues and
blaming Jolly have thrown more fuel on the fire,
impacting the manner in which the partners and their
companies are perceived by affliates, affiliate programs
and the player community.
And the reported
syphoning off of CAP/AMI funds whilst isolating Fabiano
despite his 40 percent ownership of CAP/AMI has kept the
story very much in the public eye.
Jolly goes on
to refute a claim made by Fabiano that he was the owner
of the CardSpike online poker room, saying: "Although I
had no ownership interest in Cardspike or Absolute
Slots, I did have a beneficial interest due to my
involvement with EMG.
"Again, I sincerely
apologize for not coming clean sooner about this. I
failed to do so because of the perceived conflict of
interest with the CAP and PAP operations, and because
Lou and I could not come to an agreement on how to go
public with this information.
"Effective
immediately, I am resigning from EMG and surrendering my
shares in this company. I will have no further
connection with EMG, Absolute Slots, Cardspike, or any
of the owners or shareholders of these entities."
Judging by the reaction on the message boards, this
move to distance himself from the root cause of the
opprobrium now surrounding both management and companies
may be too little and too late, although it is yet too
early to make an objective call on this.
Jolly
then turns to the more recent events which have resulted
in his partner Lou Fabiano claiming that he has been
deliberately and maliciously sidelined from the company
whilst money was being transferred from its accounts.
"Over the past weeks, because of certain
irrational and potentially dangerous decisions on his [Fabiano's]
part, a rift has developed between my former business
partner and me," Jolly claims. "Several days ago, Lou
chose to take these private disagreements into the
public arena, by posting harmful allegations and
sensitive company information here at CAP and on other
public message boards (as well as emailing this
information to hundreds of other people).
"I
felt that Lou’s decision to make our business
disagreements public was not only unprofessional, but
also potentially damaging to CAP and the entire iGaming
affiliate community.
"While Lou originally
founded Casino Affiliate Programs.com, he has since made
the decision to share the ownership and business
direction of CAP with other parties via a corporate
vehicle.
"Lou has recently accused CAP employees
of failing to post his CAP TV videos, in which case the
accusations were simply incorrect. The truth is, he
failed to meet the deadline for content submission,
which is the same every week. He has displayed
unwarranted hostility towards community members and has
even posted forum threads under other users’ names —
even under my own name.
"He has chosen to
circulate throughout the iGaming world a letter in which
I am accused of illegally channeling Affiliate Media
funds into my own personal accounts. This is absolutely
untrue. The transactions in question were simply the
transferring of company funds from one corporate account
to another.
"This was done in order to limit
access to these funds and protect the company and its
shareholders from rash and potentially damaging actions
(such as posting sensitive financial information on
public message boards)."
The latter is an
apparent reference to an attempt by Fabiano (it was
blocked by a moderator) at the Casinomeister.com message
board to publish a bank document allegedly showing
certain bank transfers initiated by Jolly.
To
back his statement, Jolly includes a statement from
Larry Ernst, Affiliate Media’s Vice President of
Finance. In it, Ernst reveals that the WAMU Business
Analysis Checking account is used for general business
purposes for all divisions of Affiliate Media, Inc.
"Regarding the transactions circled on the WAMU
Business Analysis Checking Account Transaction History
document [presumably a reference to the transfers
disputed by Fabiano in his forum postings - ed.], funds
were transferred to the WAMU Money Market account ending
in 2410 to maximize return on funds since the Business
Analysis Checking Account was non-interest bearing,"
Ernst reports.
"The funds withdrawn by the PC
Initiated Outgoing Wire on February 20, 2009 were
transferred to the Wells Fargo Business Cash Management
Account for Affiliate Media, Inc. and subsequently
transferred to the Affiliate Media, Inc. Comerica
Business Checking account for safekeeping.
"In no
event have company funds been co-mingled with personal
funds by any officer of Affiliate Media, Inc."
Jolly says he was "personally appalled" to find the
corporate records of the company being posted in account
number and transaction level detail, potentially
compromising the privacy and integrity of the accounts.
"This kind of irrational and damaging behavior
is why Lou has been banned from the CAP Forum. I cannot
allow such unprofessional behavior to further jeopardize
this company or the interests of its owners, employees,
and community members."
It appears from the next
statement that Jolly seeks to oust Fabiano from the
company; he says: "In light of his recent behavior, I
strongly feel that Lou’s exit will only improve the CAP
community. Those of you who have been around CAP for a
while know that I truly do care about this community,
and have been an integral part of its growth. Yes, as a
businessman and entrepreneur, I want to see it generate
revenue. However, I am not willing to jeopardize my
relationships with clients, affiliates, or colleagues to
make that happen."
Jolly concludes with a forward
looking statement on measures he intends to implement at
CAP/AMI, which include:
* Changes to the
Affiliate Program certification program - much
criticised for its alleged lack of de facto inspection
and monitoring and uneven pricing.
* A free
speech approach allowing members to speak their minds
without unjust banning (several have already been
reinstated)
*Termination of hostile CAP
[competitive] efforts, such as the T&C alert monitoring
and CAP audits. Jolly promises: "Instead, we will
partner with folks who already do this well, such as AGD
and APCW.
* Evaluating the establishment of an
independent “Advisory Board” consisting of influential
members that will help ensure CAP makes the right
decisions in the best interest of all.
Jolly ends
his communication with an apology for the public nature
of the events at CAP/AMI and indicates that he will be
curtailing this practice going forward. He also
expressed the wish to get back to business as usual and
encouraged interested parties to communicate privately
with comments or suggestions.
Whether Jolly's
radical about turn in CAP/AMI attitudes and policies is
sufficient to ensure its continued success and
prosperity following the extensive disclosures of recent
months is still unclear.
Jolly has also avoided
mentioning the position of the reportedly third partner
in the structure, Raj Lahoti. Should Lahoti throw in his
lot (and his 30 percent shareholding in the companies)
Jolly's position would presumably be substantially
reinforced; according to posts made by Fabiano the
shareholding split is Fabiano 40 percent, Jolly 30
percent and Lahoti 30 percent.
Fabiano has also
asserted that he is taking legal advice regarding what
he perceives as an attempt to hijack control of the
company without full shareholder consent - that is a
legal element in the struggle that has still to evolve.
This story has a way to run yet...
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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