May the Fates smile upon you! *This promotion is not sponsored, administered, or endorsed by TikTok #booktok #mythologyretellings #greekmythology #mythology #bookish #bookgiveaway #readersoftiktok #historicalfantasy". Tell us your favorite myth or retelling in the comments and tag your bookish friends! This giveaway will run from 5/18-5/25. May the Fates smile upon you! *This promotion is not sponsored, administered, or endorsed by TikTok #booktok #mythologyretellings #greekmythology #mythology #bookish #bookgiveaway #readersoftiktok #historicalfantasyģ4 Likes, TikTok video from ADRhine_author "□BOOK GIVEAWAY!□ It's no secret that we're huge mythology nerds, so to celebrate the many amazing novels out right now, we're doing an EPIC book giveaway of retellings from around the globe! One lucky reader will win ALL of the books in this video, plus a mug with the gorgeous cover of our upcoming release □□ HORSES OF FIRE□□ and a book manicure set with polish colors named after each of our heroines! To enter you must have a U.S. It offered the investor a 15 per cent guaranteed rate of return.□BOOK GIVEAWAY!□ It's no secret that we're huge mythology nerds, so to celebrate the many amazing novels out right now, we're doing an EPIC book giveaway of retellings from around the globe! One lucky reader will win ALL of the books in this video, plus a mug with the gorgeous cover of our upcoming release □□ HORSES OF FIRE□□ and a book manicure set with polish colors named after each of our heroines! To enter you must have a U.S. The investor took out the mortgage on the home and Epic took responsibility for everything from finding tenants to maintaining the property. The company's promotional material suggested a 10 per cent return on a one-year investment.įinally, the "Hassle Free Landlord Program" had investors - most from out of province - buying homes acquired by Epic through the Fund-a-Flip program. The "Fund-A-Flip" program had investors buying homes through Epic, doing improvements and upgrades, and then selling for a profit. There's no specific purpose given for those funds when they're loaned," said lawyer Mike Russell. "You have a pool of unsecured funds that can be used for whatever. The stated rates of return varied from 15 to 20 per cent. They featured the loan amount, when the term began and ended, and the interest rate. The single-page notes, of which multiple examples were provided in affidavits, were extremely simple. The company built up a pool of capital by enticing people to give Epic $50,000 to $500,000 in exchange for a promissory note. LaFlamme and Thompson created and ran three main ventures: a loan program based on promissory notes, a "Fund-A-Flip" program and a "Hassle Free Landlord Program." Over the years after its founding, Epic Alliance evolved into a web of named and numbered companies, including Epic Alliance Real Estate, Epic Alliance Electrical, Epic Accounting and Bookkeeping, and Epic Holdings. It's further alleged that they continued to raised money after the province ordered them to stop. "Due to incomplete books and records prior to 2019, the Inspector has been unable to reach conclusions regarding the use of Investor funds for that period of time."Ī dozen investors allege that LaFlamme and Thompson sold securities when they were not licensed to do so and pitched investments without a prospectus. "Based on the unaudited books and records of EA Group, total funds raised from Investors amounted to approximately $211.9 million," wrote Peter Chisholm from Ernst and Young in a 58-page report. 19, 2022, when they told 121 investors in a video meeting that there was no money left.Ī court-appointed investigator looking into the Epic Alliance group of companies said the public may never fully know what happened to the hundreds of millions raised by the failed real estate venture. LaFlamme and Thompson created Epic Alliance in August 2013 and ran it until Jan. "If the panel finds that there were at least one, or multiple, or however many violations of various securities laws, the next step in the proceedings would be to have a sanctions hearing," FCAA lawyer Connor Smith said in an interview. 28, to consider the allegations raised by a dozen investors. The Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority of Saskatchewan (FCAA) will hold 14 days of hearings, scheduled to begin on Aug. Investors who lost hundreds of millions collectively when Epic Alliance Real Estate collapsed in January 2022 want the province to fine the company's founders Rochelle LaFlamme and Alisa Thompson and ban the pair from ever trading securities again. Rochelle Laflamme, left, and Alisa Thompson speak to investors on Jan.
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