Knowledge House fraud trial postponed - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Knowledge House fraud trial postponed

A high-profile fraud trial that was supposed to start today after the collapse of the information technology company Knowledge House Inc. has been adjourned again.

Dan Potter, one of three men accused of fraud, asks for adjournment to care for injured wife

Dan Potter, one of three people charged in the Knowledge House Inc. fraud case, speaks with reporters on Tuesday following his request for an adjournment in his trial. (CBC)

A high-profile fraud trial that was supposed to begin today and centreson the collapse ofinformation technologycompany Knowledge House Inc. has been postponed, another delay in thelong-running court case.

One of the men charged, former Knowledge House presidentDan Potter, asked for theadjournment to care for his wife, who was injured in a traffic accident 10 days ago.

The trail has been adjourned until Nov. 16.

Knowledge House Inc. shut down14 years ago.Charges of fraud and conspiracy to commit fraud were laid more than four years agoagainst Potter,the company's lawyer,BloisColpitts,and former National Bank stockbroker Bruce Clarke.

Beginning in 2000, theNova Scotia publicly traded companysaw its penny stock soar to $9.Knowledge Housecollapsed in August 2001,taking with it about 50 employees, $1.2 million of taxpayers money, andinvestments by ordinary Nova Scotians.At one point, those investmentswere valued at close to $100million.

Since then there has been an avalanche of lawsuits and an investigation by the RCMP that took more than seven years to complete.

In June, the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal made an important ruling.It ordered National Bank to pay $3 million in punitive damages to four investors and $6 million to the estate of a deceased investor.

The appeal court said it was punishing the bank for dragging out trials when it knew Clarkehad admitted to stock market manipulation as early as 2005. The bank and the Nova Scotia Securities Commission agreed to keep that fact secret for seven years.

When the agreement finally surfaced, the appeal court judges said it showed the bank had been actively deceiving the court and the public, amountingto "an abuse of process."

The bank must also pay legal costs.