-----BEGIN PRIVACY-ENHANCED MESSAGE----- Proc-Type: 2001,MIC-CLEAR Originator-Name: webmaster@www.sec.gov Originator-Key-Asymmetric: MFgwCgYEVQgBAQICAf8DSgAwRwJAW2sNKK9AVtBzYZmr6aGjlWyK3XmZv3dTINen TWSM7vrzLADbmYQaionwg5sDW3P6oaM5D3tdezXMm7z1T+B+twIDAQAB MIC-Info: RSA-MD5,RSA, GQi7jZBFmuEJznjHMEKdTTaynlEaYx8v79SJFZUAV3Zt9SZnxJvnoSv7tRCO6gf+ gAIsIvMN8mIIxPXnVpIVEA== 0001144204-09-001179.txt : 20090109 0001144204-09-001179.hdr.sgml : 20090109 20090109175219 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0001144204-09-001179 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: S-1/A PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 3 FILED AS OF DATE: 20090109 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20090109 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: CHRISTIAN STANLEY INC CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0001449866 STANDARD INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION: INSURANCE AGENTS BROKERS & SERVICES [6411] IRS NUMBER: 204433804 STATE OF INCORPORATION: CA FISCAL YEAR END: 1231 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: S-1/A SEC ACT: 1933 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 333-155357 FILM NUMBER: 09519887 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: 1150 SILVERADO STREET #207 CITY: LA JOLLA STATE: CA ZIP: 92037 BUSINESS PHONE: 858 750 6220 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: 1150 SILVERADO STREET #207 CITY: LA JOLLA STATE: CA ZIP: 92037 S-1/A 1 v136018_s1a.htm Unassociated Document
 
As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
Registration No. 333-155357
 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

Amendment No. 1
FORM S-1
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER
THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

California
 
6199
 
20-4433804
State or other jurisdiction of
 
Primary Standard Industrial
 
(I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization
 
Classification Code Number)
 
Identification Number)

1150 Silverado Street, Suite 207
La Jolla, California 92037
858/750-6220
(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code
of registrant’s principal executive offices)
 
Daniel C. S. Powell
1150 Silverado Street, Suite 207
La Jolla, California 92037
858/750-6220
(Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number,
including area code, of agent for service)
 
with copy to
Lee W. Cassidy, Esq.
Cassidy & Associates
1504 R Street N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20009
202 387 5400
 
Approximate Date of Commencement
of proposed sale to the public:
  As soon as practicable after the effective date of this Registration Statement.
  
If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933, check the following box. x

If this Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering. o

If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier registration statement for the same offering. o

If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering. o

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See definitions
“large accelerated filer,”“accelerated file,” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
 
Large accelerated filer
o
 
Accelerated filed
o
Non-accelerated filed
o
 
Smaller reporting company
x
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
     
 
The registrant hereby amends this registration statement on such date or dates as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the registrant shall file a further amendment which specifically states that this registration statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 or until the registration statement shall become effective on such date as the Commission acting pursuant to said section 8(a), may determine.



CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE

   
 
 
Proposed
 
Proposed
 
 
 
 
 
Amount
 
Maximum
 
Maximum
 
Amount of
 
Title of Each Class of
 
 
to be
 
 
Offering Price
 
 
Aggregate
 
 
Registration
 
Securities to be Registered
 
 
Registered
 
 
Per Unit
 
 
Offering Price
 
 
Fee (2)
 
Total Minimum
                         
Common Stock
   
2,000,000 shares
 
$
5.00
 
$
10,000,000
 
 
 
Total Maximum
                         
Common Stock
   
4,000,000 shares
 
$
5.00
 
$
20,000,000
 
$
786
 
Common Stock held by
                         
Selling Shareholders
   
16,622,750 shares
 
$
5.00
 
$ 
83,113,750
 
$ 
3,262
 
Total
             
$
103,113,750  
$
4,052
 
 
(1)
There is no current market for the securities and the price at which the Shares are being offered has been estimated based on the Company’s projections and its anticipated growth and market potential.
(2)
Paid by electronic transfer.
 
EXPLANATORY NOTE

This Registration Statement covers the registration of (i) up to 4,000,000 shares of the Company’s common stock at an offering price of $5.00 per share and (ii) 16,622,750 shares of common stock offered by the holders thereof (the “Selling Shareholders Shares”) at a price of $5.00 per share until such time as this offering is closed after which such selling shareholders may sell their shares at prevailing market or privately negotiated prices.

Following the prospectus contained in this registration statement are certain pages of a prospectus relating solely to the offer and sale of the shares to be sold by the selling shareholders which pages are marked the "Alternate-A" pages. These pages include alternate front and back cover pages, table of contents page and sections entitled "Concurrent Sales," and "Selling Shareholders" to be included in the prospectus delivered by selling shareholders in connection with the offer and sale by them of their shares. .



The information contained in this prospectus is not complete and may be changed. A registration statement relating to these securities has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and these securities may not be sold until that registration statement becomes effective. This prospectus is not an offer to sell these securities and it is not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any state where the offer or sale is not permitted.

PROSPECTUS
 
CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.

Minimum of 2,000,000 shares and a maximum of 4,000,000 shares of
common stock offered by the Company at $5.00 per share

This prospectus relates to the offer and sale of up to a maximum of 4,000,000 shares of common stock of Christian Stanley, Inc., (the "Shares"), a California company (the “Company”), $1.00 par value per share, to be offered from time to time by the Company at a price of $5.00 per share.

A minimum of 2,000,000 Shares must be sold by the Company before the offering can be closed. The Company may have additional closings thereafter from time to time during the offering period. The maximum number of Shares that can be sold pursuant to the terms of this offering is 4,000,000. All funds received before the initial closing of the offering will be held in escrow pursuant to an escrow agreement with an independent third party. If the minimum offering amount is not met by the date of termination of the offering, all funds, without interest thereon, will be promptly returned to the investors. Funds received after the initial closing will be will be immediately available to the Company. Once the initial minimum offering amount is met and the initial closing occurs, then there is no fixed amount or number of Shares that must be reached or sold before the next closing can occur.

The Company intends to maintain the currency and accuracy of this prospectus and to sell the Company Shares for a period of up to two years, unless earlier completely sold, pursuant to Rule 415 of the General Rules and Regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

All costs incurred in the registration of the Shares are being borne by the Company.

Prior to this offering, there has been no public market for the Company’s common stock. No assurances can be given that a public market will develop following completion of this offering or that, if a market does develop, it will be sustained. The offering price for the Shares has been arbitrarily determined by the Company and does not necessarily bear any direct relationship to the assets, operations, book or other established criteria of value of the Company.

The Shares will be sold through licensed underwriters, broker-dealers and/or selling agents if the Company can locate and enter into an arrangement with any such underwriter, broker-dealer and/or selling agent. All or some Shares may be sold by certain officers and directors of the Company, none of whom will receive any commission or compensation for the sale of the Shares. The Company has no current arrangements nor has entered into any agreement with any underwriters, broker-dealer or selling agents for the sale of the Shares. The Shares will become tradeable on the effective date of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part.

NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION HAS APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED OF THESE SECURITIES OR PASSED UPON THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
These securities involve a high degree of risk. See “RISK FACTORS” contained in this prospectus beginning on page 4.

Christian Stanley
1150 Silverado Street, Suite 207
La Jolla, California 92037
858/750-6220

   Prospectus dated __________________, 2008
 

 
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Prospectus Summary  
Risk Factors  
The financial statements reflect a going concern footnote which indicates that the auditors for the Company are concerned that the Company may not have the resources to continue.
 
 
The Company is a development-stage company with no operating history of its own and as such an investor cannot assess the Company’s profitability or performance.
 
 
The Company is a development stage company and has a correspondingly small financial and accounting organization. Being a public company may strain the Company's resources, divert management’s attention and affect its ability to attract and retain qualified directors.
 
 
Although the Company has been actively soliciting business since 2004, it has not yet developed a pool of sellers of life settlement policies nor a network of institutional or private buyers of such potential life settlement policies.
 
 
 If the Company is unable to generate sufficient cash from operations, it may find it necessary to curtail development and operational activities.
 
 
Every life insurance policy acquired under a life settlement transaction is different and each policy purchased is typically negotiated on an arms-length basis so it is difficult to create projections or forecasts of revenue.
 
 
An unanticipated increase in premiums or failure to pay premiums by the life settlement purchaser could result in a lapse and cancellation of the policy which would result in no death benefit payout. 
 
 
The Company will operate in markets that may change dramatically and is heavily dependent on a sufficient number of institutional purchasers committing to the industry.
 
 
The Company’s founder beneficially owns and will continue to own a majority of the Company’s common stock and, as a result, can exercise control over shareholder and corporate actions.
 
 
The Company depends on its president to manage its business effectively.
 
 
Investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission of the earlier sale of the Company’s shares may adversely affect the Company.
 
 
The Company must develop its life settlement referral network in order to create a sufficient volume of potential life settlement transactions to expand and develop its business plan.
 
 
The Company will depend on growth in the life settlement market in order to develop and establish itself as a life settlement broker.
 
 
Potential life settlement purchasers depend on the Company’s abilities to predict life expectancies and if such predictions are generally inaccurate, the Company will lose purchasers
 
 
Government regulation could negatively impact the business.
 
 
There has been no prior public market for the Shares and the lack of such a market may make resale of the stock difficult. 
 
 
The concurrent sales of shares by the selling shareholders may make sales of the Shares more difficult.
 
 
The Company does not intend to pay dividends to its stockholders, so investors will not receive any return on investment in the Company prior to selling their interest in it.
 
 
The Company’s stock may be considered a penny stock and any investment in the Company’s stock will be considered a high-risk investment and subject to restrictions on marketability.
   
 
Forward Looking Statement
   
Use of Proceeds
   
Determination of Offering Price
   
Dividend Policy
   
Dilution
   
Concurrent Sales by Selling Shareholders
   
Plan of Distribution
   
Description of Securities
   
The Company
   
Plan of Operation
   
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
   
Management
   
 
2

 
Legal Proceedings
 
Executive Compensation
 
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management
 
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions
 
Shares Eligible for Future Sales
 
Interest of Named Experts and Counsel
 
Experts
 
Disclosure of Commission Position of Indemnification for Securities Act Liabilities
 
Financial Statements
 
Part II
 
Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution
 
Indemnification of directors and Officers
 
Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities
 
   
Exhibits
 
Signatures
 
_________________

Until _______________, all dealers that effect transactions in these securities, whether or not participating in this offering, may be required to deliver a prospectus. This is in addition to the dealers' obligation to deliver a prospectus when acting as underwriters and with respect to their unsold allotments or subscriptions.
 
3

 
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

This summary highlights some information from this prospectus, and it may not contain all the information important to making an investment decision. A potential investor should read the following summary together with the more detailed information regarding the Company and the common stock being sold in this offering, including “Risk Factors” and the financial statements and related notes, included elsewhere in this prospectus.

The Company
The Business

The Company is a development stage company incorporated in California in March, 2006 to serve as the successor entity to Christian Stanley, LLC, a California limited liability company formed June 1, 2004. The Company has been established to serve as a liaison and broker in the secondary market for life insurance policies known generally as “life settlements”, to facilitate the sale of corporate-owned policies (keyman life insurance policies) to licensed and accredited institutional funders (i.e. purchasers), to develop investment and consultative products and services relating to the business-to-business sale of life insurance policies and to participate in a securitization market of life settlement policies.

A life settlement is the sale of the right to be the beneficiary and owner of an existing life insurance policy for a cash payment that is normally greater than the policy’s cash surrender value and less than the death benefit. These transactions involve the purchase for investment purposes of the life insurance policies of terminally ill persons (“viatical” settlements) or persons over 65 at a discount to their face value. The Company intends to make a market for these transactions by matching sellers and purchasers. The Company intends locate life insurance policy sellers, conduct an analysis of the policy value, complete the background disclosure (health releases and reports, medical summaries, etc.) and then offer the policy on an auction basis to several purchasers, primarily large institutional investors.

The Company intends to offer securitized portfolios of life settlement contracts to qualified institutional investors which will provide the original funders of the life insurance settlements a liquid and profitable exit strategy and provide a versatile financial instrument. The Company also intends to develop an “incubator” life settlement market comprised of pre-market policies purchased from insureds several years prior to reaching the life settlement age standard of 65 years. As part of its development, the Company anticipates acting as a consultant to certain businesses desiring to add life settlement brokerage activities to their portfolios.
 
Trading Market

Currently, there is no trading market for the securities of the Company. The Company intends to initially apply for admission to quotation of its securities on the OTC Bulletin Board. There can be no assurance that the Company will qualify for quotation of its securities on the OTC Bulletin Board. See“RISK FACTORS--Absence of Trading Markets” and “DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES--Admission to Quotation on OTC Bulletin Board”.

The Offering
 
A minimum of 2,000,000 Shares must be sold by the Company before the offering can be closed. The Company may have additional closings thereafter from time to time during the offering period. The maximum number of Shares that can be sold pursuant to the terms of this offering is 4,000,000.

Common stock outstanding before the offering
   
81,062,917
   
(1)
 
Maximum number of shares of common stock offered by the Company
   
4,000,000
       
Common stock outstanding after the offering if maximum number sold
   
85,062,917
   
(2)
 

 
(1)
Based on number of shares outstanding as of the date of this prospectus.
 
(2)
Assumes the sale of the maximum number of Shares
 
4

 
All funds received before the initial closing of the offering will be held in escrow pursuant to an escrow agreement with an independent third party. If the minimum offering amount is not met by the date of termination of the offering, all funds, without interest thereon, will be promptly returned to the investors. Funds received after the initial closing will be will be immediately available to the Company. Once the initial minimum offering amount is met and the initial closing occurs, then there is no fixed amount or number of Shares that must be reached or sold before the next closing can occur.

Summary Financial Information

The following summary financial data should be read in conjunction with additional discussions of the financial status of the Company and the Financial Statements and Notes thereto, included elsewhere in this prospectus. The following information is derived from the audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2007.

Assets
 
$
118,456
 
Liabilities
   
259,657
 
         
Operating Loss for 2007
 
$
(340,035
)
         
Accumulated Deficit
 
$
1,879,203
 

RISK FACTORS

A purchase of any Shares is an investment in the Company’s common stock and involves a high degree of risk. Investors should consider carefully the following information about these risks, together with the other information contained in this prospectus, before the purchase of the Shares. If any of the following risks actually occur, the business, financial condition or results of operations of the Company would likely suffer. In this case, the market price of the common stock could decline, and investors may lose all or part of the money they paid to buy the Shares.

Our independent auditors have issued a report questioning our ability to continue as a going concern.

The Company’s independent auditors have concluded that the Company has a history of operating losses and had an accumulated deficit of $1,879,203 at December 31, 2007, which raises substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.

The Company is a development-stage company with no operating history of its own and as such an investor cannot assess the Company’s profitability or performance.

The Company is a development-stage company, has limited operations and is relying on this offering to finance its development and operations. Because it is a development-stage company with no operating history, it is impossible for an investor to assess the performance of the Company or to determine whether the Company will meet its projected business plan. The Company has limited financial results upon which an investor may judge its potential. As of December 31, 2007, the Company had accumulated losses of $1,847,703. The Company will require additional capital in order to execute its current business plan. As a Company emerging from the development-stage, it may in the future experience under-capitalization, shortages, setbacks and many of the problems, delays and expenses encountered by any early stage business. As a result of these factors, other factors described herein and unforeseen factors, the Company may not be able to successfully implement its business model. An investor will be required to make an investment decision based solely on the Company’s management’s history and its projected operations in light of the risks, expenses and uncertainties that may be encountered by engaging in the life settlement industry.

The Company is a development stage company and has a correspondingly small financial and accounting organization. Being a public company may strain the Company's resources, divert management’s attention and affect its ability to attract and retain qualified directors.

The Company is a development stage company with a finance and accounting organization that has been geared toward its operations as a small privately owned company; however, the rigorous demands of being a public reporting company will require a larger finance and accounting group. As a public company, the Company will be subject to the reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The requirements of these laws and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder entail significant accounting, legal and financial compliance costs, and have made, and will continue to make, some activities more difficult, time consuming or costly and may place significant strain on the Company's personnel, systems and resources.
 
5

 
The Securities Exchange Act requires, among other things, that the Company maintain effective disclosure controls and procedures and internal control over financial reporting. In order to establish the requisite disclosure controls and procedures and internal control over financial reporting, significant resources and management oversight are required. As a result, management’s attention may be diverted from other business concerns, which could have a material adverse effect on the Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.

These rules and regulations may also make it difficult and expensive for the Company to obtain director and officer liability insurance. If the Company is unable to obtain adequate director and officer insurance, its ability to recruit and retain qualified officers and directors, especially those directors who may be deemed independent, will be significantly curtailed.

Although the Company has been actively soliciting business since 2004, it has not yet developed a pool of sellers of life settlement policies nor a network of institutional or private buyers of such potential life settlement policies.

Since 2004 the Company has advertised, primarily in the print media, for client purchasers of life settlements, whether as individual policies or packages as a group. The Company believes that it needs to locate a buyer or buyers of the life settlement policies before it can actively seek the sellers of these packages. To date, the Company has not served as broker for the sale and purchase of any life settlement policies despite its continuing advertising campaign for such clients.

If the Company is unable to generate sufficient cash from operations, it may find it necessary to curtail development and operational activities.

The Company has an extensive business plan hinged on its ability to match sellers of life insurance policies known generally as “life settlements” (policies taken on persons shortened life expectancies i.e. terminally ill or elderly persons) with purchasers of those insurance policies. If the Company is unable to locate a sufficient number of holders of such life settlement policies or to locate a sufficient number of purchasers (generally large institutions) of such policies, then it would not be able to proceed with its business plan or possibly to develop operations at all.

Every life insurance policy acquired under a life settlement transaction is different and each policy purchased is typically negotiated on an arms-length basis so it is difficult to create projections or forecasts of revenue.

There is no fixed formula that applies to the acquisition of a life insurance policy as each policy is negotiated based on variables particular to each individual. As such, it is difficult to make accurate forecasts of possible life settlement stream and commissions arising therefrom. Without such financial forecasts the Company may not be able to effectively plan for its development or use of resources.

An unanticipated increase in premiums or failure to pay premiums by the life settlement purchaser could result in a lapse and cancellation of the policy which would result in no death benefit payout.

The purchaser of the policy in a life settlement is required to pay all subsequent premiums due over the life of the policy acquired. Failure to pay premiums when due can result in termination (lapse) of the policy and the loss of the investment in that policy. Premiums generally will increase, on an annual basis, although such an increase is not expected to exceed 10% per year. Expectation of this percentage as a maximum annual increase is based upon historical experience of insurance policies generally, and could be significantly more, as many insurance policies do not guarantee premium rates and such rates may be increased. It is possible that the premiums, over a period of years, may increase so as to negate any positive cash flow that would have been received on the payment of the death benefit.

The Company will operate in markets that may change dramatically and is heavily dependent on a sufficient number of institutional purchasers committing to the industry.

6

 
The Company will operate in the viatical and age-based life settlement markets. The viatical settlement market is approximately 15 years old. While this market saw significant growth in its initial years as a result of the AIDS epidemic, the market growth in recent years has moderated somewhat. The age-based life settlement market is less than a decade old. How and to what extent both markets will develop is uncertain. As more insureds become aware of life settlements as a financial planning option, the Company expects the size of the market to grow substantially. While the Company believes that it can originate and place age-based life settlements as well as viatical settlements, any dramatic growth will depend heavily upon the entry of institutional purchasers. Until a sufficient number of institutional purchasers commit to this industry and create a relatively stable demand, the Company’s financial performance during any period could be dramatically affected by the entry or departure from the market of one or more institutional providers. Whether the Company can attract institutional purchasers will depend on its ability to convince these purchasers that it can originate sufficient numbers of qualified policies for purchase and that the Company’s policy analysis and pricing practices are sound.

The Company’s founder beneficially owns and will continue to own a majority of the Company’s common stock and, as a result, can exercise control over shareholder and corporate actions.

Mr. Daniel C.S. Powell, the founder and president of the Company, is currently the beneficial owner of approximately 79% of the Company’s outstanding common stock, and assuming sale of all the Shares, will own 75% of the Company's then outstanding common stock upon closing of the offering. As such, he will be able to control most matters requiring approval by shareholders, including the election of directors and approval of significant corporate transactions. This concentration of ownership may also have the effect of delaying or preventing a change in control, which in turn could have a material adverse effect on the market price of the Company’s common stock or prevent shareholders from realizing a premium over the market price for their Shares of common stock.

The Company depends on its president to manage its business effectively.

The Company's future success is dependent in large part upon its ability to understand and develop the business plan and to attract and retain highly skilled managerial, sales and marketing personnel. In particular, due to the relatively early stage of the Company's business, its future success is highly dependent on its president and founder, to provide the necessary experience and background to execute the Company's business plan. The loss of his services could impede, particularly initially as the Company builds a record and reputation, its ability to develop its objectives, particularly in its ability to develop a core of institutional purchasers of the life settlement policies and as such would negatively impact the Company's possible development.

Investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission of the earlier sale of the Company’s shares may adversely affect the Company.

In July, 2008, the California Regional Office of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") opened a formal order of investigation of the president of the Company, Daniel C.S. Powell. Although the status of such investigation and its specific nature are unclear, it appears that its principal focus is whether the private sales of the Company’s stock to date has complied with the rules and regulations governing the such private sales of securities. Depending upon its initial findings after review, the SEC may determine to expand its investigation to include the Company or to broaden the focus of the investigation to other concerns such as securities fraud. If the SEC determines that the rules governing the private sale of securities have been violated, it may impose a variety of remedies, including requiring that a recision offer be made to the purchasers of the stock, by which investors would receive back their investment funds with interest. If the SEC made a determination of fraud, it would have additional remedies available including fines and/or the temporary or permanent bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer, director or control person of a public company. The Company does not have the financial ability to complete an offer of recision to its investors and such a determination would likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue to attempt to develop operations. Similarly, the imposition of a permanent or temporary bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer or director of a public company would require Mr. Powell’s resignation from such offices with the Company and would also likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue.
 
7

 
The Company must develop a life settlement referral network in order to create a sufficient volume of potential life settlement transactions to develop and expand its business plan.

An impediment to the Company’s development and expansion in the life settlement market could be the difficulty in identifying a large volume of potential sellers. While the target market is narrow and traditional media is expensive, the Company anticipates utilizing television, radio, public relations, print media, and internet advertising to create name recognition of Christian Stanley as a life settlement broker. The Company believes the best way to reach this market is generally through media advertising and through life insurance professionals and, to a lesser extent, through professionals engaged in estate planning, such as attorneys, accountants, financial planners, insurance professionals and brokers. The Company will rely heavily on this type of network to refer life settlement purchasers to it. The relationships with these professionals is essential to the Company’s operations. The Company does not anticipate entering into contractual arrangements with the brokers, financial planners or other professionals and they are free to do business with competitors. In addition, the pool of referring professionals is relatively small, which can increase the Company’s reliance on its existing relationships. A failure to create such a network would leave the Company without product to sell to its institutional providers and would seriously impede the ability of the Company to develop as a life settlement broker.

The Company will depend on growth in the life settlement market in order to develop and establish itself as a life settlement broker.

While the market for viatical life settlements will provide opportunity for growth, the Company believes that the greater opportunity for growth lies in the age-based life settlement market. However, the are many factors which will affect this market. Growth of the age-based life market and the Company’s entrance into and expansion within the market may be negatively affected by a variety of factors, including:

 
 
the inability to convince potential settlors of the benefits of life settlements;
 
the inability to attract new institutional purchasers and securitization participants;
 
competition from other life settlement companies;
 
negative publicity about the market; and
 
the adoption of additional governmental regulation.

In addition, the life settlement market may evolve in ways the Company has not anticipated and it may be unable to respond in a timely or cost-effective manner. If the life settlement market fails to grow as quickly as or in the directions anticipated, the Company’s development, business, financial condition and operations would be materially adversely affected.

Potential life settlement purchasers will depend on the Company’s abilities to predict life expectancies and if such predictions are generally inaccurate, the Company will lose purchasers.

A purchaser's investment return from a life settlement depends primarily on the demise of the insured. The Company will price life settlements based on the anticipated life expectancy of an insured and, for viatical settlements, on a medical analysis of the insured. For life settlements, life expectancies are estimated from medical and actuarial data based on the historical experiences of similarly situated persons. The data is necessarily based on averages involving mortality and morbidity statistics. The outcome of a single settlement may vary significantly from the statistical average. It is impossible to predict any one insured’s life expectancy exactly. In addition, unanticipated medical advances and new pharmaceuticals may be introduced that will make such earlier actuarial data inaccurate. To mitigate the risk that an insured will outlive the predicted life expectancy, viatical and age-based life settlement purchasers must be able to bear a non-liquid investment for an indeterminate period of time.

If the Company underestimates average life expectancies, purchasers will not realize anticipated returns, demand for the Company’s product will fall, and purchasers will invest their funds elsewhere. In addition, amounts escrowed for premiums may be insufficient to keep the policy in force. If the Company overestimates average life expectancies, the settlement prices offered life settlors will fall below market levels, supply will decrease, and life settlors will opt for other alternatives.
 
8

 
To foster the integrity of its pricing systems, the Company anticipates using both in-house and outside experts and research, including published actuarial data. Either over- or underestimation of life expectancies could result in a loss of on-going purchasers or providers, and those losses could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business, financial condition, and results of operations.

Government regulation could negatively impact the business.

At least 36 states have now adopted some version of the model viatical and life settlement law promulgated by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or another form of regulation governing viatical settlement companies in some way. These laws generally require the licensing of viatical providers and brokers, require the filing and approval of viatical settlement agreements and disclosure statements, and describe the content of disclosures that must be made to potential settlors, describe various periodic reporting requirements for viatical settlement companies and prohibit certain business practices deemed abusive. Because the industry is relatively new and because there has been a history of certain abuses in the industry, particularly in the viatical settlement market, the Company believes that there may be increased regulation on both a state and federal level. It is impossible to predict what such regulation would encompass, but any regulation would most likely be at least include additional reporting requirements and possibly even regulation of additional aspects of the industry.

There has been no prior public market for the Company’s Shares and the lack of such a market may make resale of the stock difficult. 

No prior public market has existed for the Company’s securities and the Company cannot assure any investor that a market will develop subsequent to this offering. An investor must be fully aware of the long-term nature of an investment in the Company. The Company intends to apply for quotation of its common stock on the OTC Bulletin Board. However, the Company does not know if it will be successful in such application, how long such application will take, or, that if successful, that a market for the common stock will ever develop or continue on the OTC Bulletin Board. If for any reason the common stock is not listed on the OTC Bulletin Board or a public trading market does not otherwise develop, investors in the offering may have difficulty selling their common stock should they desire to do so. If the Company is not successful in its application for quotation on the OTC Bulletin Board, it will apply to have its securities quoted by the Pink OTC Markets, Inc., real-time quotation service for over-the-counter equities.
 
The concurrent sales of shares by the selling shareholders may make sales of the company's Shares more difficult. 

Concurrently with the filing of this Registration Statement, the Company has filed a registration statement which relates to the sale of up to 16,622,750 shares of outstanding common stock of the Company by the holders thereof (the "selling shareholders"). The selling shareholders will sell their shares at the same price as the Shares offered by the Company until the close of this offering. Thereafter the selling shareholders may sell their shares at prevailing market rates or at privately negotiated prices as they may determine from time to time. For whatever reason a purchaser may determine not to purchase shares from the Company but from one or more of the selling shareholders. In addition, the sale of the shares held by the selling shareholders will likely make more shares of the Company's common stock available for purchase which may have an adverse impact on the Company's ability to sell its shares. The Company will not receive any proceeds from the sale of the shares by the selling shareholders and sales of shares by them instead of sales by the Company would reduce the amount of proceeds that the Company receives from this offering.

The Company does not intend to pay dividends to its stockholders, so investors will not receive any return on investment in the Company prior to selling their interest in it.

The Company does not project paying dividends but anticipates that it will retain future earnings for funding the Company’s growth and development. Therefore, investors should not expect the Company to pay dividends in the foreseeable future. As a result, investors will not receive any return on their investment prior to selling their Shares in the Company, if and when a market for such Shares develops.

The Company’s stock may be considered a penny stock and any investment in the Company’s stock will be considered a high-risk investment and subject to restrictions on marketability.

9

 
If the Shares commence trading, the trading price of the Company's common stock may be below $5.00 per share. If the price of the common stock is below such level, trading in its common stock would be subject to the requirements of certain rules promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These rules require additional disclosure by broker-dealers in connection with any trades generally involving any non-NASDAQ equity security that has a market price of less than $5.00 per share, subject to certain exceptions. Such rules require the delivery, before any penny stock transaction, of a disclosure schedule explaining the penny stock market and the risks associated therewith, and impose various sales practice requirements on broker-dealers who sell penny stocks to persons other than established customers and accredited investors (generally institutions). For these types of transactions, the broker-dealer must determine the suitability of the penny stock for the purchaser and receive the purchaser’s written consent to the transactions before sale. The additional burdens imposed upon broker-dealers by such requirements may discourage broker-dealers from effecting transactions in the Company’s common stock which could impact the liquidity of the Company’s common stock.

Forward-Looking Statements

This prospectus contains, in addition to historical information, certain information, assumptions and discussions that may constitute forward-looking statements. Such statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ materially than those projected or anticipated. Actual results could differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Although the Company believes its assumptions underlying the forward-looking statements are reasonable, the Company cannot assure an investor that the forward-looking statements set out in this prospectus will prove to be accurate. The Company’s businesses can be affected by, without limitation, such things as natural disasters, economic trends, international strife or upheavals, consumer demand patterns, labor relations, existing and new competition, consolidation, and growth patterns within the industries in which the Company competes and any deterioration in the economy may individually or in combination impact future results.

USE OF PROCEEDS

The Company will receive proceeds from the sale of the Shares assuming the minimum offering of 2,000,000 shares is concluded. The Company does not know how many additional Shares, if any, may be sold or the aggregate amount of proceeds it may receive from such additional sales. The Company anticipates that it will use the proceeds from the sale of any of the Shares as listed below. If less than the maximum number of Shares offered is sold and less proceeds are received, the Company anticipates that the use of such proceeds listed below will be proportionately reduced where possible.

 
 
If all 4,000,000
 
If 2,000,000
 
 
 
Shares sold
 
Shares sold
 
 
 
($20,000,000)
 
($10,000,000)
 
           
Sales and Marketing
 
$
2,250,000
 
$
1,125,000
 
Mergers and Acquisitions
   
3,500,000
   
1,750,000
 
Life Settlement Securitization and
             
Incubator Program
   
11,000,000
   
5,500,000
 
Public Relations and Advertising
   
2,250,000
   
1,125,000
 
Placement Agent Fees (5%) (1)
   
1,000,000
   
500,000
 
               
Total
 
$
20,000,000
 
$
10,000,000
 
_________________________________
(1) Assumes 50% of the sale of the Shares will be made by officers of Company who do not receive commissions.

Discussion of Use of Proceeds Items

Sales and Marketing: The Company hopes to capitalize on the life settlement market opportunity by investing in branding the “Christian Stanley” name through sales and marketing campaigns. The company's sales and marketing department will be bifurcated into retail and institutional divisions, which maintain products and services tailored for each respective market. The Company intends to employ national television, radio, billboards, electronic-billboards, call centers, print media, internet advertising, and word-of-mouth marketing to build consumer awareness and confidence in the Company and its products and services. The Institutional Sales and Marketing Division will be focused on creating business-to-business relationships with national organizations that will be effective in cross-marketing the Company and its related products and services such as CPAs, insurance agents, business brokers, estate professionals, real estate professionals, and assisted-living centers. To foster these relationships, the Company intends to invest in trade conferences, trade publications, venture partnerships, and institutional call centers.
 
10

 
Mergers and Acquisitions: The Company’s growth strategy may employ mergers and acquisition activity as a growth catalyst. The Company may acquire target companies that it believes hold value when leveraged into the life settlement industry such as assisted-living centers or it may acquire companies that it believes will assist in the development and sale of the life-settlement process such as broker-dealers, industrial-loan company, call centers, sales and marketing, and public-relations.

Life Settlement Securitization: The Company intends to acquire life settlement that provide a positive rate of return upon maturity of the policy relative to the annual premiums and cost of acquisition. The Company intends to acquire life settlement assets and repackage these assets into derivative instruments, which are insurance-linked securities. These securities will be distributed to investors in the form of an exchange-traded fund structured by the Company that will enable investors to earn a rate-of-return predicated upon the performance of a reference portfolio of life settlement assets.

Public Relations and Advertising: The Company believes that at this present time, the American public is not fully aware of the life settlement asset market and the potential benefits that may be realized utilizing life settlement transactions. This dearth of awareness is, in the Company’s view, caused by the lack of active public relations campaigns predicted upon the life settlements market place. The Company intends to employ its brand and trademarks as tools to differentiate itself from competitors and create public awareness with respect to the industry. The Company intends to lobby law makers and legislatures at local, state, and national governmental levels for the purpose of bringing about positive regulations, greater knowledge, and balanced sociological perspectives concerning the life settlements industry and the products and services of the Company.

DETERMINATION OF OFFERING PRICE

There is no public market for the Company’s common stock. There is no current market for the securities and the price at which the Shares are being offered has been estimated based on the Company’s projections and its anticipated growth and market potential.

DIVIDEND POLICY

The Company does not anticipate that it will declare dividends in the foreseeable future but rather intends to use any future earnings for the development of the business.

DILUTION

Purchasers of the Shares may experience immediate dilution in the value of their shares of common stock. Purchasers in this offering will pay $5.00 per Share but immediately after purchase the value of those Shares will be reduced. Dilution represents the difference between the initial public offering price per share paid by purchasers and the net tangible book value per share immediately after completion of the offering. Net tangible book value per share is the net tangible assets of the Company (total assets less total liabilities less intangible assets), divided by the number of shares of common stock outstanding.

Prior to the offering, the Company had a net tangible book value deficiency of $(279,626) or $0.003 per share with 81,062,917 shares of common stock outstanding.

The Company intends to sell up to 4,000,000 Shares at $5.00 per Share. This would result in an adjusted net tangible book value of $18,720,374 (assuming offering commissions of $1,000,000) with 85,062,917 shares of common stock outstanding or $0.22 per Share.
 
11

 
Assuming Sale of all 4,000,000 Shares (resulting in $20,000,000 in gross proceeds)

   
Shares Outstanding
 
 
Total Paid
 
 
 
Number
 
Percent
 
 
Amount
 
Percent
 
                     
Existing Shareholders
   
81,062,917
   
95
%
   
1,373,980
   
6
%
New Investors
   
4,000,000
   
5
%
 
$
20,000,000
   
94
%
                             
Total
   
85,062,917
   
100
%
 
$
21,373,980
   
100
%

Net tangible book value deficiency before offering
 
$
(279,626
)
Net tangible book value deficiency per share before offering
 
$
(0.003
)
Net tangible book value after offering
 
$
18,720,374
 
Net tangible book value per share after offering
 
$
0.22
 
         
Dilution per share to new investors   $ 4.78  

Assuming Sale of 2,000,000 Shares (resulting in $10,000,000 in gross proceeds)

   
Shares Outstanding
 
 
Total Paid
 
 
 
Number
 
Percent
 
 
Amount
 
Percent
 
                     
Existing Shareholders
   
81,062,917
   
98
%
   
1,373,980
   
11
%
New Investors
   
2,000,000
   
2
%
 
$
10,000,000
   
89
%
                             
Total
   
83,062,917
   
100
%
 
$
11,373,980
   
100
%

Net tangible book value deficiency before offering
 
$
(279,626
)
Net tangible book value deficiency per share before offering
 
$
(0.003
)
Net tangible book value after offering
       
Net tangible book value per share after offering
 
$
0.10
 
         
Dilution per share to new investors
 
$
4.90
 

CONCURRENT SALES BY SELLING SHAREHOLDERS

The registration statement of which this Prospectus is a part also relates to the offer and sale by the holders thereof of 16,622,750 shares of the Company’s common stock. Accordingly, such additional shares of common stock may become freely transferable on the effectiveness of this registration statement.

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

As of the date of this prospectus, the Company has not entered into any arrangements with any underwriter for the sale of the Shares. The Company intends to attempt to locate an underwriter or broker-dealer or selling agent to sell the Shares. Some Shares may be sold by certain officers and directors of the Company, none of whom will receive any commission or compensation for the sale of the Shares. The Company has no arrangements nor has entered into any agreement with any underwriters, broker-dealer or selling agents for the sale of the Shares. The executive officers of the Company will be offering the Shares for sale without commission or payment.

A minimum of 2,000,000 Shares must be sold by the Company before the offering can be closed. The Company, at its sole discretion, may have additional closings thereafter from time to time during the offering period. The maximum number of Shares that can be sold pursuant to the terms of this offering is 4,000,000. All funds received before the initial closing of the offering will be held in escrow pursuant to an escrow agreement with an independent third party. If the minimum offering amount is not met by the date of termination of the offering, all funds, without interest thereon, will be promptly returned to the investors. Funds received after the initial closing will be will be immediately available to the Company. If the minimum offering amount is met and the initial closing occurs, then there is no fixed amount or number of additional Shares that must be sold before the next closing can occur.
 
12

 
The Company intends to maintain the currency and accuracy of this prospectus and to sell the Shares for a period of up to two years, unless earlier completely sold, pursuant to Rule 415 of the General Rules and Regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Pursuant to the provisions of Rule 3a4-1 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, none of the officers offering the Shares is considered to be a broker of such securities as (i) no officer is subject to any statutory disqualification, (ii) no officer is nor will be compensated by commissions for sales of the securities (iii)no officer is associated with a broker or dealer (iv) all officers are primarily employed on behalf of the Company in substantial duties and (v) no officer participates in offering and selling securities more than once every 12 months.

Resales of the Securities under State Securities Laws

The National Securities Market Improvement Act of 1996 ("NSMIA") limits the authority of states to impose restrictions upon resales of securities made pursuant to Sections 4(1) and 4(3) of the Securities Act of companies which file reports under Sections 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act. Resales of the Shares in the secondary market will be made pursuant to Section 4(1) of the Securities Act (sales other than by an issuer, underwriter or broker).
 
DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES 

Capitalization

The Company is authorized to issue 100,000,000 shares of common stock, $1.00 par value per share, of which 81,062,917 shares were outstanding as of the date of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part.

Common Stock

The Company is registering 4,000,000 shares of its common stock for sale to the public at a price of $5.00 per Share.

Holders of shares of common stock are entitled to one vote for each share on all matters to be voted on by the shareholders. Holders of common stock do not have cumulative voting rights. Holders of common stock are entitled to share ratably in dividends, if any, as may be declared from time to time by the board of directors in its discretion from funds legally available therefor. In the event of a liquidation, dissolution or winding up, the holders of common stock are entitled to share pro rata all assets remaining after payment in full of all liabilities.

Holders of common stock have no preemptive rights to purchase the Company’s common stock. There are no conversion or redemption rights or sinking fund provisions with respect to the common stock. The Company may issue additional shares of common stock which could dilute its current shareholder's share value.

Additional Information Describing Securities

Reference is made to applicable statutes of the state of California for a description concerning statutory rights and liabilities of shareholders.

No Trading Market

There is currently no established public trading market for the Company’s securities. A trading market in the securities may never develop.
 
13

 
Admission to Quotation on the OTC Bulletin Board

If the Company meets the qualifications, it intends to apply for quotation of its securities on the OTC Bulletin Board. The OTC Bulletin Board differs from national and regional stock exchanges in that it (1) is not situated in a single location but operates through communication of bids, offers and confirmations between broker-dealers and (2) securities admitted to quotation are offered by one or more broker-dealers rather than the "specialist" common to stock exchanges. To qualify for quotation on the OTC Bulletin Board, an equity security must have one registered broker-dealer, known as the market maker, willing to list bid or sale quotations and to sponsor the company listing.

Penny Stock Regulation

Penny stocks generally are equity securities with a price of less than $5.00 per share other than securities registered on national securities exchanges or listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market, provided that current price and volume information with respect to transactions in such securities are provided by the exchange or system. The penny stock rules impose additional sales practice requirements on broker-dealers who sell such securities to persons other than established customers and accredited investors (generally those with assets in excess of $1,000,000 or annual income exceeding $200,000, or $300,000 together with their spouse). For transactions covered by these rules, the broker-dealer must make a special suitability determination for the purchase of such securities and have received the purchaser's written consent to the transaction prior to the purchase. Additionally, for any transaction involving a penny stock, unless exempt, the rules require the delivery, prior to the transaction, of a disclosure schedule prescribed by the SEC relating to the penny stock market. The broker-dealer also must disclose the commissions payable to both the broker-dealer and the registered representative and current quotations for the securities. Finally, monthly statements must be sent disclosing recent price information on the limited market in penny stocks. Because of these penny stock rules, broker-dealers may be restricted in their ability to sell the Company’s common stock. The foregoing required penny stock restrictions will not apply to the Company’s common stock if such stock reaches and maintains a market price of $5.00 per share or greater.

Dividends

The Company does not anticipate declaring dividends but utilizing any funds for further development of the technology and the marketing of its applications.

THE BUSINESS

The Business: Life Settlement Market

When an insured has a reasonably definable life expectancy because of terminal illness or because of advanced age, a present value for a life insurance policy can be reasonably calculated. This is the essence of pricing life settlement transactions. The life settlement market is a secondary market for life insurance policies. Life insurance is private property. Like cars, homes, stocks and bonds, it can be sold in accordance with applicable laws. An age-based life settlement is the sale by the owner of a life insurance policy on a person 65 years or older for a lump-sum of cash that is greater than the cash surrender value of the policy, but less than the death benefit of the policy. A viatical settlement is the sale of a life insurance policy by a terminally ill person.

The viatical settlement market is approximately 15 years old with its origins stemming from the onslaught of the AIDS epidemic and the immediate need for cash by victims of the epidemic. By selling the policy, the insured receives an immediate cash payment. The purchaser takes ownership of the policy at a discount to its face value and receives the death benefit under the policy when the settlor dies. The new owner is responsible for the continuing premiums due on the policy until death of the insured.

The age-based life settlement market is approximately ten years old. Life settlements are an attractive transaction to persons who purchased life insurance for income protection or estate planning, but no longer need the insurance due to growth in their investment portfolios or other changes in circumstances. Life settlements also appeal to persons who want to make immediate gifts to their beneficiaries. In these instances, the insured may feel the insurance is no longer needed. Life settlements are also an attractive transaction for the corporate owner of a keyman or insurance policy on an employee who no longer works for the Company and such insurance policy is no longer applicable. Because these policies often have substantially large face values, the purchasers of life policies are generally institutional purchasers.
 
14

 
In the past several years, the distinction between these two market segments has diminished and the markets have largely merged. State regulations govern both types of transactions in essentially the same manner, and the services provided by the Company for both types of transactions are the same. The term "life settlement transaction" used herein includes both viatical and age-based settlements unless the context indicates otherwise.

The Market

The Population Reference Bureau (“PRB”) World Population Report states that as of 2007 there were 302.2 million individuals living in the United States. As a result of declining birth rates and increasing longevity, the percentage of those 65 years or older in the US has risen to 12.6%or 36.2 million people. With the aging of the baby boomers, the 65 and older demographic is the fastest growing segment of the population. According to PRB, it is estimated that 20% of Americans will be over the age of 65 by 2030. This growing demographic provides the foundation of the Company’s target market.

While the Company anticipates that the industry will continue to expand, how and to what extent it will develop is uncertain. As more insureds become aware of life settlements as a financial planning option and the increase in the senior aged population, the Company expects the size of the market to grow substantially. The Company believes that with awareness the market for life settlements will grow as it offers owners of life insurance policies, aged 65 or greater, or those with a life expectancy of 15 years or less, a liquid cash conversion and exit strategy from life insurance policies that are displaced due to business restructuring, estate planning changes, budget constraints, or other variables. A life settlement provides an innovative wealth management tool particularly for individuals questioning their ability to continue to pay increasing large premiums for life insurance. The industry has developed partially as a result of these individuals who can no longer afford premium payments, and who wish a life settlement rather than letting their policy lapse or taking the cash-surrender value, typically much lower than the life settlement price. Life settlements are also available to owners of policies that have no cash-surrender value.

It is estimated by Conning and Co., a leading research firm in the insurance industry, that the potential market for life settlements in the United States is approximately $100 billion. Although this market niche is large, the public in general is uninformed about the life settlements industry. The Company views life settlements as an essential part of a comprehensive platform of financial services. Life settlement transactions are almost exclusively employed in an estate planning, business transfer, corporate structuring, risk management, or tax optimization context. Life settlements typically have a face value death benefit of no less than $100,000.

The Company believes that the following elements characterize the market of those who may consider a life settlement:

An insured:
 
Who is over 65 whose policy is beyond the two year contestable period;
Whose policy has a death benefit of at least $100,000;
Whose policy is a universal life or second-to-die policy with low cash surrender value;
Where the original purpose for the insurance may no longer exists and the current policy owner
may no longer have a need for the policy death benefit;
Who has a change in financial condition and the premium is no longer affordable;
Who originally purchased a policy because of estate tax liability which is no longer be needed;
Who has a life threatening condition, such as AIDS.

15

 
Although, through its anticipated marketing program the Company plans to introduce the American financial planning community and the public to the benefits of life settlements for owners of life insurance policies, any significant growth will depend heavily upon the entry of institutional purchasers that purchase life insurance policies. With this in mind, the Company plans to develop securitization of the life insurance policies that it estimates will enhance liquidity in the marketplace and entice a greater number of institutional investors to participate in the life settlement market as such securitization will provide an exit strategy more likely available sooner than the payment of the death benefit itself.

In 2006, it is estimated that life settlement funding sources acquired approximately $14 billion worth of policies increasing to an estimated $15 billion in 2007 (see www.lisassociation.org/vlsaamembers/news/files). The Wharton Business School indicates that more than 20% of insurance policyholders over age 65 have policies whose value exceeds cash surrender value and that the industry will reach $15 billion in annual transactions by 2006. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners in 1996 estimated that nearly $1.5 trillion in life insurance face amount lapsed or was canceled by policyholders.

Life settlement markets are segmented by length of life expectancy and policy face value. The amount of competition in these markets varies according to the demand for such policies. The Company believes the life settlement market in general will substantially increase during the next several years due to a number of factors. Market demand from purchasers may increase as the awareness among the financial markets in general of the value of life settlements as an investment vehicle grows. A favorable market demand will grow, in part, as a result of a continued cautious attitude of purchasers and a desire for returns which are not correlated to market indices. The Company believes that continued general economic uncertainty has led many purchasers to seek alternative investment strategies that diversify their portfolios and avoid economically sensitive investments. Life settlements provide diversification and are largely independent of the factors contributing to economic downturns, such as interest rate fluctuations and increasing fuel costs. The Company believes that interest from both individual and institutional purchasers will continue to grow steadily throughout the next several years.

Marketing

In order to develop its life settlement business, the Company needs to identify a continuing source of potential life insurance sellers. While the target market is narrow and traditional media is expensive, the Company anticipates utilizing television, radio, public relations, print media, and internet advertising to create name recognition of Christian Stanley as a life settlement broker and to create a larger awareness in the public of life settlement transactions as viable wealth management tools. The Company believes the best way to reach this market is generally through media advertising and through life insurance professionals and, to a lesser extent, through professionals engaged in estate planning, such as attorneys, accountants, and financial planners. The Company’s business plan utilizes insurance professionals and brokers as sources of policies, as well as the development of a life settlement referral network. The Company intends to develop this referring network of insurance professionals to educate potential life settlors on the options presented by life settlements. The Company anticipates utilizing direct solicitation, seminars and calls to managing general insurance agents as well as word-of-mouth contacts to develop this referring network.

At present, the Company is working to develop a network of independent contractors to serve as providers for the life settlement contracts. The Company maintains a "Preferred Vendor" relationship with Business Brokers Network, a nationally-based company in the transfer of businesses and related assets. The relationship provides for an independent -contractor affiliation between the Business Brokers Network and the Company affording the Company access to the infrastructure of Business Brokers Network. The Company is developing independent contracting relationships by serving as a sponsor at several industry trade conferences starting in 2004 continuing to the present. The Company has also been an active sponsor of organizations and events such as seminars targeted to develop the Company's provider network, including the International Business Brokers Association (2004), Alliance of Merger and Acquisition Advisors (2005-2006), Institute of Certified Business Consultants (2005), Assisted-Living Federation of America (2005), Association for Corporate Growth( 2006), Sunbelt Business Brokers (2006-2007), VR Business Brokers (2005-2006), Business Brokers Network (2004-2008), Attorney-CPA Society (2006), and Long-Term Care Summit( 2007). The Company has advertised extensively in trade journals and publications geared towards the financial planning community and hopes to establish independent contractor relationships from these activities as well.

16

 
The Company intends to maintain a call center relationship with www.Telemessagingusa.com, which is a leading provider of outsourced call center services. The Company has negotiated corporate call center services on a 24/7 basis. The call center serves as a central communication base on behalf of the Company and is linked to the Company's toll-free calling system. Also, the Company maintains a call center relationship with www.AccessLine.com, which enables the Company to create an efficient call forwarding-system for all telecommunications between its institutional and retail divisions.

Life Settlement Transactions

The Company’s role in a life settlement transaction will be to match settlors with purchasers. The Company intends to facilitate these transactions by identifying, examining, and analyzing the policies for the purchasers. The Company intends to locate potential life settlors through a network of agents (often referred to as “producers”) consisting of insurance brokers, accountants, lawyers, financial, estate planning and other professionals, obtained through referrals and through Internet and print media advertising. These sources of settlement policies will be compensated by the Company, probably on a fee base, when and if a policy is sold. The Company believes the economic incentive that sourcing life settlement policies will add to some of these providers, will create an economic synergy between the Company and the provider and will develop into a mutually profitable continual relationship. The Company anticipates that a provider may receive not only the fee from sourcing the life settlement but an ability to offer their clients a method to maximum proceeds through policy liquidation. The Company anticipates that it will work with it sourcing network to establish a methodology to ascertain, document and measure the relative risk and adjusted value-added to a client’s portfolio and the effect of policy liquidation.

The Company will present life settlement policies to institutional providers of life settlements to create an auction-type of competitive bidding environment that will ensure profit maximization on behalf of clients. The cash surrender value of a life policy does not reflect the true economic value of the asset in a competitive market environment because it is simply the lowest value, or floor value, of the life insurance policy, not necessarily its market value. Major factors affecting the size of a life settlement offer are age and health of insured, type of policy and cost of coverage, and state of residency.

The Company intends to serve as a supplier of policies to providers, funders and investors by doing policy analysis, life expectancy evaluations and gathering of all pertinent documentation such as medical and policy release authorization forms. The Company, as a life settlement broker, anticipates that it will be paid a commission for such services by the purchasers of life insurance policies). The Company intends to work exclusively with licensed, accredited, institutional funders to ensure that the highest level of transactional legitimacy is afforded to both institutional and retail clients.

Because of the initial high purchase price for a life settlement, institutions are the primary source as life settlement purchasers. The Company will present life settlement policies to institutional providers and create a competitive bidding environment. The Company will present life settlements for possible purchase to Settlement Benefits Association, a provider of life settlement transactional services, with which it has entered an exclusive contract for such offers.

The Company maintains a life settlement processing relationship with Settlement Benefits Association ("SBA"), located in Tampa, Florida. Settlement Benefits Association is a national broker in the life settlements market and provides brokerage services to the Company. Settlement Benefits Association functions as the back-office processing unit for the Company and provides the Company with access to the institutional life settlement market. The Company’s business relationship with Settlement Benefits Association enables the Company to earn transactional and consulting fees through processing life settlement candidates.

Examples of Life Settlements
 
Examples. Some examples of the use of life settlements are:

1. Economic Need. Mr. Smith age 75, owns a $500,000 life insurance policy with annual premiums of $25,000 and is unable to pay the premiums. The cash value is small or even zero. A life settlement transaction may immediately offer him as much as $100,000. Understanding that he can no longer afford the policy, Mr. Smith opts to enter into a life settlement and receive $100,000, rather than letting the policy lapse.
 
17

 
2. Flexible Tool. A widow in her early 80’s no longer needs multiple life insurance policies with increasing annual premiums; she owns a $3 million universal policy with a cash value of $69,000 and annual premiums of $68,000. Through a life settlement, she may be able to receive as much as $500,000 for the policy and eliminate the $68,000 annual premium. reinvest the $500,000 in a single-premium annuity and use the money she would have spent on the premiums to make $10,000 individual gifts to all five of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

3. Business Application. A company owns a $2 million key-man policy on its president who recently retired. The policy is a convertible 20-year-level premium term policy with no cash value at the time of retirement. Annual premiums are $60,000. Instead of letting the policy lapse, the company can sell it in a life settlement transaction for as much as $250,000.

The Process. The life settlement process commences when an agent submits an application on behalf of a policy holder to the Company. The application will be received and the case reviewed by an underwriting team. If the policy meets certain criteria, the policy will be approved for purchase. If approved, the Company will contact several potential institutional purchasers (often referred to in the industry as “funders” or “providers”) whose criteria the policy meets. The policy will be placed up for auction amongst the potential purchasers. The greatest offer will be submitted to the policy owner and if accepted closing documents will be prepared and delivered. Purchase funds will be placed in escrow at an independent financial institution. Ownership and change of beneficiary forms will be executed and when received by the financial institution, the funds will be released to the policy owner.

Once the transaction is complete, the purchaser will become the new policy owner, premium payer, and the beneficiary of the death benefits. Responsibility for payment of policy premiums will pass to the purchaser, who may fund the premium costs through deposits with an escrow agent. To protect the insured’s privacy, a purchaser will receive a copy of the policy and the transfer of ownership (which has the settlor named as the insured), but will not receive the insureds contact information. The Company will monitor the insured’s health status and notify the escrow agent or purchaser upon death. The Company will monitor and notify purchasers in instances in which the premium escrow account has been exhausted so that the purchaser can replenish the account to keep the policy from lapsing.

As a life settlement broker, the Company will serve the institutional purchasers by reviewing, analyzing, verifying, researching and summarizing proposed life insurance policies for sale. The Company will also make estimates on the pricing of a proposed life insurance policy.

As part of the policy evaluation process, the Company will:

(a) Verify life insurance policy, past premium payments, death benefits, transferability, etc.
(b) Obtain 4 years of medical records,
(c) Review medical records to determine significant health conditions.  
(d) Conduct a “Manual Underwriting” of a life expectancy using life insurance mortality tables. By this, the Company will compare third-party life
expectancy estimates with published mortality tables to create an accurate representation of life expectancy.
(e) Preliminary classification is reviewed by a licensed physician to make adjustments to life expectancy if required.
 
Pricing analysis is conducted using a financial model that is based upon the discounted present value of the policy’s death benefit vis-à-vis the present value of premium payments and other post purchase servicing costs and the purchasing company’s up-front origination fee.

It is important for the Company to estimate an insured life expectancy as accurately as possible. If the Company underestimates average life expectancies, purchasers will not realize anticipated returns as the annual premiums will erode the value of the death benefit and amounts escrowed for premium payments, if any, may be insufficient to keep the policy in force. If the Company overestimates average life expectancies, the settlement price received by a settlor may be below what a more accurate estimate may have been able to obtain. The ability to accurately predict life expectancies is affected by a number of factors, including an insured’s age, medical condition, life habits (such as smoking), and geographic location; and the ability to anticipate and adjust for trends, such as advances in medical treatments, that affect life expectancy. In order to foster an accurate pricing system, the Company anticipates that it will use both in-house and outside experts, including medical doctors and published actuarial data.
 
18

 
Criteria. The criteria for a life insurance policy acceptable to the Company will be:
 
The insured:

Is over 65 with a life expectancy of 15 years or less;
Has a policy that is beyond the contestable period;
Has a policy with a death benefit of at least $100,000;
Has a policy with a death benefit greater than the cash value (plus total premiums based on life expectancy)
 
The factors that contribute to the purchase price for a policy will be:

The face value (death benefit);
The insured’s estimated life expectancy;
Outstanding loans against the policy;
The policy’s cash value;
Premium payments to keep the policy in force.
  
Life Settlement Competition 

Life settlements provide a secondary market for existing life insurance policies which the owner no longer needs or wants and which insure a person whose life expectancy can be reasonably estimated. While measuring the market is difficult due to the lack of reported data, based on known transaction volumes with allowance for unreported data, the Company estimates that the total face value of life settlement transactions completed during 2005 was approximately $2.5 billion. The largest industry competitor captured approximately 43% of that market because of its affiliate relationship with a large insurance company acting as an institutional purchaser. The remainder of the market is divided among other competitors, none of whom is believed to have more than 10% of the market.

Unlike some industry competitors which have more restrictive purchasing parameters, the Company anticipates that it will develop markets for all types of life expectancies in order to accommodate various investment goals as well as the individual circumstances of the policies presented. The Company believes this business model will make it more competitive in the market and provide it with greater flexibility. The Company also believes that this model provides a stronger platform for sustainable growth as a company.

As a form of competition to life settlements, the life insurance industry has responded with policy features offering various pre-death cash benefits (sometimes called accelerated death benefits). While in some cases accelerated death benefits may compete with viatical settlements, the Company does not expect the availability of accelerated death benefits to affect the life settlement market significantly. The availability of accelerated death benefits is generally more restricted than life settlements. For example, policies often limit such benefits to persons who have a life expectancy of less than one year, in contrast to viatical settlements that are usually available to persons with life expectancies of two to 15 years. Life settlements generally offer sellers greater amounts than they would receive under accelerated death benefit provisions. An insurance company’s willingness to offer a competitive accelerated death benefit, and the amount of such benefit, may be affected by imputed policy lapse rates. The availability and amount of an accelerated death benefit negatively impacts lapse rates, which could increase policy rates. The competition for new policies limits policy rates and may, indirectly, limit the availability and amount of accelerated death benefits.

The life settlement market has been negatively affected by some companies using illegal or questionable business practices. The Company believes that state and federal regulators have effectively identified and shut down most of the companies that were engaged in such practices. The result of these law enforcement actions has been to reduce the amount of competition for both policies and purchasers. Although state and federal law enforcement officials successfully employed existing laws to curb these illegal practices, state legislatures and insurance regulators have passed laws and adopted regulations requiring the licensing of viatical brokers and settlement companies, mandated disclosures to settlors or purchasers or both, and instituting periodic reporting requirements, and setting forth prohibited business practices.
 
19

 
The Company has negotiated a private-label agreement with Settlement Benefits Association, www.settlementbenefits.com, which is a Florida licensed life settlement broker. All life settlement transactions are processed through SBA, and it functions as an independent marketing and consulting firm in the life settlement asset market. Specializing in the marketing and public relations aspects of the life settlement industry enables the Company to specialize itself as a publisher and investment bank dedicated to the life settlements industry. To date, the Company has advertised its brand over television and the Company has advertised extensively over print media and trade journal publications, which are dedicated to the financial planning community.

Broker-dealer firms such as Merrill Lynch, Smith Barney, and Morgan Stanley have been generally prohibited from engaging in life settlement transactions because of an implied conflict of interest. Internally, such broker-dealers treat life settlements as unapproved products and thereby prohibit employees, advisors, and affiliates from offering life settlements. This inefficiency creates an opportunity for life settlement firms to acquire policies that would otherwise be immediately absorbed into the transactional sphere of such broker-dealer firms.

THE COMPANY

Background and Current Operations

Currently the Company is engaged in a development capacity focusing on the life settlement industry. The Company runs advertising in trade journals, such as Financial Planning Magazine, On Wall Street, and Accounting Today. The Company seeks to make its name recognizable as a specialty consulting enterprise centered around life settlements. The company uses Internet marketing and telephone prospecting to develop its market impact and locate possible new relationships.

Revenues from Operations

The Company is a development stage company incorporated in California in 2006 as the successor company to the limited liability company formed in 2004, to serve as a liaison and broker in the secondary market for life insurance policies known generally as “life settlements”, to facilitate the sale of corporate-owned policies (keyman life insurance policies) to licensed and accredited institutional funders (i.e. purchasers), to develop investment and consultative products and services relating to the business-to-business sale of life insurance policies and to participate in a securitization market of life settlement policies.

Since 2004 the Company has advertised, primarily in the print media, for client purchasers of life settlements, whether as individual policies or packages as a group. The Company believes that it needs to locate a buyer or buyers of the life settlement policies before it can actively seek the sellers of these packages. To date, the Company has not served as broker for the sale and purchase of any life settlement policies despite its continuing advertising campaign for such clients.

Since inception, the Company has raised funds for its operations through the periodic sale of its common stock. The Company has incurred an aggregate net loss from operating activities of $1,847,703 since inception.

The Company currently brokers life settlement contracts to Settlement Benefits Association which maintains a private consortium of institutional funders. The Company intends to offer securitized portfolios of life settlement contracts to Settlement Benefits Association which will provide the original funders of the life insurance settlements a liquid and profitable exit strategy and provide a versatile financial instrument. The Company also intends to develop an “incubator” life settlement market comprised of pre-market policies purchased from insureds several years prior to reaching the life settlement age standard of 65 years. As part of its development, the Company anticipates acting as a consultant to certain businesses desiring to add life settlement brokerage activities to their portfolios.

PLAN OF OPERATION

20

 
Business Plan

The Company intends to develop into a full-service, business-to-business clearinghouse for the life settlement industry. By providing a structured finance expertise utilizing the life settlement asset-class, the Company believes it will address many of the inefficiencies and difficulties currently facing the industry. The Company intends to use the unique characteristics of this asset-class as building blocks to develop products and services that address the changing needs of clients. The Company is developing proprietary transactions, products, and services that align incentives between licensed brokers and providers through counter-swap, lending, and derivative transactions predicated upon the life settlement industry. The Company will market its products and services through direct advertising, mass media communications, television marketing, internet advertising, franchise marketing, and public relations.

The Company’s website was publicly launched in 2004 at www.Christianstanley.com.

The Company has developed a multi-faceted business plan stemming from and anticipating development and growth in the life settlement business. The Company’s initial primary focus is life settlement transactions as discussed above, but the Company anticipates developing related operational areas. Although certain of the transactions and functions overlap, the Company’s business plan is composed of the following business segments:

Life settlement transactions
Incubator acquisition program and keyman acquisition program
Securitization of life settlements and use of life settlements as financial tools
Consulting and business enhancement program and franchise program
Computer software for policy analysis and life settlement auction

The plan of operation for the Company for the succeeding twelve months is to focus on the following key objectives:

 
Develop network of producers and potential providers for life settlement transactions
 
Continue with mass media and public relations branding of the Company
 
Launch keyman acquisition and incubator acquisition programs
 
Create securitization of life settlement packages
 
Launch additional franchise program and financial and consulting services
 
Develop intellectual property for life settlement industry

 
Keyman Insurance Buyout Program. In addition to the life settlement program outlined, the Company intends to develop a keyman insurance buyout program. When a business owner decides to sell the business, the keyman policy will stop serving its original economic function because the former executive insured by the policy is no longer with the company. Typically these policies are simply allowed to lapse or are surrendered for their cash value. The cash value of an insurance policy does not indicate the real economic value of the policy because it is a one-sided offer from the insurance carrier. In contrast, the Company intends to serve as a marketplace where policyholders are afforded the benefits of receiving multiple bids from providers in the secondary market for these keyman life insurance policies, rather than relying on the cash surrender value offered by the originating insurance carrier. The purchaser of the keyman policy will pay a lump-sum amount to the business owner in consideration of irrevocably receiving all rights to future death benefits and ownership. The purchaser will correspondingly maintain premium payments on the policy to keep it in force.

In general, the successful engagement of life settlement transactions involving keyman life insurance are five-fold:

 
The insured is aged 65 or greater or has a life expectancy of less than 15 years;
 
Face-value, or death benefit, of the keyman life insurance is at least $100,000;
 
The keyman policy must be in force and past the period of contestability;
  •   All types of keyman life insurance policies qualify for an appraisal including, but not limited to, whole life, universal life, variable universal life, convertible-term, and term coverage;
 
No medical examination is required by insured because pricing analysis is based upon medical record review, actuarial modeling, and third-party life expectancy underwriting;
 
21

 
Commercial lending institutions often require keyman life insurance as a hedge for business loans. At the bargaining table, the injection of new capital gleaned from life settlements may be employed as a deal making tool when pricing becomes an impediment to finalizing transactions.

Business brokers serve as fiduciaries in the transfer process because clients rely on intermediaries as a source of prudent advice regarding valuation. As such, it is vital that, when applicable, life settlement transactions be employed because the value of keyman life insurance on the secondary market constitutes a substantial component of enterprise value when a firm is being sold. Many owners sell businesses for retirement purposes and want to maximize the sale price.

The importance of employing life settlements may be important in the mergers and acquisition context. For business transfers, keyman life insurance becomes an increasingly valuable asset because the risk management needs of large institutions require firms to invest more heavily in coverage, which increases demands for liquidity from keyman policies. Often merger and acquisition professionals find that several corporate owned life insurance policies exist within the same firm that qualify for resale when a business transfer occurs because of executive insurance packages. Due to the inherent leverage afforded by life insurance policies and the economies of scale achieved when executive insurance packages are purchased by corporations, sellers in mergers and acquisition environments find life settlements to be of exponential value-added.

Incubator Program. The Company’s incubator program will be designed to acquire life insurance policies during the pre-market phase, i.e. policies of insureds aged between 55 and 65. The Company believes that a substantial quantity of quality life settlement policies exists in the pre-market phase and that by acquiring these policies prior to the insured attaining the minimum age of 65, the Company will decrease the available supply of life policies in the future when these insured do, in fact, attain the minimum age. The Company anticipates that this decrease in supply will have the effect of increasing the price that life settlement will command upon resale. Since the Company will own a quantity of these policies as they become available to the life settlement industry, it will be able to sell the policies at a profit. The Company anticipates that the purchase of the initial incubator policies may be economically prohibitive to it without the influx of additional capital through an alliance with a larger entity or through raising capital specifically for the purchase of bundled pre-market life settlement insurance policies.

The general plan is as follows:

Target pre-market life settlement policies (insureds between 55 and 65)
Warehouse these pre-market policies until the life expectancy is less than 15 years
Use capital derived from this offering to purchase pre-market policies.
Sell policies to mainstream life settlement providers

A typical incubator insured would not yet be 65 and therefore mainstream providers typically decline to make an offer on this policy. The whatever reason, the insured wishes to cash out of his life insurance policy and desires remuneration higher than the cash surrender value. The Company’s incubator is designed to capitalize on this inefficiency. Multiple exit strategies exists to liquidate the policies held by the incubator program , which include (1) selling the policies to private life settlement providers, (2) selling the policies to public securitization pools organized by the Company or (3) placement of policies into collateral pools, which are used to guarantee letters of credit, consumer products, and banking instruments. The Company’s incubator program is a form of post-origination premium financing, which employs the life settlements market as an exit strategy. The incubator program targets persons who desire a life settlement, but that are unable to receive offers from mainstream providers.

The Company intends to utilize funds from the offering to fund its incubator program. The Company anticipates that the incubator program will increase efficiency in the life settlement market by creating a pre-market for the transaction. The Company believes that incubator transactions enable it to earn trading profits by packaging the incubator life policies into securitization time-sequenced offerings.
 
22

 
Securitization of Life Settlements. The packaging of life insurance assets, their corresponding liabilities, and cash flows into asset-backed securities is a relatively new arm of the life settlement industry. The first rated securitization of life settlements occurred in March, 2004 when Moody’s Investor Services rated two separate traunches of a bond offering syndicated by Merrill Lynch A1 and Baa2.  By definition, securitization is the process of bundling and packaging a group of life insurance policies together to form a security. These securities can take the form of private placements, or rated securities, such as bonds collateralized by life settlement contracts.

Securitization provides investors with the opportunity to gain rights to the future death benefit of a life settlement contract, while circumventing the idiosyncrasies that come with purchasing the asset in its raw form. Providers will register and submit to the Company information and documentation on life insurance policies which they purchased through life settlement transactions and are seeking to sell prior to the maturation of the corresponding death benefit. The securitization of the life settlements will afford life settlement providers a means by which to monetize portfolios of life settlement policies. The Company will group several of these policies into a life settlement portfolio and will sell equity instruments in these groups of life insurance policies in transactions to public investors. The Company believes that creating such an exit strategy for life settlement providers via the securitization of life portfolios encourages bidding on policies as it allows more buyers into the marketplace, and thus, the Company helps to create greater value for policy owners. In addition, the asset-class created by the securitization of these policies may be used in various financial applications.

The Company anticipates that providers will register and list the criteria that they use in evaluating the feasibility of selling life insurance policies through the Company and related securitization transactions. The Company allows providers to significantly cut their operating costs by providing a means to monetize and liquidate thousands of policies held in portfolios prior to the maturation of the death benefit by selling the life portfolios into securitization transactions and thus focus their resources on just those policies most appropriate to their needs.

At such time that a provider locates and successfully sells a life insurance policy to the Company’s securitization syndicate, the provider will then assign the portfolio of policies to the securitization pool and the provider will receive a lump-sum payment in consideration of the portfolio sold.

The Company anticipates that the securitized life insurance policy pool will be an asset that may be used as collateral to underpin lines of credit, which would enable purchasers to employ portfolios of life settlements as principal guarantees for leveraged buy-out strategies. Buyers use cash flows from the acquired business to service the interest requirements on the line of credit, while the life settlement portfolio serves as collateral for the principal amount of the loan. Funds from the death benefit of the life settlement portfolio will ultimately pay the principal amount of the loan. The Company believes that the applications of life settlements in mainstream investment banking and business brokerage offer a great deal of opportunity for future transactions that has not heretofore been used.

The Company believes that the regulatory and legislative changes related to the recent financial crisis will focus primarily on the housing and lending markets and their rated securitizations and derivative products and will not imact the securitization of life insurance policies. Moreover, the Company believes that the securitization of life insurance cash flows is a superior collateral on a risk-adjusted basis vis-a-vis mortgage-backed securities because the death-benefit of a life insurance policy is a guaranteed value by the issuing insurance carrier, whereas, the value of a real estate asset is subject to market fluctuations.

The securitized life settlement pool as an asset holds significant advantages because in a general sense, it is not prone to interest rate risk, stock market fluctuations, or systemic factors. In general, the risk of investing in life settlement contracts is longevity risk, which is the risk of the policy failing to mature at the expected future date. The life settlement securitization structure seeks to distill this risk by providing a wide range of conservative policy maturity estimates from leading third-party underwriters.

Benefits of Life Settlements: The following are key benefits of the securitized life settlement portfolio investment structure, which in part is the fact that portfolios are a self-liquidating asset class:

(1) Certainty of event
(2) Clear expectation of payment
(3) Clear expectation of amount
(4) Reasonable expectation of timing of payment
(5) Diversification is achieved by holding no less than 10 life settlement contracts per portfolio.
 
23

 
Consulting and Business Enhancement

As part of its business plan, the Company intends to develop a financial advisory and consulting capacity specifically relevant to life settlements. Whether a client is an institution, a trust, a small business, or a private client, the Company’s life settlement consulting will provide in-dividual guidance with respect to income objectives, risk tolerance, tax considerations, wealth transfer strategies, and other long-term goals. The Company views portfolios as the driving force behind the attainment of long-term financial success, and it seeks to integrate the characteristics of life settlement portfolios into every component of a strategic plan. The Company will investigate the applicability of life settlement asset products in a client’s overall asset-allocation.

The Company anticipates consulting with funding groups and assist life settlement purchasers in structuring methodologies of life settlement portfolio management that optimize return on behalf of funders by affording these institutions an exit strategy from assets in their portfolios through securitization markets. By making markets with hedge funds, pension plans, alternative investment syndicates, and other institutional buyers, the Company will enable its core of funding groups to refinance life settlement asset portfo-lios and thereby increase their ability to receive return on their investment and simultaneously de-creasing the duration of holding such assets. This will increase liquidity on behalf of life settlement funders.

Warehouse of life settlements. The purchaser of life settlement contracts simply pays policy premiums until the maturation of the portfolio. The problem with this approach is that the funder does not realize any positive cash flows until the maturity of the portfolio and also must pay premiums in the interim. This is a buy and hold strategy. The Company has developed alternative structures geared towards optimizing the internal flow of money among core funding groups.  The viatical settlement market had a shorter life expectancy and shorter hold period for the purchaser of the life settlement. As the industry has shifted away from the viatical market to the age-based life settlement market, the hold period has increased for the purchaser of the life settlement.

Life settlement hypothecation. The Company has developed an alternative funding model (life settlement hypothecation) that will enable purchasers to manage life settlement assets and to receive interest on their investment. Life settlements hypothecation provides a mechanism for institutional funders to loan life set-tlements inventory to borrowers. The purchaser (funder) of the life settlement will enter into an agreement with a potential borrower which will afford the borrower the use of the portfolio life settlements as collateral under the condition that borrower pay funder a rate of interest equal to the expected return of the life settlement portfolio. The transaction will benefit funders by allowing the premium cost of financing policies to be absorbed into borrower’s loan, which removes the cost of carry on funders balance sheets. Eliminating the cost-of-carry enhances portfolio returns to funders and creates a positive cash flow cycle from acquisition. The borrower agrees to a discounted acceleration of the expected annual return of a life settlement portfolio and pays funder an annual rate of interest on the borrowed life settlement contracts. This may be remitted to funder as a lump-sum reflecting the present-value of the life settlement portfolio, or structured as a periodic stream of cash flows to funders.

Whereas the warehousing model (holding the life settlement portfolio) requires funders to sustain policies until maturity to receive a gross return, hypothecation allows funders to earn interest on a life settlement portfolio along an agreed cash flow cycle. The final implication of hypothecation is that funders will be induced to offer higher bids in wholesale life settlement markets to acquire life settle-ment contracts, because such assets will require no cost-of-carry to funders, have increased cash conversion liquidity, and remove mortality risk from funders portfolios.

Refinance Model of Life Settlements: The purchaser, or funder of life settlement assets, owns assets at discounted acquisition costs, or wholesale rates. Rather than holding these life settlement policies to fruition, or hypothecating these life settlement portfolios to third-party borrowers in exchange for an agreed upon rate of return, the refinance model anticipates that funders will sell life settlement portfolios at a predetermined mark-up from acquisition cost. This transaction would allow a client to open a letter of credit using a portfolio of life settlement policies to underpin the letter of credit. The principal of the loan is guaranteed by use of the letter of credit. The client is obligated to service the interest requirement of any loan and the ability to pay this interest requirement is essential to make the transaction viable.
 
24

 
Software Development

On April 21, 2006, the Company applied for a service mark for the computer software services, namely, installation, implementation, maintenance, and repair services for computer software in the field of the life settlement industry offered by Christian Stanley, registration number 3390087.

The Company has also applied and has a pending application for the service mark "Reverse-Life Insurance". The Company anticipates that it will further develop software solutions that address the needs of professionals involved in life settlement transactions. The software includes valuation tools, portfolio analytics, consumer response management, and professional networking amongst users.

Potential Revenue

Life Settlement Broker: The Company anticipates that the fees from matching life settlement transactions will be its initial primary source of revenue. The Company will receive a fee at or after closing based on the face value of the purchased policy from the purchasers of the life insurance policy. The Company has negotiated a relationship with Settlement Benefits Association, which enables the Company to earn a fee in consideration of introducing candidates for life settlement transactions. The fee will vary on a case-by-case basis. Typically, the Company will earn a fee that is between 3%-7% of the life settlement death benefit value. The Company intends to engage in national mass media marketing and public relations campaigns, which it believes will foster brand recognition and consumer confidence in “Christian Stanley” and its related life settlement transaction services. The Company anticipates that such mass media campaign will result in qualified candidates responding to the value-proposition of life settlements on a national basis, which will provide a source of revenue for the Company. Given the condition of financial markets, the Company believes that consumers will desire to access latent-value held in life insurance policies through the life settlement brokerage services of the Company.

Securitization Fees: The Company anticipates that it will earn fees in the capacity of a dealer wherein life settlement assets are acquired, securitized, and distributed to investors in the form of equity securities. The Company seeks to introduce life settlement securities as an alternative to traditional investment vehicles and believes that investors could earn positive portfolio. The Company believes that such securitized life settlement assets will provide investors with an efficient alternative to traditional asset-classes.

Professional Fees: The Company anticipates that it will earn fees as a consultant specializing in life settlement related transactions. As such, the Company will advise life settlement providers and others to optimize portfolio holdings and diversify the portfolio as the settlement market changes. The expertise, relationships, know-how, and market penetration of the Company may be leveraged in a consulting capacity. That is to say, the myriad firms that are involved in the life settlement market place provide a key potential client base for the Company because it is focused on engineering exit strategies for purchasers of life settlement assets prior to the maturation of portfolio death benefits. Institutional purchasers of life settlements will benefit from acceleration of the rate-of-return prior to the death benefit. The Company will provide consulting services and professional strategic advisory services to firms that seek to access its suite of proprietary transactions.

Employees

The Company has three executive officers and two employees. The Company expects that it will hire additional personnel as it expands.

Industry Regulation and Taxation

When the viatical life settlement market first arose, it was sparsely regulated. Due in part to abuses within the industry, which were well-publicized, both the federal government and various states moved to regulate the market in the mid-1990’s. These regulations generally took two forms. One sought to apply consumer protection-type regulations to the market. This application was designed to protect both settlors and purchasers. Another sought to apply securities regulations to the market, which was designed to protect purchasers. Various states have also used their insurance regulations to attack instances of insurance fraud within the industry.
 
25

 
Consumer Protection Licensing. The consumer protection-type regulations arose largely from the draft of a model law and regulations promulgated by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. A majority of states have now adopted some version of this model law or another form of regulation governing in some way life settlement companies. These laws generally require the licensing of providers and brokers, require the filing and approval of settlement agreements and disclosure statements, describe the content of disclosures that must be made to potential settlors and/or life settlors, describe various periodic reporting requirements for settlement companies and prohibit certain business practices deemed to be abusive.

Insurance Regulation. As a life settlement company, the Company facilitates the transfer of ownership in life insurance policies, but does not participate in the issuance of policies. The Company is not required to be licensed as an insurance company or an insurance professional. The Company does, however, deal with insurance companies and professionals in the business and is indirectly affected by the regulations covering them. The insurance industry is highly regulated, and these regulations affect the Company in numerous ways. The Company must understand the regulations as they apply to policy terms and provisions and the entitlement to, and collectibility of, policy benefits. The Company relies upon the protections against fraudulent conduct that these regulations offer and upon the licensing of companies and individuals with whom it does business.

Taxation. In 1996, Congress passed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. This act exempts from taxation proceeds received in a viatical settlement paid to terminally ill settlors (those having a life expectancy of 24 months or less) and chronically ill settlors (those who are incapable of at least two daily-living activities, such as eating and bathing, and require supervision). The tax exemption applies only if the viatical settlement company is licensed in the state in which the settlor resides, or if the settlor resides in a state that does not license viatical companies, if the viatical company can certify that it complies with the Model Act provisions. Since most states follow the Federal income tax definitions, the receipt of settlement proceeds is generally exempt for state income tax purposes also. The Act does not exempt the receipt of life settlement proceeds. Life settlement proceeds would typically be taxed as ordinary income to the extent that the proceeds exceed the premiums paid for the insurance policy

"Wall Street Bail Out" Legislation. Congress has recently enacted legislation providing a financial package intended to assist certain financial institutions by purchasing or defraying certain mortgage or debt backed securities that have currently lost most if not all of their value. Such legislation includes a variety of regulations impacting the sale and regulation of mortgage and insurance backed securities as well as other derivative securities. The impact of this legislation on the Company’s business plan to offer securitized packages of life settlement insurance policies is unclear but may be significant.

Property

The Company’s offices are located at 1150 Silverado Street, Suite 207, La Jolla, California 92037. The Company uses this property pursuant to a month-to-month lease at at a monthly rental of $650.

Subsidiaries

The Company does not have any subsidiaries.

Patents and Trademarks

In April, 2006, the Company applied for a service mark for the computer software services, namely, installation, implementation, maintenance, and repair services for computer software in the field of the life settlement industry offered by Christian Stanley.
 
26

 
Reports to Security Holders

The Company intends to deliver a copy of its annual report to its security holders, and will voluntarily send a copy of the annual report, including audited financial statements, to any registered shareholder who requests it. The Company will not be a reporting issuer with the Securities and Exchange Commission until its registration statement on Form S-1 is declared effective.

The Company has filed a registration statement on Form S-1, under the Securities Act of 1933, with the Securities and Exchange Commission with respect to the shares of its common stock. This prospectus is filed as a part of that registration statement, but does not contain all of the information contained in the registration statement and exhibits. Statements made in the registration statement are summaries of the material terms of the referenced contracts, agreements or documents of the company. Reference is made to the Company’s registration statement and each exhibit attached to it for a more detailed description of matters involving the Company. The statements made in this prospectus are qualified in their entirety by reference to these additional materials. A potential investor may inspect the registration statement, exhibits and schedules filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission at the Commission's principal office in Washington, D.C. Copies of all or any part of the registration statement may be obtained from the Public Reference Section of the Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street N.E., Washington, D.C. 20002. Please call the Commission at 1-800-SEC-0330 for further information on the operation of the public reference rooms. The Securities and Exchange Commission also maintains a web site at http://www.sec.gov that contains reports, proxy statements and information regarding registrants that file electronically with the Commission. The Company’s registration statement and the referenced exhibits can also be found at the web site address.

MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

The Company is a development stage company and was incorporated in California in March, 2006 as a successor to Christian Stanley, LLC, a California limited liability company formed in June, 2004. As of December 31, 2007, the Company had generated insignificant revenue and incurred operating losses, as part of the Company's development stage activities, of $1,847,703. The Company has received all its operating funds from the sale of its securities.

Discussion of Fiscal Years Ended December 31, 2006 and December 31, 2007.
 
The Company incurred a net loss from operating activities of $340,035 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2007 and a net loss of $985,726 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006 with general and administrative expenses of $345,142 and $985,726 , respectively, for those years. The Company received consulting revenue of $10,000 in the year ended 2007.

The Company accrued a total of $200,000 of salary due to its chief executive officer for the years ended December 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively.

Liquidity. The Company received $335,760 and $519,545 from the private sale of its stock in the years ended December 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively. The Company has issued a total of 5,321,250 shares of its common stock to employees and other individuals for services rendered to it. The Company has no continuous methods of generating cash other than the sale of its securities.

Capital Resources. The Company did not incur any capital expenditures other than the purchase of an automobile for use by the Company's chief executive officer and office and computer equipment.

Results of Operations. The Company anticipates that it may be able to develop its consulting services which would begin to generate revenue but it does not believe that such revenue would be sufficient in the year ending December 31, 2008 to cover operating expenses. The Company does not anticipate that it will generate revenue sufficient to cover its operating expenses until the close of this offering and the development of its business plan.
 
27

 
Discussion of Period Ended September 30, 2008 and September 30, 2007

For the nine-month period ended September 30, 2008, the Company incurred a net loss from operations of $(451,540) primarily with general and administrative expenses of $(461,540) compared with a net loss from operation of $(210,530) for the nine-month period ended 2007 consisting primarily of general and administrative expenses for that period of $(220,530). The Company received consulting revenue of $10,000 in the first nine months of 2008 and 2007 respectively. The general and administrative expenses were comprised primarily of salary, advertising and marketing expenses related to developing awareness of the Company name.

The Company had an accumulated deficit of $2,330,743 at September 30, 2008 compared with an accumulated deficit of $(1,749,696) for nine month period ended September 30, 2007. The history of operating losses and accumulated deficit raise substantial doubt about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern. Management of the Company seeks funding from its shareholders and other qualified investors to pursue its business plan and anticipates that proceeds from its offering will be sufficient to enable it to commence its business and generate positive operating revenues.

Liquidity. The Company has no continuous methods of generating cash other than the sale of its securities.

Capital Resources. The Company did not incur any capital expenditures other than the purchase of an automobile for use by the Company's chief executive officer and office and computer equipment.

The Company received $10,000 in consulting services for the nine month period ended September 30, 2008, but the revenues received from such consulting activities are not sufficient to sustain the Company. The Company anticipates that it may be able to develop its consulting services which would begin to generate revenue but it does not believe that such revenue would be sufficient in the year ending December 31, 2008, to cover operating expenses. The Company does not anticipate that it will generate revenue sufficient to cover its operating expenses until the close of this offering and the development of its business plan.
 
MANAGEMENT

The following table sets forth information regarding the members of the Company’s board of directors and its executive officers:

     
Date Directorship
Name
Age
Position
Commenced
       
Daniel C.S. Powell
27
Chief Executive Officer, Director
2004
       
Mona Salem
52
Secretary, Treasurer, Director
2005
       
Omar A. Salem
27
Chief Operations Officer
 

The number of directors to compose the Company’s Board of Directors is not fewer than one nor more than five. Directors do not receive any compensation. Directors may be shareholders of the Company.

The directors will serve until the annual meeting of the shareholders and until their respective successors have been elected and qualified or until death, resignation, removal or disqualification.

The Company’s by-laws provide that the number of directors to serve on the Board of Directors may be established, from time to time, by action of the Board of Directors. Vacancies in the existing Board are filled by a majority vote of the remaining directors on the Board. The Company’s executive officers are appointed by and serve at the discretion of the Board.

Committees and Terms

The Board of Directors has not established any committees.

The Company anticipates that the annual meeting of shareholders will be held in May. The Company will notify its shareholders that they may present proposals for inclusion in the Company’s proxy statement to be mailed in connection with any such annual meeting; such proposals must be received by the Company at least 90 days prior to the meeting. No other specific policy has been adopted in regard to the inclusion of shareholder nominations to the Board of Directors.
 
28

 
Daniel C.S. Powell has served as the chief executive officer and chairman of the board of directors of the Company since its inception. Mr. Powell is the founder of the Company. Since its inception, Mr. Powell has been responsible for the development and implementation of the Company’s direction, strategic ventures and relationships. He was a key-note speaker at the Business Brokers Network meeting in Dallas, Texas, in 2004, at the meeting of Alliance of Mergers and Acquisition Advisors in Chicago, Illinois in 2005, and at the Association of Attorney-Certified Public Accountants in San Diego, California, in 2006. From 2002 to 2004, Mr. Powell was a Financial Advisor and later Vice President with Morgan Stanley in Los Angeles, California. In 2004, Mr. Powell left Morgan Stanely and founded Christian Stanley. Mr. Powell received his Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial and Labor Relations from Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, in 2002.

Mona Salem has served as the secretary, treasurer and a director of the Company since 2005. Ms. Salem worked for Castagnola Fleet Management, San Diego, California from 1981 to 2005 at which she supervised a team of 75 employees and served as senior Office Manager. Ms. Salem holds a Bachelor of Accounting degree from the University of Cairo, Cairo, Egypt, and has been a registered tax preparer in California since 1995.

Omar A. Salem has served as chief operations officer of the Company since 2005. From 2003 to 2005, Mr. Salem worked for PC Mall, Los Angeles, California where he specialized in institutional sales. Mr. Salem received a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science degree from the University of Arizona in May, 2003.

Legal Proceedings
 
Investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission of the earlier sale of the Company’s shares.

In July, 2008, the California Regional Office of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") opened a formal order of investigation of the president of the Company, Daniel C.S. Powell. Although the status of such investigation and its specific nature are unclear, it appears that its principal focus is whether the private sales of the Company’s stock to date has complied with the rules and regulations governing the such private sales of securities. Depending upon its initial findings after review, the SEC may determine to expand its investigation to include the Company or to broaden the focus of the investigation to other concerns such as securities fraud. If the SEC determines that the rules governing the private sale of securities have been violated, it may impose a variety of remedies, including requiring that a recision offer be made to the purchasers of the stock, by which investors would receive back their investment funds with interest. If the SEC made a determination of fraud, it would have additional remedies available including fines and/or the temporary or permanent bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer, director or control person of a public company. The Company does not have the financial ability to complete an offer of recision to its investors and such a determination would likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue to attempt to develop operations. Similarly, the imposition of a permanent or temporary bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer or director of a public company would require Mr. Powell’s resignation from such offices with the Company and would also likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Remuneration of Officers:

Summary Compensation Table

Name
 
Year
 
Capacity  (1)
 
Advances Salary and Remuneration Accrues
 
Paid
 
Common Stock Received or Expected
 
Expected 
Total Value 
Of Compensation
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
Daniel C.S. Powell
   
2007
   
Chief Executive Officer
 
$
200,000
   
-
   
(1)
 
$
200,000
 
 
   
2006
   
Chairman of the Board
   
200,000
   
-
       
200,000
 
 
                   
 
   
Omar A. Salem
   
2007
 
 
Chief Operations Officer
             
(2)
 
   
 
   
2006
                       
 
     
 
               
 
   
Mona Salem
   
2007
   
Secretary, treasurer, director
             
(3)
 
   
 
   
2006
                       
 
(1) Mr. Powell owns 64,000,000 shares of the Company’s common stock issued in 2004.
(2) Mr. Salem owns 4,000,000 shares of the Company’s common stock issued in 2005.
(3) Ms. Salem owns 500,000 shares of the Company’s common stock issued in 2005.
 
29

 
Description of Compensation Table 

The Company accrued a total of $700,000 and $500,000 of salary due to its chief executive officer for the years ended December 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively, and made total payments of $475,368 and $348,465, respectively in those years with a resulting net amount of $224,632 and $151,535 due to the Company's chief executive officer for the years ended December 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively.

The Company maintains an automobile for use by its Chief Executive Officer for which it incurred and expense of $35,696 in 2007 and $49,001 in 2006.

Anticipated Officer and Director Remuneration

Although not presently offered, the Company anticipates that its officers and directors will be provided with a group health, vision and dental insurance program.

Employment Agreements

The Company has not entered into any employment agreements with the officers and key personnel. Although the Company has not yet finalized any formal compensation agreements, the table set forth above lists the proposed annual base compensation to be paid by the Company to each officer.

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS
AND MANAGEMENT

The following table sets forth information as of the date of this prospectus regarding the beneficial ownership of the Company’s common stock by each of its executive officers and directors, individually and as a group and by each person who beneficially owns in excess of five percent of the common stock after giving effect to any exercise of warrants or options held by that person.          
 
       
Number of
 
Percent of
 
Percent of
 
       
Shares of
 
Class Before
 
Class After
 
   
Position
 
Common Stock
 
Offering (1)
 
Offering (2)
 
                           
Daniel C. S. Powell
   
Chief Executive Officer, Director 
   
64,000,000
   
79
%
     
                           
Omar A. Salem
   
Chief Operations Officer
   
4,000,000
   
4.9
%
     
                           
Mona Salem
   
Secretary, Treasurer, director 
   
500,000
   
*
       
 
                       
                           
Less than 1%
                         
 
(1)
The total number of outstanding shares of common stock as of December 31, 2007 is 80,812,917. Assuming sale of all shares offered by this prospectus resulting in an aggregate of 84,812,917 shares outstanding.
 
30

 
CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

Mona Salem, the Company's secretary, treasurer and a director, is the mother of Omar Salem, chief operations officer of the Company.

In 2007, the Company used the consulting services of Anand Gupta for assistance with technology and information systems. He created the corporate website for the Company and created marketing materials. Mr. Gupta is a shareholder of the Company.
 
A partner in the law firm which acts as counsel to the Company is the sole owner and director of Tiber Creek Corporation which owns 250,000 shares of the Company's common stock and which is a selling shareholder in the simultaneous offering of shares by selling shareholders.

SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE

As of the date of this prospectus, there are 80,812,917 shares of common stock outstanding of which 68,500,000 shares are owned by officers and directors of the Company, namely Mr. Powell, Ms. Salem and Mr. Salem. There will be 84,812,917 shares of common stock issued and outstanding if the maximum number of Shares offered herein are sold. Of such outstanding shares, 16,622,750 are being registered concurrently for sale by the holders thereof . Upon completion of the offering and sale of all the Shares offered by selling shareholders in such concurrent registration, shareholders of the Company will own 68,190,167 shares of the outstanding common stock of the Company which shares are “restricted securities” subject to the limitations of Rule 144 under the Securities Act. In general, securities may be sold pursuant to Rule 144 after being fully-paid and held for more than 12 months. While affiliates of the Company are subject to certain limits in the amount of restricted securities they can sell under Rule 144, there are no such limitations on sales by persons who are not affiliates of the Company. In the event non-affiliated holders elect to sell such shares in the public market, there is likely to be a negative effect on the market price of the Company's securities.
 
DISCLOSURE OF COMMISSION POSITION ON INDEMNIFICATION
FOR SECURITIES ACT LIABILITIES

The Company’s Articles of Incorporation include an indemnification provision that provides that the Company shall indemnify directors against monetary damages to the Company or any of its shareholders by reason of a breach of the director’s fiduciary except (i) for any breach of the director’s duty of loyalty to the Company or its shareholders or (ii) for acts or omissions not in good faith or which involve intentional misconduct of (iii) for unlawful payment of dividend or unlawful stock purchase or redemption or (iv) for any transaction from which the director derived an improper personal benefit.

The Articles of Incorporation do not specifically indemnify the officers or directors or controlling persons against liability under the Securities Act.

The Securities and Exchange Commission’s position on indemnification of officers, directors and control persons under the Securities Act by the Company is as follows:

INSOFAR AS INDEMNIFICATION FOR LIABILITIES ARISING UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 MAY BE PERMITTED TO DIRECTORS, OFFICERS AND CONTROLLING PERSONS OF THE SMALL BUSINESS ISSUER PURSUANT TO THE RULES OF THE COMMISSION, OR OTHERWISE, THE SMALL BUSINESS ISSUER HAS BEEN ADVISED THAT IN THE OPINION OF THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION SUCH INDEMNIFICATION IS AGAINST PUBLIC POLICY AS EXPRESSED IN THE ACT AND IS, THEREFORE, UNENFORCEABLE.

31

 
CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

SEPTEMBER 30, 2008

 

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

CONTENTS

PAGE
2
BALANCE SHEETS AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 (UNAUDITED) AND DECEMBER 31, 2007
     
PAGE
3
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS FOR THE NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 AND 2007 AND FOR THE PERIOD JUNE 1, 2004 (INCEPTION) TO SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 (UNAUDITED)
     
PAGE
4
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDER’S DEFICIENCY FOR THE PERIOD JUNE 1, 2004 (INCEPTION) TO SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 (UNAUDITED)
     
PAGE
5
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS FOR THE NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 AND 2007 AND FOR THE PERIOD JUNE 1, 2004 (INCEPTION) TO SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 (UNAUDITED)
     
PAGES
6-13
NOTES TO  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 (UNAUDITED)

 
1

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
BALANCE SHEETS

   
September 30,
2008
(Unaudited)
   
December 31,
2007
 
ASSETS
           
Current assets
           
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 6,694     $ 103,606  
Deposit for purchase of broker-dealer
    20,000       -  
                 
Total current assets
    26,694       103,606  
                 
Automobile and equipment, net
    12,794       14,850  
Investment in Surya Consulting LLC
    7,300       -  
                 
Total assets
  $ 46,788     $ 118,456  
                 
LIABILITIES AND
STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIENCY
               
Current liabilities
               
Accrued salaries, officer, net
  $ 282,400     $ 224,632  
Accrued payroll taxes
    44,014       35,025  
                 
Total current liabilities
    326,414       259,657  
                 
Commitments
               
                 
Stockholders’ deficiency
               
Common stock, 100,000,000 shares authorized, 81,062,917 and 80,789,750 shares issued and outstanding, respectively
    2,051,117       1,738,002  
Deficit accumulated during development stage
    (2,330,743 )     (1,879,203 )
                 
Total stockholders’ deficiency
    (279,626 )     (141,201 )
                 
Total liabilities and stockholders’ deficiency
  $ 46,788     $ 118,456  

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
2

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (Unaudited)

   
Nine months 
ended
September 30, 
2008
   
Nine months 
ended
September 30, 
2007
   
June 1, 2004
(inception) to
September 30, 
2008
 
                   
Consulting revenue
  $ 10,000     $ 10,000     $ 20,000  
                         
General and administrative expenses
    (461,540 )     (220,530 )     (2,346,378 )
Loss from operations
    (451,540 )     (210,530 )     (2,326,378 )
                         
Loss on sale of automobile
    -       -       (4,365 )
                         
Net loss
  $ (451,540 )   $ (210,530 )   $ (2,330,743 )
                         
Net loss per share, basic and diluted
  $ (0.01   $ (0.01        
Weighted average number of shares outstanding, weighted and diluted
     80,930,049       80,460,702          

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
3

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
 STATEMENT OF CHANGES  IN STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIENCY
June 1, 2004 (Inception) to September 30, 2008 (Unaudited)

   
Common Stock
             
    
Number of 
shares
   
Amount
   
Accumulated 
Deficit
   
Total
 
 Balance, June 1, 2004
    -     $ -     $ -     $ -  
                                 
Shares issued to founder
    64,000,000       -       -       -  
Fair value of shares issued for services
    4,021,250       120,637       -       120,637  
Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    1,150,000       21,500       -       21,500  
Net loss
    -       -       (241,858 )     (241,858 )
Balance, December 31, 2004
    69,171,250       142,137       (241,858 )     (99,721 )
Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    5,915,000       184,060       -       184,060  
Net loss
    -       -       (311,584 )     (311,584 )
Balance, December 31, 2005
    75,086,250       326,197       (553,442 )     (227,245 )
Fair value of shares issued for services
    1,300,000       556,500       -       556,500  
Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    3,913,500       519,545       -       519,545  
Net loss
    -       -       (985,726 )     (985,726 )
Balance, December 31, 2006
    80,299,750       1,402,242       (1,539,168 )     (136,926 )
Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    490,000       335,760       -       335,760  
Net loss
    -       -       (340,035 )     (340,035 )
 Balance, December 31, 2007
    80,789,750       1,738,002       (1,879,203 )     (141,201 )
Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    273,167       313,115       -       313,115  
Net loss
    -       -       (451,540 )     (451,540 )
 Balance, September 30, 2008 (Unaudited)
    81,062,917     $ 2,051,117     $ (2,330,743 )   $ (279,626 )

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
4

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

 STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (Unaudited)

   
Nine months 
ended
September 30, 
2008
   
Nine months 
ended
September 30, 
2007
   
June 1, 2004
(inception) to
September 30, 
2008
 
                   
Cash Flows from Operating Activities
                 
Net Loss
  $ (451,540 )   $ (210,530 )   $ (2,330,743 )
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities:
                       
Depreciation expense
    4,906       8,267       34,186  
Loss on sale of automobile
    -       -       4,365  
Fair value of shares issued for services
    -       -       677,137  
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
                       
Prepaid
                       
Accrued salaries, officer, net
    57,768       41,922       282,400  
Accrued payroll taxes
    8,989       8,709       44,014  
Net cash used in operating activities
    (379,877 )     (151,632 )     (1,288,641 )
                         
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
                       
Proceeds from sale of automobile
    -       -       4,893  
Acquisition of property and equipment
    (2,850 )     -       (56,238 )
Deposit for purchase of broker-dealer
    (20,000 )     -       (20,000 )
Investment in Surya Consulting LLC
    (7,300 )     -       (7,300 )
Net cash used in investing activities
    (30,150 )     -       (78,645 )
                         
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
                       
Proceeds from issuance of common stock
    313,115       147,960       1,373,980  
Cash overdraft
    -       215       -  
Proceeds from note payable
    -       -       17,938  
Principal payment of notes payable
    -       -       (17,938 )
Net cash provided by financing activities
    313,115       148,175       1,373,980  
                         
Increase (decrease) in cash
    (96,912 )     (3,457 )     6,694  
                         
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period
    103,606       3,457       -  
Cash and cash equivalents , end of period
  $ 6,694     $ -     $ 6,694  
                         
Supplementary cash flow information
                       
Income taxes paid
  $ -     $ -     $ -  
Interest paid
  $ -     $ -     $ -  

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
5

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2008 (Unaudited)

NOTE 1 – NATURE OF BUSINESS AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
Description of business

Christian Stanley, Inc. (“the Company”) was incorporated as a California corporation in March 2006, and serves as the successor entity to Christian Stanley, LLC, a California limited liability company formed June 1, 2004. The Company is a development stage enterprise as defined by Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 7, "Accounting and Reporting by Development Stage Enterprises." All losses accumulated since the inception of the Company will be considered as part of the Company's development stage activities. The Company has generated insignificant revenue.  The Company's fiscal year end is December 31.

Going concern

The Company has a history of operating losses.  During the nine months ended September 30, 2008, the Company incurred a net loss of $451,540 and used cash in operations of $379,877, and had an accumulated deficit of $2,330,743 at September 30, 2008.  These matters raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.  The financial statements do not include any adjustments that might result from these uncertainties.  Management continues to seek funding from its shareholders and other qualified investors to pursue its business plan.

Basis of presentation

The accompanying unaudited financial statements have been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America for interim financial information and pursuant to the rules and regulations of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Accordingly, they do not include all of the information and footnotes required by generally accepted accounting principles for complete financial statements. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting of normal recurring adjustments) considered necessary for a fair presentation have been included. These financial statements should be read in conjunction with the Company's annual financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2007 included elsewhere in the registration statement.  The results of operations for interim periods are not necessarily indicative of the results expected for a full year or for any future period.

Use of estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

 
6

 

Cash and cash equivalents

For purposes of the financial statements, the Company considers all liquid instruments purchased with original maturities of three months or less to be cash equivalents.

Automobile and equipment

Automobile and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and amortization. Expenditures for additions, renewals, and improvements are capitalized. Costs of repairs and maintenance are expensed when incurred.

Depreciation is provided using the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets, which range from three to five years.

Revenue recognition

Revenue is recognized when all four of the following criteria are met: (i) persuasive evidence that an arrangement exists; (ii) delivery of the services and or products has occurred; (iii) the selling price is both fixed and determinable and; (iv) collectibility is reasonably assured, generally which occur when the Company has completed its contractual obligations to provide its services.

Equity Based Compensation

The Company periodically issues shares of stock to employees and non-employees in non-capital raising transactions for services.  The Company adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standard (SFAS) No. 123R, “Accounting for Share-Based Compensation” effective January 1, 2006, and is using the modified prospective method in which compensation cost is recognized beginning with the effective date (a) based on the requirements of SFAS No. 123R for all share-based payments granted after the effective date and (b) based on the requirements of SFAS No. 123R for all awards granted to employees prior to the effective date of SFAS No. 123R that remain unvested on the effective date.

The Company accounts  for shares granted  and vesting to non-employees in accordance with EITF No. 96-18: "Accounting for Equity Instruments that are Issued to Other Than Employees for Acquiring, or in Conjunction with Selling, Goods or Services” and EITF No. 00-18 “Accounting Recognition for Certain Transactions involving Equity Instruments Granted to Other Than Employees” whereas the value of the stock compensation is based upon the measurement date as determined at either a) the date at which a performance commitment is reached, or b) at the date at which the necessary performance to earn the equity instruments is complete.

The Company has no stock options or stock warrants outstanding.

Income Taxes
 
The Company accounts for income taxes and related accounts under the liability method. Deferred tax liabilities and assets are determined based on the difference between the financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities using enacted rates expected to be in effect during the year in which the basis differences reverse.

 
7

 
 
Financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value

Effective January 1, 2008, the Company adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 157, Fair Value Measurements. This Statement defines fair value for certain financial and nonfinancial assets and liabilities that are recorded at fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value, and expands disclosures about fair value measurements. This guidance applies to other accounting pronouncements that require or permit fair value measurements. On February 12, 2008, the FASB finalized FASB Staff Position (FSP) No. 157-2, Effective Date of FASB Statement No. 157. This Staff Position delays the effective date of SFAS No. 157 for nonfinancial assets and liabilities to fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2008 and interim periods within those fiscal years, except for those items that are recognized or disclosed at fair value in the financial statements on a recurring basis (at least annually). The adoption of SFAS No. 157 had no effect on the Company's consolidated financial position or results of operations.
Fair value of financial instruments

Comprehensive loss
 
For the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2008 and 2007, the Company had no items that represent other comprehensive income or loss.

Concentration of Credit Risk

Financial instruments that are exposed to concentrations of credit risk consist principally of cash.  The Company places its cash in what it believes to be credit-worthy financial institutions.  However, cash balances may have exceeded federally insured levels at various times during the year.  The Company has not experienced any losses in such accounts and believes it is not exposed to any significant risk in cash.
 
Loss Per Share

Basic loss per share has been computed using the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. Diluted loss per share is computed based on the weighted average number of common shares and all common equivalent shares outstanding during the period in which they are dilutive. As of September 30, 2008 and 2007, there were no common equivalent shares outstanding.
 
Recent Accounting Pronouncements

In December 2007, the FASB issued FASB Statement No. 141 (R), Business Combinations (FAS 141(R)), which establishes accounting principles and disclosure requirements for all transactions in which a company obtains control over another business.  Statement 141 (R) applies prospectively to business combinations for which the acquisition date is on or after the beginning of the first annual reporting period beginning on or after December 15, 2008.  Earlier adoption is prohibited.

In December 2007, the FASB issued SFAS No. 160, Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements, an amendment of ARB No. 51 (“SFAS No. 160”).  SFAS No. 160 establishes accounting and reporting standards that require that the ownership interests in subsidiaries held by parties other than the parent be clearly identified, labeled, and presented in the consolidated statement of financial position within equity, but separate from the parent’s equity; the amount of consolidated net income attributable to the parent and to the noncontrolling interest be clearly identified and presented on the face of the consolidated statement of income; and changes in a parent’s ownership interest while the parent retains its controlling financial interest in its subsidiary be accounted for consistently.  SFAS No. 160 also requires that any retained noncontrolling equity investment in the former subsidiary be initially measured at fair value when a subsidiary is deconsolidated.  SFAS No. 160 also sets forth the disclosure requirements to identify and distinguish between the interests of the parent and the interests of the noncontrolling owners.  SFAS No. 160 applies to all entities that prepare consolidated financial statements, except not-for-profit organizations, but will affect only those entities that have an outstanding noncontrolling interest in one or more subsidiaries or that deconsolidate a subsidiary.  SFAS No. 160 is effective for fiscal years, and interim periods within those fiscal years, beginning on or after December 15, 2008.  Earlier adoption is prohibited.  SFAS No. 160 must be applied prospectively as of the beginning of the fiscal year in which it is initially applied, except for the presentation and disclosure requirements.  The presentation and disclosure requirements are applied retrospectively for all periods presented.

 
8

 

In March 2008, the FASB issued SFAS No. 161, Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities—an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133 (“SFAS No. 161”), to improve financial reporting of derivative instruments and hedging activities by requiring enhanced disclosures to enable investors to better understand their effects on an entity’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows. SFAS No. 161 applies to fiscal years and interim periods beginning after November 15, 2008.

The Company does not believe that the adoption of the above recent pronouncements will have a material effect on the Company’s results of operations, financial position, or cash flows.

NOTE 2   AUTOMOBILE AND EQUIPMENT

Automobile and equipment consists of the following as of:

   
September 30,
2008
 (Unaudited)
   
December 31, 
2007
 
             
Automobile
  $ 35,696     $ 35,696  
Computer equipment
    7,237       4,387  
      42,933       40,083  
                 
Less accumulated depreciation
    (30,139 )     (25,233 )
                 
    $ 12,794     $ 14,850  
 
Depreciation expense was $4,906, $8,267, and $34,186 for the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2008 and 2007, and for the period June 1, 2004 (inception) to September 30, 2008, respectively.

NOTE 3     ACCRUED SALARIES, OFFICER, NET

As of September 30, 2008 and December 31, 2007, the Company had accrued a total of $850,000 and $700,000, respectively, of salary due to its Chief Executive Officer.  For each of the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2008 and 2007, salary expense was $150,000, respectively.

Also as of September 30, 2008 and December 31, 2007, the Company had made total advances of $567,600 and $475,368, respectively, to its Chief Executive Officer.    For the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2008 and 2007, advances totaled $92,232 and $108,078, respectively.

At September 30, 2008 and December 31, 2007, $282,400 and $224,632, respectively, represents the net amount due to the Company’s Chief Executive Officer.

 
9

 

NOTE 4    INCOME TAXES

The Company has federal and state net operating loss carryforwards that can be used through 2019 to offset taxable income, and accordingly, has not recorded a provision for income taxes in the current year.

Significant components of the Company's deferred income tax liability at September 30, 2008 and December 31, 2007 are as follows:

   
September 30,
2008
(Unaudited)
   
December 31, 
2007
 
Deferred tax assets:
           
Net operating loss carry forward
  $ 661,000     $ 476,000  
Share-based compensation
    271,000       271,000  
Total deferred tax assets
    932,000       747,000  
 Valuation allowance
    (932,000 )     (747,000 )
Net deferred income tax asset
  $ -     $ -  

In the Company’s opinion, it is uncertain whether they will generate sufficient taxable income in the future to fully utilize the net deferred tax asset.  Accordingly, a valuation allowance for the deferred tax asset has been recorded.

Reconciliation of the effective income tax rate to the U.S. statutory rate for the nine-month period ended September 30, 2008 is as follows:

Tax expense at the U.S. statutory income tax rate
    34.0 %
State tax net of federal tax benefit
    5.8 %
Net effect of net operating loss and other
    (39.8 )%
Effective income tax rate
    0.0 %

Effective January 1, 2007, the Company adopted Financial Accounting Standards Board Interpretation No. 48, “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes (“FIN 48”) - an interpretation of FASB Statement No. 109, Accounting for Income Taxes.” The Interpretation addresses the determination of whether tax benefits claimed or expected to be claimed on a tax return should be recorded in the financial statements. Under FIN 48, the Company may recognize the tax benefit from an uncertain tax position only if it is more likely than not that the tax position will be sustained on examination by the taxing authorities, based on the technical merits of the position. The tax benefits recognized in the financial statements from such a position should be measured based on the largest benefit that has a greater than fifty percent likelihood of being realized upon ultimate settlement. FIN 48 also provides guidance on de-recognition, classification, interest and penalties on income taxes, accounting in interim periods and requires increased disclosures. At the date of adoption, and as of September 30, 2008, the Company does not have a liability for unrecognized tax uncertainties.

 
10

 

NOTE   5 - - CAPITAL STOCK

The Company was capitalized on June 1, 2004 when it issued 64,000,000 shares of common stock valued at zero to its founder.

Since inception, the Company has sold a total of 11,741,667 shares of common stock in private placements to accredited investors for total proceeds, net of offering costs, of $1,373,980 as follows:

Sale of common stock in 2004

-500,000 shares issued at $0.007 per share for total consideration of $3,500
-650,000 shares issued at $0.03 per share for a total consideration of $20,000
-Offering costs totaling $2,000 are deducted from the proceeds of the sales

Sale of common stock in 2005

-1,100,000 shares issued at $0.02 per share for total consideration of $23,000
-2,935,000 shares issued at $0.03 per share for total consideration of $93,000
-725,000 shares issued at $0.04 per share for total consideration of $29,000
-1,000,000 shares issued at $0.06 per share for total consideration of $60,000
-150,000 shares issued at $0.07 per share for total consideration of $10,000
-5,000 shares issued at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $5,000
-Offering costs totaling $35,940 are deducted from the proceeds of the sales

Sale of common stock in 2006

-250,000 shares issued at $0.02 per share for total consideration of $5,000
-1,135,000 shares issued at $0.04 per share for total consideration of $45,000
-500,000 shares issued at $0.06 per share for total consideration of $30,000
-575,000 shares issued at $0.07 per share for total consideration of $40,000
-145,000 shares issued at $0.10 per share for total consideration of $14,000
-580,000 shares issued at $0.12 per share for total consideration of $70,000
-136,000 shares issued at $0.20 per share for total consideration of $26,666
-250,000 shares issued at $0.24 per share for total consideration of $60,000
-20,000 shares issued at $0.42 per share for total consideration of $8,334
-15,000 shares issued at $0.50 per share for total consideration of $7,500
-25,000 shares issued at $0.60 per share for total consideration of $15,000
-25,000 shares issued at $0.72 per share for total consideration of $18,000
-125,000 shares issued at $0.80 per share for total consideration of $100,000
-107,500 shares issued at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $107,500
-25,000 shares issued at $1.20 per share for total consideration of $30,000
-Offering costs totaling $57,455 are deducted from the proceeds of the sales

Sale of common stock in 2007

-125,000 shares issued at $0.08 per share for total consideration of $10,000
-30,000 shares issued at $0.10 per share for total consideration of $3,000
-10,000 shares issued at $0.20 per share for total consideration of $2,000
-5,000 shares issued at $0.80 per share for total consideration of $4,000

 
11

 

-10,000 shares issued at $0.90 per share for total consideration of $9,000
-12,500 shares issued at $0.92 per share for total consideration of $11,560
-13,000 shares issued at $0.98 per share for total consideration of $12,700
-274,500 shares issued at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $274,500
-10,000 shares issued at $1.90 per share for total consideration of $19,000
-Offering costs totaling $10,000 are deducted from the proceeds of the sales

Sale of common stock in 2008 (Unaudited)
-20,000 shares issued at $0.53 per share for total consideration of $10,500
-109,000 shares issued at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $109,000
-63,000 shares issued at $1.06 per share for total consideration of $66,500
-30,000 shares issued at $1.10 per share for total consideration of $33,000
-20,000 shares issued at $1.50 per share for total consideration of $30,000
-15,000 shares issued at $1.94 per share for total consideration of $29,115
-12,500 shares issued at $2.00 per share for total consideration of $25,000
-3,667 shares issued at $2.73 per share for total consideration of $10,000
-There were no offering costs incurred during the nine-month period ended September 30, 2008.

Issuance of common stock for services

Since inception, the Company has issued a total of 5,321,250 shares of common stock to employees and other individuals for services as follows:

Period
 
Number of 
shares
   
Fair value of 
shares
   
Average 
value per 
share
 
Year ended December 31, 2004
    4,021,250     $ 120,637     $ 0.03  
Year ended December 31, 2005
    -       -       -  
Year ended December 31, 2006
    1,300,000       556,500     $ 0.43  
Year ended December 31, 2007
    -       -       -  
Nine-month period ended September 30, 2008 (unaudited)
    -       -       -  
Total
    5,321,250     $ 677,137     $ 0.13  

The value of the shares were valued based on the price of shares of the Company's common stock sold in contemporaneous private placements and were recorded as compensation expense as follows: $556,500 for the year ended December 31, 2006, and $120,637 for the year ended December 31, 2004.

NOTE 6     RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

On February 12, 2008, the Company purchased five percent of Surya Consulting LLC for $7,300.  The president of Surya Consulting is a shareholder in the Company.  As the Company’s ownership interest is less than 20 percent, and the Company does not have the ability to exercise significant influence, the investment is accounted for using the cost method of accounting. Under this method, the Company carries its investment at historical cost and periodically evaluates the fair value of the investment to determine if an other-than-temporary decline in value has occurred.  As of September 30, 2008, the Company was not aware of any impairment in its investment.    During the nine-month period ended September 30, 2008, the Company paid the shareholder or Surya Consulting LLC $31,145 for providing various consulting services to the Company.

 
12

 

Also during the nine-month period ended September 30, 2008, the Company paid $29,000 to another shareholder for providing consulting services to the Company.

During the nine-month period ended September 30, 2007, the Company paid $500 to a shareholder as a commission related to the Company’s private placement of its common stock.

NOTE    7 - - COMMITMENTS

On March 5, 2008, the Company began preliminary negotiations to purchase a broker-dealer company for $45,000, and deposited $20,000 into escrow towards the purchase. The Company expects to complete the purchase in 2009.

The Company leases its office facilities under a month-to-month operating lease.  For the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2008 and 2007, rent expense was $3,450 and $3,555, respectively.

In July, 2008, the California Regional Office of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") opened a formal order of investigation of the president of the Company, Mr. Daniel C.S. Powell. Although the status of such investigation and its specific nature are unclear, it appears that its principal focus is whether the private sales of the Company’s stock to date has complied with the rules and regulations governing the such private sales of securities. Depending upon its initial findings after review, the SEC may determine to expand its investigation to include the Company or to broaden the focus of the investigation to other concerns such as securities fraud. If the SEC determines that the rules governing the private sale of securities have been violated, it may impose a variety of remedies, including requiring that a recision offer be made to the purchasers of the stock, by which investors would receive back their investment funds with interest. If the SEC made a determination of fraud, it would have additional remedies available including fines and/or the temporary or permanent bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer, director or control person of a public company. The Company does not have the financial ability to complete an offer of recision to its investors and such a determination would likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue to attempt to develop operations. Similarly, the imposition of a permanent or temporary bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer or director of a public company would require Mr. Powell’s resignation from such offices with the Company and would also likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue.

 
13

 
 
CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2007 AND 2006

 
 

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

CONTENTS

PAGE
2
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
     
PAGE
3
BALANCE SHEETS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2007 AND 2006
     
PAGE
4
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2007 AND 2006 AND FOR THE PERIOD JUNE 1, 2004 (INCEPTION) TO DECEMBER 31, 2007
     
PAGE
5
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDER’S DEFICIENCY FOR THE PERIOD JUNE 1, 2004 (INCEPTION) TO DECEMBER 31, 2007
     
PAGE
6
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2007 AND 2006 AND FOR THE PERIOD JUNE 1, 2004 (INCEPTION) TO DECEMBER 31, 2007
     
PAGES
7-13
NOTES TO  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2007 AND 2006

 
1

 

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Stockholders of
Christian Stanley, Inc.
(a Development Stage Company)
La Jolla, California

We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of Christian Stanley, Inc. (the “Company”) (a development stage company) as of December 31, 2007 and 2006, and the related statements of operations, changes in stockholders' deficiency, and cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2007 and 2006, and for the period June 1, 2004 (Inception) to December 31, 2007.  These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit.

We conducted our audits in accordance with standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States).  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement.  The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting.  Our audits included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.  Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.  We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion .

In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Christian Stanley, Inc. (a development stage company) at December 31, 2007 and 2006, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2007 and 2006, and for the period June 1, 2004 (Inception) to December 31, 2007 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

The accompanying financial statements have been prepared assuming Christian Stanley, Inc. will continue as a going concern.  The Company has experienced recurring losses and has a stockholders’ deficiency at December 31, 2007.  These conditions raise substantial doubt regarding the Company's ability to continue as a going concern.  Management's plans in regard to these matters are described in Note 1 to the financial statements.  The financial statements do not include any adjustments to reflect the possible future effects on the recoverability and classification of assets or the amounts and classification of liabilities that may result from the outcome of this uncertainty.

Weinberg & Company, P.A.

Boca Raton, Florida
March 13, 2008

 
2

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
BALANCE SHEETS
December 31,

   
2007
   
2006
 
ASSETS
           
CURRENT ASSETS
           
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 103,606     $ 3,457  
                 
Total current assets
    103,606       3,457  
                 
Automobile and equipment, net
    14,850       36,743  
                 
Total assets
  $ 118,456     $ 40,200  
                 
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIENCY
               
CURRENT LIABILITIES
               
Accrued salaries, officer, net
  $ 224,632     $ 151,535  
Accrued payroll taxes
    35,025       25,591  
                 
Total current liabilities
    259,657       177,126  
                 
Commitments
               
                 
Stockholders’ Deficiency
               
Common stock, 100,000,000 shares authorized, 80,789,750 and 80,299,750 shares issued and outstanding, respectively
      1,738,002         1,402,242  
Deficit accumulated during development stage
    (1,879,203 )     (1,539,168 )
                 
Total stockholders’ deficiency
    (141,201 )     (136,926 )
                 
Total liabilities and stockholders’ deficiency
  $ 118,456     $ 40,200  

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
3

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

   
Year ended 
December 31, 
2007
   
Year ended 
December 31, 
2006
   
June 1, 2004 
(inception) to 
December 31, 
2007
 
                   
Consulting revenue
  $ 10,000     $ -     $ 10,000  
                         
General and administrative expenses
    (345,142 )     (985,726 )     (1,884,310 )
Loss from operations
    (335,142 )     (985,726 )     (1,874,310 )
                         
Loss on sale of automobile
    (4,893 )     -       (4,893 )
                         
Net loss
  $ (340,035 )   $ (985,726 )   $ (1,879,203 )
                         
Net loss per share, basic and diluted
  $ (0.01   $ (0.01   $    
Weighted average number of shares outstanding, weighted and diluted
    80,510,534       78,281,054          

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
4

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
 STATEMENT OF CHANGES  IN STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIENCY
June 1, 2004 (Inception) to December 31, 2007

   
Common Stock
   
Accumulated
Deficit
   
Total
 
                   
   
Number
   
Amount
                
 Balance, June 1, 2004
    -     $ -     $ -     $ -  
                                 
Shares issued to founder
    64,000,000       -       -       -  
                                 
Fair value of shares issued for services
    4,021,250       120,637       -       120,637  
                                 
 Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    1,150,000       21,500       -       21,500  
                                 
Net loss
    -       -       (241,858 )     (241,858 )
                                             
Balance, December 31, 2004
    69,171,250       142,137       (241,858 )     (99,721 )
                                 
 Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    5,915,000       184,060       -       184,060  
                                 
Net loss
    -       -       (311,584 )     (311,584 )
                                          
Balance, December 31, 2005
    75,086,250       326,197       (553,442 )     (227,245 )
                                 
Fair value of shares issued for services
    1,300,000       556,500       -       556,500  
                                 
Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    3,913,500       519,545       -       519,545  
                                 
Net loss
    -       -       (985,726 )     (985,726 )
                                         
Balance, December 31, 2006
    80,299,750       1,402,242       (1,539,168 )     (136,926 )
                                 
Issuance of shares for cash, net of offering costs
    490,000       335,760       -       335,760  
                                 
Net loss
    -       -       (340,035 )     (340,035 )
                                            
 Balance, December 31, 2007
    80,789,750     $ 1,738,002     $ (1,879,203 )   $ (141,201 )

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
5

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

 STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

   
Year ended 
December 31, 
2007
   
Year ended 
December 31, 
2006
   
June 1, 2004 
(inception) to 
December 31, 
2007
 
Cash Flows from Operating Activities
                 
Net Loss
  $ (340,035 )   $ (985,726 )   $ (1,879,203 )
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities:
                       
Depreciation expense
    12,635       10,398       29,280  
Loss on sale of automobile
    4,365       -       4,365  
Fair value of shares issued for services
    -       556,500       677,137  
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
                       
Accrued salaries, officer, net
    82,531       (75,452 )     224,632  
Accrued payroll taxes
    -       6,232       35,025  
Net cash used in operating activities
    (240,504 )     (488,048 )     (908,764 )
                         
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
                       
Proceeds from sale of automobile
    4,893       -       4,893  
Acquisition of property and equipment
    -       (17,692 )     (53,388 )
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities
    4,893       (17,692 )     (48,495 )
                         
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
                       
Proceeds from issuance of common stock
    335,760       519,545       1,060,865  
Proceeds from note payable
    -       -       17,938  
Principal payment of notes payable
    -       (17,938 )     (17,938 )
Net cash provided by financing activities
    335,760       501,607       1,060,865  
                         
Increase (decrease) in cash
    100,149       (4,133 )     103,606  
Cash and cash equivalents,  Beginning of period
    3,457       7,590       -  
Cash and cash equivalents , end of period
  $ 103,606     $ 3,457     $ 103,606  
                         
Supplementary cash flow information
                       
Income taxes paid
  $ -     $ -     $ -  
Interest paid
  $ -     $ -     $ -  

See accompanying notes to financial statements

 
6

 

CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.
(A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
December 31, 2007 and 2006

NOTE 1 – NATURE OF BUSINESS AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
Description of business

Christian Stanley, Inc. (“the Company”) was incorporated as a California corporation in March 2006, and serves as the successor entity to Christian Stanley, LLC, a California limited liability company formed June 1, 2004. The Company is a development stage enterprise as defined by Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 7, "Accounting and Reporting by Development Stage Enterprises." All losses accumulated since the inception of the Company will be considered as part of the Company's development stage activities. The Company has generated insignificant revenue.  The Company's fiscal year end is December 31.

Going concern

The Company has a history of operating losses and had an accumulated deficit of $1,879,203 at December 31, 2007.  This matter raises substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.  The financial statements do not include any adjustments that might result from this uncertainty.  Management continues to seek funding from its shareholders and other qualified investors to pursue its business plan.

Use of estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

Cash and cash equivalents

For purposes of the financial statements, the Company considers all liquid instruments purchased with original maturities of three months or less to be cash equivalents.

Automobile and equipment

Automobile and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and amortization. Expenditures for additions, renewals, and improvements are capitalized. Costs of repairs and maintenance are expensed when incurred.

Depreciation is provided using the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets, which range from three to five years.

Revenue recognition

Revenue is recognized when all four of the following criteria are met: (i) persuasive evidence that an arrangement exists; (ii) delivery of the services and or products has occurred; (iii) the selling price is both fixed and determinable and; (iv) collectibility is reasonably assured, generally which occur when the Company has completed its contractual obligations to provide its services.

 
7

 

Equity Based Compensation

The Company periodically issues shares of stock to employees and non-employees in non-capital raising transactions for services.  The Company adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standard (SFAS) No. 123R, “Accounting for Share-Based Compensation” effective January 1, 2006, and is using the modified prospective method in which compensation cost is recognized beginning with the effective date (a) based on the requirements of SFAS No. 123R for all share-based payments granted after the effective date and (b) based on the requirements of SFAS No. 123R for all awards granted to employees prior to the effective date of SFAS No. 123R that remain unvested on the effective date.

The Company accounts  for shares granted  and vesting to non-employees in accordance with EITF No. 96-18: "Accounting for Equity Instruments that are Issued to Other Than Employees for Acquiring, or in Conjunction with Selling, Goods or Services” and EITF No. 00-18 “Accounting Recognition for Certain Transactions involving Equity Instruments Granted to Other Than Employees” whereas the value of the stock compensation is based upon the measurement date as determined at either a) the date at which a performance commitment is reached, or b) at the date at which the necessary performance to earn the equity instruments is complete.

The Company has no stock options or stock warrants outstanding.
 
Income Taxes
 
The Company accounts for income taxes and related accounts under the liability method. Deferred tax liabilities and assets are determined based on the difference between the financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities using enacted rates expected to be in effect during the year in which the basis differences reverse.

Fair value of financial instruments

The carrying value of the Company's cash and cash equivalents and accrued liabilities approximate fair values due to the short-term nature of the instruments.

Comprehensive loss
 
For the years ended December 31, 2007 and 2006, the Company had no items that represent other comprehensive income or loss.

Concentration of Credit Risk

Financial instruments that are exposed to concentrations of credit risk consist principally of cash.  The Company places its cash in what it believes to be credit-worthy financial institutions.  However, cash balances may have exceeded federally insured levels at various times during the year.  The Company has not experienced any losses in such accounts and believes it is not exposed to any significant risk in cash.
 
Loss Per Share

Basic loss per share has been computed using the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. Diluted loss per share is computed based on the weighted average number of common shares and all common equivalent shares outstanding during the period in which they are dilutive. As of December 31, 2007 and 2006, there were no common equivalent shares outstanding.
 
 
8

 

Recent Accounting Pronouncements

In September 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued SFAS No. 157, Fair Value Measurements  (“SFAS No. 157) which provides enhanced guidance for using fair value to measure assets and liabilities. SFAS No. 157 provides a common definition of fair value and establishes a framework to make the measurement of fair value in generally accepted accounting principles more consistent and comparable. SFAS No. 157 also requires expanded disclosures to provide information about the extent to which fair value is used to measure assets and liabilities, the methods and assumptions used to measure fair value, and the effect of fair value measures on earnings. SFAS No. 157 is effective for financial statements issued in fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007 and to interim periods within those fiscal years.
 
In February 2007, the FASB issued SFAS Statement No. 159 The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities - Including an amendment of FASB Statement No. 115 (“SFAS 159”).  SFAS 159, which becomes effective for the Company on January 1, 2008, permits companies to choose to measure many financial instruments and certain other items at fair value and report unrealized gains and losses in earnings.  Such accounting is optional and is generally to be applied instrument by instrument.

In December 2007, the FASB issued FASB Statement No. 141 (R), Business Combinations (FAS 141(R)), which establishes accounting principles and disclosure requirements for all transactions in which a company obtains control over another business.  Statement 141 (R) applies prospectively to business combinations for which the acquisition date is on or after the beginning of the first annual reporting period beginning on or after December 15, 2008.  Earlier adoption is prohibited.

In December 2007, the FASB issued SFAS No. 160, Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements, an amendment of ARB No. 51 (“SFAS No. 160”).  SFAS No. 160 establishes accounting and reporting standards that require that the ownership interests in subsidiaries held by parties other than the parent be clearly identified, labeled, and presented in the consolidated statement of financial position within equity, but separate from the parent’s equity; the amount of consolidated net income attributable to the parent and to the noncontrolling interest be clearly identified and presented on the face of the consolidated statement of income; and changes in a parent’s ownership interest while the parent retains its controlling financial interest in its subsidiary be accounted for consistently.  SFAS No. 160 also requires that any retained noncontrolling equity investment in the former subsidiary be initially measured at fair value when a subsidiary is deconsolidated.  SFAS No. 160 also sets forth the disclosure requirements to identify and distinguish between the interests of the parent and the interests of the noncontrolling owners.  SFAS No. 160 applies to all entities that prepare consolidated financial statements, except not-for-profit organizations, but will affect only those entities that have an outstanding noncontrolling interest in one or more subsidiaries or that deconsolidate a subsidiary.  SFAS No. 160 is effective for fiscal years, and interim periods within those fiscal years, beginning on or after December 15, 2008.  Earlier adoption is prohibited.  SFAS No. 160 must be applied prospectively as of the beginning of the fiscal year in which it is initially applied, except for the presentation and disclosure requirements.  The presentation and disclosure requirements are applied retrospectively for all periods presented.

In March 2008, the FASB issued SFAS No. 161, Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities—an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133 (“SFAS No. 161”), to improve financial reporting of derivative instruments and hedging activities by requiring enhanced disclosures to enable investors to better understand their effects on an entity’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows. SFAS No. 161 applies to fiscal years and interim periods beginning after November 15, 2008.

 
9

 

The Company does not believe that the adoption of the above recent pronouncements will have a material effect on the Company’s results of operations, financial position, or cash flows.

NOTE 2   AUTOMOBILE AND EQUIPMENT

Automobile and equipment consists of the following as of:

   
December 31, 
2007
   
December 31, 
2006
 
             
Automobile
  $ 35,696     $ 49,001  
Computer equipment
    4,387       4,387  
      40,083       53,388  
                 
Less accumulated depreciation
    (25,233 )     (16,645 )
                 
    $ 14,850     $ 36,743  
 
Depreciation expense was $12,635, $10,398, and $29,280 for the years ended December 31, 2007 and 2006, and for the period June 1, 2004 (inception) to December 31, 2007, respectively.

NOTE 3     ACCRUED SALARIES, OFFICER, NET

As of December 31, 2007 and 2006, the Company had accrued a total of $700,000 and $500,000, respectively, of salary due to its Chief Executive Officer.

Also as of December 31, 2007 and 2006, the Company had made total advances of $475,368 and $348,465, respectively, to its Chief Executive Officer.

At December 31, 2007 and 2006, $224,632 and $151,535, respectively, represents the net amount due to the Company’s Chief Executive Officer.

NOTE 4     RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

During 2007, the Company paid $73,440 to four shareholders for providing various consulting services to the Company.  During 2007, the Company also paid $1,300 to a shareholder as a commission related to the Company’s private placement of its common stock.

During 2006, the Company paid $6,300 to a shareholder as commission related to the Company’s private placement of its common stock.

NOTE 5    INCOME TAXES

The Company has federal and state net operating loss carryforwards that can be used through 2019 to offset taxable income, and accordingly, has not recorded a provision for income taxes in the current year.

Significant components of the Company's deferred income tax liability at December 31, 2007 and 2006 are as follows:

 
10

 

   
December 31, 
2007
   
December 31, 
2006
 
Deferred tax assets:
           
Net operating loss carry forward
  $ 476,000     $ 340,000  
Share-based compensation
    271,000       271,000  
Total deferred tax assets
    747,000       611,000  
 Valuation allowance
    (747,000 )     (611,000 )
Net deferred income tax asset
  $ -     $ -  

In the Company’s opinion, it is uncertain whether they will generate sufficient taxable income in the future to fully utilize the net deferred tax asset.  Accordingly, a valuation allowance for the deferred tax asset has been recorded.

Reconciliation of the effective income tax rate to the U.S. statutory rate for the year ended December 31, 2007 is as follows:

Tax expense at the U.S. statutory income tax rate
    34.0 %
State tax net of federal tax benefit
    5.8 %
Net effect of net operating loss and other
    (39.8 )%
Effective income tax rate
    0.0 %

Effective January 1, 2007, the Company adopted Financial Accounting Standards Board Interpretation No. 48, “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes (“FIN 48”) - an interpretation of FASB Statement No. 109, Accounting for Income Taxes.” The Interpretation addresses the determination of whether tax benefits claimed or expected to be claimed on a tax return should be recorded in the financial statements. Under FIN 48, we may recognize the tax benefit from an uncertain tax position only if it is more likely than not that the tax position will be sustained on examination by the taxing authorities, based on the technical merits of the position. The tax benefits recognized in the financial statements from such a position should be measured based on the largest benefit that has a greater than fifty percent likelihood of being realized upon ultimate settlement. FIN 48 also provides guidance on de-recognition, classification, interest and penalties on income taxes, accounting in interim periods and requires increased disclosures. At the date of adoption, and as of December 31, 2007, the Company does not have a liability for unrecognized tax uncertainties.

NOTE   6 - - CAPITAL STOCK

The Company was capitalized on June 1, 2004 when it issued 64,000,000 shares of common stock valued at zero to its founder.

Since inception, the Company has sold a total of 11,468,500 shares of common stock in private placements to accredited investors as follows:

Sale of common stock in 2004

-500,000 shares issued at $0.007 per share for total consideration of $3,500
-650,000 shares issued at $0.03 per share for a total consideration of $20,000

 
11

 

Sale of common stock in 2005

-1,100,000 shares issued at $0.02 per share for total consideration of $23,000
-2,935,000 shares issued at $0.03 per share for total consideration of $93,000
-725,000 shares issued at $0.04 per share for total consideration of $29,000
-1,000,000 shares issued at $0.06 per share for total consideration of $60,000
-150,000 shares issued at $0.07 per share for total consideration of $10,000
-5,000 shares issued at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $5,000

Sale of common stock in 2006

-250,000 shares issued at $0.02 per share for total consideration of $5,000
-1,135,000 shares issued at $0.04 per share for total consideration of $45,000
-500,000 shares issued at $0.06 per share for total consideration of $30,000
-575,000 shares issued at $0.07 per share for total consideration of $40,000
-145,000 shares issued at $0.10 per share for total consideration of $14,000
-580,000 shares issued at $0.12 per share for total consideration of $70,000
-136,000 shares issued at $0.20 per share for total consideration of $26,666
-250,000 shares issued at $0.24 per share for total consideration of $60,000
-20,000 shares issued at $0.42 per share for total consideration of $8,334
-15,000 shares issued at $0.50 per share for total consideration of $7,500
-25,000 shares issued at $0.60 per share for total consideration of $15,000
-25,000 shares issued at $0.72 per share for total consideration of $18,000
-125,000 shares issued at $0.80 per share for total consideration of $100,000
-107,500 shares issued at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $107,500
-25,000 shares issued at $1.20 per share for total consideration of $30,000

Sale of common stock in 2007

-125,000 shares issued at $0.08 per share for total consideration of $10,000
-30,000 shares issued at $0.10 per share for total consideration of $3,000
-10,000 shares issued at $0.20 per share for total consideration of $2,000
-5,000 shares issued at $0.80 per share for total consideration of $4,000
-10,000 shares issued at $0.90 per share for total consideration of $9,000
-12,500 shares issued at $0.92 per share for total consideration of $11,560
-13,000 shares issued at $0.98 per share for total consideration of $12,700
-274,500 shares issued at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $274,500
-10,000 shares issued at $1.90 per share for total consideration of $19,000

Since inception, the Company has issued a total of 5,321,250 shares of common stock to employees and other individuals for services as follows:

Period
 
Number of 
shares
   
Fair value of 
shares
   
Average 
value per 
share
 
Year ended December 31, 2004
    4,021,250     $ 120,637     $ 0.03  
Year ended December 31, 2005
    -       -       -  
Year ended December 31, 2006
    1,300,000       556,500     $ 0.43  
Year ended December 31, 2007
    -       -       -  
Total
    5,321,250     $ 677,137     $ 0.13  

 
12

 

The value of the shares were valued based on the price of shares of the Company's common stock sold in contemporaneous private placements and were recorded as compensation expense as follows: $556,500 for the year ended December 31, 2006, and $120,637 for the year ended December 31, 2004.

Included in shares issued for services, 250,000 shares of the Company’s common stock were issued pursuant to a consulting agreement.  The consulting agreement provides for up to an additional 250,000 shares of the Company’s common stock to be issued if the Company’s shares of common stock trade below $1.00 per share for a 30 day period.  Currently, the Company shares of common stock are not listed on any stock exchange.

NOTE    7 - - COMMITMENTS

The Company leases its office facilities under a one-year, non-cancelable operating lease with a minimum rental commitment of $12,000 through December 31, 2008.

NOTE    8 – SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

During the period January 1, 2008 through March 13, 2008, the Company sold 294,000 shares of its common stock in private placements to accredited investors for total proceeds of $144,000.

NOTE    9 – EVENT (UNAUDITED) SUBSEQUENT TO THE DATE OF THE REPORT OF THE INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

In July, 2008, the California Regional Office of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") opened a formal order of investigation of the president of the Company, Mr. Daniel C.S. Powell. Although the status of such investigation and its specific nature are unclear, it appears that its principal focus is whether the private sales of the Company’s stock to date has complied with the rules and regulations governing the such private sales of securities. Depending upon its initial findings after review, the SEC may determine to expand its investigation to include the Company or to broaden the focus of the investigation to other concerns such as securities fraud. If the SEC determines that the rules governing the private sale of securities have been violated, it may impose a variety of remedies, including requiring that a recision offer be made to the purchasers of the stock, by which investors would receive back their investment funds with interest. If the SEC made a determination of fraud, it would have additional remedies available including fines and/or the temporary or permanent bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer, director or control person of a public company. The Company does not have the financial ability to complete an offer of recision to its investors and such a determination would likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue to attempt to develop operations. Similarly, the imposition of a permanent or temporary bar of Mr. Powell from acting as an officer or director of a public company would require Mr. Powell’s resignation from such offices with the Company and would also likely have a severe adverse impact on the ability of the Company to continue.

 
13

 
 
 
[Replaces cover page of Prospectus.]
PROSPECTUS
Subject to Completion, Dated ______ , 2008
 
CHRISTIAN STANLEY, INC.

16,622,750 shares of common stock offered by the holders thereof

This prospectus relates to 16,622,750 shares of common stock of Christian Stanley, Inc. (the “Company”), a California company (the “Company”), $1.00 par value per share, to be sold by the holders of such stock (the "selling shareholders"). The selling shareholders' shares offered by this Prospectus may be sold from time to time by the selling shareholders at a price of $5.00 per share until such time as the concurrent offering of up to 4,000,000 shares of the Company's common stock by the Company at $5.00 per share has been closed. After the close of such offering, the selling shareholders may offer their shares for sale in one or more transactions that may take place on the over-the-counter market including ordinary broker's transactions, privately-negotiated transactions or through sales to one or more dealers for resale of such shares as principals at market prices prevailing at the time of sale at prices related to such prevailing market prices or at negotiated prices. Usual and customary or specifically negotiated brokerage fees or commissions may be paid by the selling shareholders in connection with such sales.

No underwriting arrangements have been entered into by any of the selling shareholders. The selling shareholders and any intermediaries through whom such securities are sold may be deemed "underwriters" within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act") with respect to the securities offered and any profits realized or commissions received may be deemed underwriting compensation.

The Company will not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of the selling shareholders shares. All costs incurred in the registration of the selling shareholders shares being offered by the selling shareholders are being borne by the Company.

On the date of this Prospectus, the concurrent offering by the Company of up to 4,000,000 shares of its common stock at a price of $5.00 per share was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
 
NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES
COMMISSION HAS APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED OF THESE SECURITIES OR PASSED UPON
THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE
CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.


These securities involve a high degree of risk.
See “RISK FACTORS” contained in this prospectus beginning on page 4.

Christian Stanley
1150 Silverado Street, Suite 207
La Jolla, California 92037
858/750-6220

Prospectus dated __________________, 2008


 
[Replaces "Table of Contents” in the Prospectus.]

TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
Prospectus Summary  
Risk Factors  
The financial statements reflect a going concern footnote which indicates that the auditors for the Company are concerned that the Company may not have the resources to continue.
   
The Company is a development-stage company with no operating history of its own and as such an investor cannot assess the Company’s profitability or performance.
   
The Company is a development stage company and has a correspondingly small financial and accounting organization. Being a public company may strain the Company's resources, divert management’s attention and affect its ability to attract and retain qualified directors.
   
Although the Company has been actively soliciting business since 2004, it has not yet developed a pool of sellers of life settlement policies nor a network of institutional or private buyers of such potential life settlement policies.
   
If the Company is unable to generate sufficient cash from operations, it may find it necessary to curtail development and operational activities.
   
Every life insurance policy acquired under a life settlement transaction is different and each policy purchased is typically negotiated on an arms-length basis so it is difficult to create projections or forecasts of revenue.
   
An unanticipated increase in premiums or failure to pay premiums by the life settlement purchaser could result in a lapse and cancellation of the policy which would result in no death benefit payout. 
   
The Company will operate in markets that may change dramatically and is heavily dependent on a sufficient number of institutional purchasers committing to the industry.
   
The Company’s founder beneficially owns and will continue to own a majority of the Company’s common stock and, as a result, can exercise control over shareholder and corporate actions.
   
The Company depends on its president to manage its business effectively.
   
Investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission of the earlier sale of the Company’s shares may adversely affect the Company.
   
The Company must develop its life settlement referral network in order to create a sufficient volume of potential life settlement transactions to expand and develop its business plan.
   
The Company will depend on growth in the life settlement market in order to develop and establish itself as a life settlement broker.
   
Potential life settlement purchasers depend on the Company’s abilities to predict life expectancies and if such predictions are generally inaccurate, the Company will lose purchasers
   
Government regulation could negatively impact the business.
   
There has been no prior public market for the Shares and the lack of such a market may make resale of the stock difficult. 
   
The concurrent sales of shares by the selling shareholders may make sales of the Shares more difficult.
   
The Company does not intend to pay dividends to its stockholders, so investors will not receive any return on investment in the Company prior to selling their interest in it.
   
The Company’s stock may be considered a penny stock and any investment in the Company’s stock will be considered a high-risk investment and subject to restrictions on marketability.
   
 
Forward Looking Statement
 
Use of Proceeds
 
Determination of Offering Price
 
Dividend Policy
 
Dilution
 
Concurrent Sales
 
Selling Shareholders 
 
Plan of Distribution
 
Description of Securities
 
 
2

 
The Company  
Plan of Operation  
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations  
Management   
Legal Proceedings
 
Executive Compensation
 
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management
 
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions
 
Shares Eligible for Future Sales
 
Interest of Named Experts and Counsel
 
Experts
 
Disclosure of Commission Position of Indemnification for Securities Act Liabilities
 
Financial Statements
 
Part II
 
Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution
 
Indemnification of directors and Officers
 
Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities
 
   
Exhibits
 
Signatures
 
_________________
 
3

 

[Replaces "RISK FACTOR: The concurrent sales of shares by the selling shareholders may make
sales of the Company's Shares more difficult." in the Prospectus.]
 
The concurrent sales of shares by the Company may make sales of the Company's Shares more difficult.

Concurrently with the filing of this Registration Statement, the Company has filed a registration statement which relates to the sale by the Company of up to 4,000,000 Shares of its common stock at a price of $5.00 per share. The selling shareholders will sell their shares at the same price as the Shares offered by the Company, i.e. $5.00 per share until the close of offering made by the Company. After the close of the offering of the Shares by the Company, the selling shareholders may sell their shares at prevailing market rates or at privately negotiated prices as they may determine from time to time. For whatever reason a purchaser may determine not to purchase shares from the Company but from one or more of the selling shareholders. In addition, the sale of the shares by the Company will likely make more shares of the Company's common stock available for purchase which may have an adverse impact on the selling shareholders to sell their shares.

4

 
[Replaces "The Offering" in the Prospectus.]

The Offering

There are 113 shareholders of the Company offering up to 16,622,750 shares of common stock held by them. These shares of common stock are offered at a sales price of $5.00 until such time as the Company's concurrent offering of up to 4,000,000 shares of its common stock at $5.00 is closed. After such time, the selling shareholders may offer their shares at prevailing market prices, if any market is established, or at privately negotiated prices, in one or more transactions that may take place on the over-the-counter market including ordinary broker's transactions, privately-negotiated transactions or through sales to one or more dealers for resale of such. Usual and customary or specifically negotiated brokerage fees or commissions may be paid by the selling shareholders in connection with such sales.

Common stock outstanding before the offering
80,812,917 (1)
   
Common Stock offered by selling shareholders
16,622,750
   
Proceeds to the Company
The Company will not receive any proceeds from the sale of the shares by selling shareholders.

 
(1)
Based on number of shares outstanding as of the date of this Prospectus. After the sale of the shares offered in the Company's concurrent offering, the outstanding number of shares will be 84,812,017 assuming sale of all the shares offered by the Company.
 
5

 
[Replaces "Concurrent Sales by Selling Shareholders” in the Prospectus.]

CONCURRENT SALES

The registration statement of which this Prospectus is a part also contains a prospectus for the offer and sale by the Company of up to 4,000,000 shares of its common stock at $5.00 per share. The prospectus for the shares for sale by the Company was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission concurrently with the effective date of this Prospectus.

The selling shareholders will not participate in the Company's offering of its shares. Sales of the shares by the Company or even the potential of such sales would likely have an adverse effect on the market price of the Company’s common stock.

6

[Additional page to be added in the Prospectus.]
SELLING SHAREHOLDERS

   
Owned Prior to the Offering
 
Offered Herein
 
After the Offering (2)
 
 
 
Number Of
 
Percent
 
Number
 
Percentage
 
Name and Address
   
Shares
 
 
Of Class (1)
 
 
of Shares
 
 
of Class
 
                           
Officers, Directors, Employees,
                         
                           
Daniel C.S. Powell
   
64,000,000
   
79.2
%
 
4,000,000
   
74.3
%
1150 Silverado Street
                         
La Jolla, CA 92037
                         
                           
Omar Salem
   
4,000,000
   
4.9
%
 
500,000
   
4.3
%
1150 Silverado Street
                         
La Jolla, CA 92037
                         
                           
Mona Salem
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
6646 Murray Park Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92120
                         
                           
Sharron McCoy
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
230 Cross Rail Lane
                         
Norco, CA 92860
                         
                           
Other Selling Shareholders
                         
                           
A&M Associates
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
7113 Bridle Path Lane
                         
Hyattsville, Maryland, 20782-1006
                         
                           
Alic-land, Llc
   
83,000
   
*
   
83,000
   
0
%
43280 Business Park Drive
                         
Suite 201
                         
Temecula, CA 92590
                         
                           
Dietra Artis
   
2,500
   
*
   
2,500
       
1631 Kensington Place NE
                         
Washington, D.C. 20011
                         
                           
Jose Basso
   
5,000
   
*
   
5,000
   
0
%
2 Mulberry Lane
                         
Avon, CT 06001
                         
                           
Rafael Bautista
   
150,000
   
*
   
150,000
   
0
%
3870 Menlo Ave
                         
San Diego, CA 92105
                         
                           
Abraham Becker
   
21,250
   
*
   
21,250
   
0
%
2415 Prospect Street
                         
Berkeley, CA 94704
                         
                           
Dr. Felton Burns
   
40,000
   
*
   
40,000
   
0
%
6378 North Eighth St.
                         
Fresno, CA 93710                          
 
7

 
   
Owned Prior to the Offering
 
Offered Herein
 
After the Offering (2)
 
 
 
Number Of
 
Percent
 
Number
 
Percentage
 
Name and Address
   
Shares
 
 
Of Class (1)
 
 
of Shares
 
 
of Class
 
 
Verlene Burns
   
40,000
   
*
   
40,000
   
0
%
6378 North Eighth St.
                         
Fresno, CA 93710
                         
                           
Andrew Castagnolia Trust
   
50,000
   
*
   
50,000
   
0
%
3851 Bandini Street
                         
San Diego, CA 92110
                         
                           
Dominic Castagnola
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
3935 Bandini St.
                         
San Diego, CA 92103
                         
                           
Joseph Castagnola
   
20,000
   
*
   
20,000
   
0
%
5533 Lancaster Dr.
                         
San Diego, CA 92120
                         
                           
Judith Castagnola
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
3935 Bandini St.
                         
San Diego, CA 92103
                         
                           
Louis Castagnolia, Jr. Trust
   
70,000
   
*
   
70,000
   
0
%
P.O. Box 2610,
                         
Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067
                         
                           
Lauranne Chartier
   
7,500
   
*
   
7,500
   
0
%
2368 Torrey Pines Rd # 62,
                         
La Jolla, CA 92037
                         
                           
Carrie Chiles
   
5,000
   
*
   
5,000
   
0
%
5357 East Belmont Avenue
                         
Fresno, CA 93727
                         
                           
Diana Cronquist
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
908 9th Street
                         
Coronado, CA 92118
                         
                           
Linda Cronquist
   
75,000
   
*
   
75,000
   
0
%
1411 East Commodore Place
                         
Tempe, AZ 85283-5509
                         
                           
Rich Cronquist
   
75,000
   
*
   
75,000
   
0
%
Rich Cronquist
                         
1411 East Commodore Place
                         
Tempe, AZ 85283-5509
                         
                           
Scott Davis
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
6530 College Grove Drive
                         
Unit 61
                         
San Diego, CA 92115
                         
                           
Emanuel Dean, Sr.
   
80,000
   
*
   
80,000
   
0
%
3011 Sunny Meadows Lane
                         
San Jose, CA 95135
                         

8

 
   
Owned Prior to the Offering
 
Offered Herein
 
After the Offering (2)
 
 
 
Number Of
 
Percent
 
Number
 
Percentage
 
Name and Address
   
Shares
 
 
Of Class (1)
 
 
of Shares
 
 
of Class
 
 
Juan Durutthy
   
25,000
   
*
   
25,000
   
0
%
9375 Customhouse Plaza
                         
San Diego, CA 92154
                         
                           
Noberto Escobar
   
50,000
   
*
   
50,000
   
0
%
739 5th Ave
                         
Chula Vista, CA 91910
                         
                           
Barbara Finnestad
   
500,000
   
*
   
500,000
   
0
%
3103 Marmil Ave
                         
San Diego, CA 92139
                         
                           
David Finnestad
   
500,000
   
*
   
500,000
   
0
%
3103 Marmil Ave
                         
San Diego, CA 92139
                         
                           
Jeremy Finnestad
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
25404 South East 221st St.
                         
Maple Valley, WA 98038
                         
                           
Jimmy Finnestad
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
14301 South East 256th PL.
                         
Kent, WA 98042
                         
                           
Karen Finnestad
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
14301 South East 256th PL.
                         
Kent, WA 98042
                         
                           
Maria Finnestad
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
25404 South East 221st St.
                         
Maple Valley, WA 98038
                         
                           
Wesley Finnestad
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
3103 Marmil Ave.
                         
San Diego, CA 92139
                         
                           
John Floyd
   
625,000
   
*
   
625,000
   
0
%
2351 Heatherbrook Circle
                         
Anchorage, AK 99504
                         
                           
Mary Gregorio
   
7,500
   
*
   
7,500
   
0
%
17707 Tristania Place
                         
San Diego, CA 92127
                         
                           
Anand Gupta
   
1,018,000
   
1
%
 
18,000
   
0
%
1767 S. 21st Street
                         
El Centro, CA 92243
                         
                           
Sunita Gupta
   
12,500
   
*
   
12,500
   
0
%
1767 S. 21st Street
                         
El Centro, CA 92243
                         
                           
Rene Gutierrez
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
6530 College Grove Drive
                         
Unit 61
                         
San Diego, CA 92115
                         
 
9

 
   
Owned Prior to the Offering
 
Offered Herein
 
After the Offering (2)
 
 
 
Number Of
 
Percent
 
Number
 
Percentage
 
Name and Address
   
Shares
 
 
Of Class (1)
 
 
of Shares
 
 
of Class
 
 
Joseph W. Harrison
   
200,000
   
*
   
200,000
   
0
%
7019 Bobhird Dr.
                         
San Diego, CA 92119
                         
                           
Merna Harrison
   
75,000
   
*
   
75,000
   
0
%
4019 Bobhird Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92119
                         
                           
Rodney Heath
   
42,000
   
*
   
42,000
   
0
%
9649 Shelborne Rd
                         
Carmel, IN 46032
                         
                           
Matt Henss
   
22,000
   
*
   
22,000
   
0
%
3650 Wishbone Blvd
                         
Indianapolis, IN 46268
                         
                           
Raina Henss
   
22,000
   
*
   
22,000
   
0
%
3650 Wishbone Blvd
                         
Indianapolis, IN 46268
                         
                           
Martin Hoekstra
   
500,000
   
*
   
500,000
   
0
%
1643 South East Alder Way
                         
Toleto, OR 97391
                         
                           
Daniel Joo
   
5,000
   
*
   
5,000
   
0
%
27514 Label Ave
                         
Canyon County, CA 92351
                         
                           
Venky Kandallu
   
25,000
   
*
   
25,000
   
0
%
3106 Carver Court Lane
                         
Plano, TX 75074
                         
                           
Jennifer LaPlante
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
14835 West Watson Lane
                         
Surprise, AZ 85379
                         
                           
Javan Lewis
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
3102 West Gettysburg Ave
                         
Fresno, CA 93722
                         
                           
William Lewis
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
3102 West Gettysburg Ave
                         
Fresno, CA 93722
                         
                           
David Lo
   
15,000
   
*
   
15,000
   
0
%
18965 Plumas Circle
                         
Walnut, CA 91789
                         
                           
Carey A. Longley
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
3468 Trophy Drive
                         
La Mesa, CA 91941
                         

Jeffrey Louie
   
5,000
   
*
   
5,000
   
0
%
2351 Heatherbrook Circle
                         
Anchorage, AK 99504
                         
 
10

 
   
Owned Prior to the Offering
 
Offered Herein
 
After the Offering (2)
 
 
 
Number Of
 
Percent
 
Number
 
Percentage
 
Name and Address
   
Shares
 
 
Of Class (1)
 
 
of Shares
 
 
of Class
 

Mary Manjarrezz IRA
   
25,000
       
25,000
       
P.O. Box 208
                         
Lakeside, CA 92040
                         
                           
Brian McAbalo
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
10705 Back Plains Drive
                         
Las Vegas, NV 89134
                         
                           
Zosimo McAbalo
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
10705 Back Plains Drive
                         
Las Vegas, NV 89134
                         
                           
Michael W. McCowan
   
2,000
   
*
   
2,000
   
0
%
3971 Chippewa Crt.
                         
San Diego, CA 92117
                         
                           
Donald Mc Donald
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
1745 Alta Vista Way
                         
San Diego, CA 92109
                         
                           
Anika McKinney
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
2703 Shawn court
                         
Fort Washington, MA 20744
                         
                           
Dr. Dwayne McKinney
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
7708 Hanover Parkway
                         
#201
                         
Greenbelt, MA 20770
                         
                           
Ernest McKinney
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
2206 Sterling Ave
                         
Sanger, CA 93657
                         
                           
George McKinney
   
240,000
   
*
   
240,000
   
0
%
5825 Imperial Avenue
                         
San Diego, CA 92114
                         
                           
G. McKinney, Jr.
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
5825 Imperial Avenue
                         
San Diego, CA 92114
                         
                           
Dr. Lorenzo McKinney
   
200,000
   
*
   
200,000
   
0
%
7113 Bridle Path Lane
                         
Hyattsville, Maryland, 20782-1006
                         
                           
Markay McKinney
   
75,000
   
*
   
75,000
   
0
%
1461 Agate Creek Way
                         
Chula Vista, CA 91913-3126
                         
                           
Patrick McKinney
   
75,000
   
*
   
75,000
   
0
%
1461 Agate Creek Way
                         
Chula Vista, CA 91913-3126
                         

11

 
   
Owned Prior to the Offering
 
Offered Herein
 
After the Offering (2)
 
 
 
Number Of
 
Percent
 
Number
 
Percentage
 
Name and Address
   
Shares
 
 
Of Class (1)
 
 
of Shares
 
 
of Class
 

Traci McKinney
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
7113 Bridle Path Lane
                         
Hyattsville, Maryland
                         
20782-1006
                         
                           
Virginia McKinney
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
2206 Sterling Ave
                         
Sanger, CA 93657
                         
                           
Bill McQurine
   
2,000,000
   
2
%
 
2,000,000
   
2
%
1650 Scimitar Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92114
                         
                           
Daina McQurine
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
1650 Scimitar Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92114
                         
                           
Ryan McQurine
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
1650 Scimitar Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92114
                         
                           
Quinton McQurine
   
100,000
   
*
   
100,000
   
0
%
1650 Scimitar Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92114
                         
                           
Jenish Patel
   
25,000
   
*
   
25,000
   
0
%
3276 Roasecrans Street
                         
Suite 101
                         
San Diego, CA 92110
                         
                           
Brene Patrick
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
722 Florigen Lane
                         
Fairburn, GA, 30213
                         
                           
John & Rita Powell
   
250,000
   
*
   
250,000
   
0
%
3035 Marmil Ave
                         
San Diego, CA 92139
                         
                           
Pourdie Reyes
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
739 5th Ave
                         
Chula Vista, CA 91910
                         
                           
Josh Rodef
   
5,000
   
*
   
5,000
   
0
%
5239 Soledad Mountain Road
                         
San Diego, CA 92109
                         
                           
Jaime Ryan
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
1275 Loring St.
                         
San Diego, CA 92109-1827
                         
                           
Baljit Saini
   
25,000
   
*
   
25,000
   
0
%
22408 W. Touchstone Ct.
                         
Saugus, CA 91390
                         

12


   
Owned Prior to the Offering
 
Offered Herein
 
After the Offering (2)
 
 
 
Number Of
 
Percent
 
Number
 
Percentage
 
Name and Address
   
Shares
 
 
Of Class (1)
 
 
of Shares
 
 
of Class
 

Adel A. Salem
   
40,000
   
*
   
40,000
   
0
%
6646 Murray Park Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92120
                         
                           
Nora Salem
   
10,000
   
*
   
10,000
   
0
%
6646 Murray Park Drive
                         
San Diego, CA 92120
                         
                           
John Salts
   
500,000
   
*
   
500,000
   
0
%
662 Elsie Way
                         
Chula Vista, CA 91910
                         
                           
Dawn Salts
   
500,000
   
*
   
500,000
   
0
%
662 Elsie Way
                         
Chula Vista, CA 91910
                         
                           
Tora Shiroma
   
75,000
   
*
   
75,000
   
0
%
10705 Back Plains Drive
                         
Las Vegas, NV 89134
                         
                           
Amir Smith
   
95,000
   
*
   
95,000
   
0
%
404 Fox Lane,
                         
Carmel, IN 46032
                         
                           
Karen Smith
   
40,000
   
*
   
40,000
   
0
%
2136 Via Alta Court
                         
Benicia, CA 94510
                         
                           
Patricia A Smith
   
2,500
   
*
   
2,500
   
0
%
2200 Culbera Dr.
                         
Hillcrest Heights, MA 20757
                         
 
                         
Treci Smith
   
75,000
   
*
   
75,000
   
0
%
404 Fox Lane
                         
Carmel, IN 46032
                         
                           
William Smith
   
40,000
   
*
   
40,000
   
0
%
2136 Via Alta Court
                         
Benicia, CA 94510
                         
                           
Kulwant Sran
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
628 Giant Way
                         
San Jose, CA 95127
                         
                           
Thomas Usury
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
5912 Slater Circle
                         
Moss Point, MS 39562
                         
                           
Tiber Creek Corporation      250,000     *     250,000     0
1504 R Street, N.W.                           
Washington, D.C. 20009                           
                           
Washington Classical
                         
Christian School
   
125,000
   
*
   
125,000
   
0
%
2200 Culbera Dr.
                         
Hillcrest Heights, MA 20757
                         
                           
Mathew Weiner
   
5,000
   
*
   
5,000
   
0
%
12696 Brubaker Crt.
                         
San Diego, CA 92130
                         

(1)  
Based upon the number of shares outstanding as of the date of this prospectus, namely 80,715,914.
(2)  
Assumes sale of all shares offered.
 
13



PART II

Item 13. Other expenses of Issuance and Distribution

The following table sets forth the Company’s expenses in connection with this registration statement. All of the listed expenses are estimates, other than the filing fees payable to the Securities and Exchange Commission.
 
Registration Fees
 
$
 
State filing fees
 
$
 
Edgarizing fees
 
$
 
Transfer agent fees
 
$
 
Accounting fee
 
$
 
Legal fees
 
$
 
Printing
 
$
 

Item 14. Indemnification of Directors and Officers

The Company’s articles of incorporation includes an indemnification provision that provides that a director shall not be liable to the Company or any shareholder for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director except (i) for any breach of the director’s duty of loyalty to the Company or its shareholders or (ii) for acts or omissions not in good faith or which involve intentional misconduct of (iii) for unlawful payment of dividend or unlawful stock purchase or redemption or (iv) for any transaction from which the director derived an improper personal benefit.

The Company does not believe that such indemnification affects the capacity of such person acting as officer, director or control person of the Company.

Item 15. Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities

The Company has sold the following securities within the past three years which were not registered under the Securities Act of 1933.
 
In 2005, the Company sold the following shares of common stock for the listed consideration pursuant to an exemption from registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, as a transaction by an issuer not involving any public offering:
 
1,100,000 shares sold at $0.02 per share for total consideration of $23,000
2,935,000 shares sold at $0.03 per share for total consideration of $93,000
725,000 shares sold at $0.04 per share for total consideration of $29,000
1,000,000 shares sold at $0.06 per share for total consideration of $60,000
150,000 shares sold at $0.07 per share for total consideration of $10,000
5,000 shares sold at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $5,000
1,050,000 shares issued for services to employees and other individuals with a fair value of $525,000
 
Part II Page 1

 
In 2006, the Company sold the following shares of common stock for the listed consideration pursuant to an exemption from registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, as a transaction by an issuer not involving any public offering:

250,000 shares sold at $0.02 per share for total consideration of $5,000
1,157,000 shares sold at $0.04 per share for total consideration of $45,833
500,000 shares sold at $0.06 per share for total consideration of $30,000
575,000 shares sold at $0.07 per share for total consideration of $40,000
145,000 shares sold at $0.10 per share for total consideration of $14,000
580,000 shares sold at $0.12 per share for total consideration of $70,000
92,000 shares sold at $0.20 per share for total consideration of $18,333
250,000 shares sold at $0.24 per share for total consideration of $60,000
22,000 shares sold at $0.34 per share for total consideration of $7,500
20,000 shares sold at $0.42 per share for total consideration of $8,334
15,000 shares sold at $0.50 per share for total consideration of $7,500
25,000 shares sold at $0.60 per share for total consideration of $15,000
25,000 shares sold at $0.72 per share for total consideration of $18,000
125,000 shares sold at $0.80 per share for total consideration of $100,000
107,500 shares sold at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $107,500
25,000 shares sold at $1.20 per share for total consideration of $30,000

In 2007, the Company sold the following shares of common stock for the listed consideration pursuant to an exemption from registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, as a transaction by an issuer not involving any public offering:

125,000 shares sold at $0.08 per share for total consideration of $10,000
30,000 shares sold at $0.10 per share for total consideration of $3,000
10,000 shares sold at $0.20 per share for total consideration of $2,000
5,000 shares sold at $0.80 per share for total consideration of $4,000
10,000 shares sold at $0.90 per share for total consideration of $9,000
12,500 shares sold at $0.92 per share for total consideration of $11,560
13,000 shares sold at $0.98 per share for total consideration of $12,700
274,500 shares sold at $1.00 per share for total consideration of $274,500
10,000 shares sold at $1.90 per share for total consideration of $19,000

Item 16. Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules.
 
EXHIBITS
 
3.1
Articles of Incorporation

3.2
By-laws

5.0*
Opinion of Counsel on legality of securities being registered

23.1
Consent of Accountants

23.2*
Consent of Attorney (as part of Exhibit 5.0)
____________________
* = to be filed by amendment

Item 17. Undertakings

Undertaking Pursuant to Rule 415 Under the Securities Act of 1933
 
Part II Page 2

 
The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes:

(1).
To file, during any period in which it offers or sales securities, a post-effective amendment to this registration statement:

(i) To include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933;

(ii) To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events which, individually or together, represent a fundamental change in the information in the registration statement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or decrease in volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of securities offered would not exceed that which was registered) any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) if, in the aggregate, the changes in volume and price represent no more than a 20% change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in the “Calculation of Registration Fee” table in the effective registration statement; and

(iii) To include any additional material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the registration statement or any material change to such information in the registration statement.

(2).
That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act of 1933, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of the securities at that time to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

(3).
To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities that remain unsold at the termination of the offering.

(4).
That, for the purpose of determining liability under the Securities Act of 1933 to any purchaser in the initial distribution of securities:
 
Each prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) as part of a registration statement relating to this offering, other than registration statements relying on Rule 403B or other than prospectuses filed in reliance on Rule 430A, shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement as of the date it is first used after effectiveness. Provided, however, that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such first use, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such date of first use.

(5).
That, for the purpose of determining liability under the Securities Act of 1933 to any purchaser in the initial distribution of securities:

The undersigned registrant undertakes that in a primary offering of securities of the undersigned registrant pursuant to this registration statement, regardless of the underwriting method used to sell the securities to the purchaser, if the securities are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the following communications, the undersigned registrant will be a seller to the purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell such securities to such purchaser.:

 
i
Any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the undersigned registrant relating to this offering required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424;
 
ii.
Any free writing prospectus relating to this offering prepared by or on behalf of the undersigned registrant or used or referred to by the undersigned registrant;
 
iii.
The portion of any other free writing prospectus relating to the offering containing material information about the undersigned registrant or its securities provided by or on behalf of the undersigned registrant; and
 
iv.
Any other communication that is an offer in the offering made by the undersigned registrant to the purchaser.
 
Part II Page 3

 
SIGNATURES
 
In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all of the requirements of filing on Form S-1 and authorized this registration statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, in the City of La Jolla, State of California on December 31 , 2008.
 
Date: December 31 , 2008
 
/s/ Daniel C. S. Powell
   
Title: Chief Executive Officer (principal executive officer)
     
Date: December 31 , 2008
 
/s/ Mona Salem
   
Title: Corporate Secretary, Treasurer (Principal financial and accounting officer)
 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, this registration statement has been signed below by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
 
Signature
 
Capacity
 
Date
         
         
/s/ Daniel C. S. Powell
 
Director
  December 31 , 2008
         
/s/ Mona Salem
 
Director
  December 31 , 2008
 

EX-23.1 2 v136018_ex23-1.htm Unassociated Document

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

We hereby consent to the use in the foregoing Registration Statement on Amendment No. 1 to Form S-1 of our report dated March 13, 2008 relating to the balance sheets of balance sheets of Christian Stanley, Inc. (a development stage company) as of December 31, 2007 and 2006, and the related statements of operations, changes in stockholders' deficiency, and cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2007 and 2006, and for the period June 1, 2004 (Inception) to December 31, 2007.  We also consent to the reference to our firm under the caption “Experts” in the Prospectus.

Weinberg & Company, P.A.

Los Angeles, California
January 9, 2009
 

GRAPHIC 4 header.jpg GRAPHIC begin 644 header.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`@``9`!D``#_[``11'5C:WD``0`$````9```_^X`#D%D M;V)E`&3``````?_;`(0``0$!`0$!`0$!`0$!`0$!`0$!`0$!`0$!`0$!`0$! M`0$!`0$!`0$!`0$!`0("`@("`@("`@("`P,#`P,#`P,#`P$!`0$!`0$"`0$" M`@(!`@(#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,#`P,# M`P,#`P,#`P,#_\``$0@`EP*&`P$1``(1`0,1`?_$`'@``0`"`@(#`0`````` M```````'"`8)!0H!`P0"`0$`````````````````````$``!!`,!``(!`P," M!@$#!`,%`P0&!P$""``1"1(3%!4A,191"D%AD2(7&"1QH2/P@;$9T3(E$0$` M````````````````````_]H`#`,!``(1`Q$`/P#OX>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X' M@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X-5,Z^Q"46]=,KY8^N2O8UT=:U=D-@M] M=`2\R0$\?G;UZWZ0&J]#?^TG']-P,-7!:[]*<@%65I+.QD9F1=3:+\KNH5@@7DU459 M"D_XN3.SAV3*;2-5N@S>XPU=;+ANJ\#P/`\$=6G;]44;#W5@W19<#J:",7HX M:[F-C2P'#(T@2,.M&(D=N:D#X>/_`'Y1XIJDW1PIE593.-=-#]^!X(7O'HZ@N9XT*F70MR5M M2L6.R$=$PAZRY>%B`TO)2NVW[$(,<&7;75\0423W6W32_+*3=)193\4D]]]0 MF;3?13311/?51-377=-33;&^F^F^,;:;Z;ZYSKMIMKGYQG'],X\'Z\'&&S86 M-!RDAD9<7'P`-@[*FCAL@T$APXM@CNY?$BA-^LW9#V#-NGLHJLMOHFGIKG;; M.,8^?!`%"=DY=8PR&QJ).[JZ:NAT6#\_KM&;@-5_P!7DIZU M[1ZAG':$KZKFLZY2KC6RJ>BX>&Y7B',_0]O.2(P=*SU`USN/;/G/-W/*@MS' M@$PD#TU)9[(LOR>5AK)!(;X.Q%X'@>!X'@\9SC7&VVV<:ZZZYVVVVSC77777 M'SMMMMGXQC7&/[YSX/&F^BFFJB>^JB>^NN^BFFV-]-]-L8VUWTWUSG7;7;7/ MSC./Z9QX/UX'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>! MX'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X(BN*]:SH4(*D-FE3PT< M=,:``Z4:@-@V.9)&%&R[S1BSCE;1>6R%93+9MOO\X:_AC&N?Z^#K,_91]C'4 M_?UFD?J>^I.&77$+K69(R;LB[+!CVNC-LMNX659!?+FGZS_P!K4\+Q^-1<1KHV1;!H\-39,!00=KG73&$4M$4_G&/Z? M/@B_HSJCGWDJOAUI]$6:&K6"&92#A(0T^9FC:QZ62-)ZZ#@0(6+BSAXX0FQ;31`K(&8E\J,>/8^P?-9,8C3`BAJH1_8:Y6U:)J_CMKMCYP M%6\];U]R]2H?'?W3W+<0ON`TZM8MY(1&5-XD)>(1]G^O)I37U92L\0LU[&ME M=TT6B>&[AR[*:N5`WZG;)KN+ MEX2`D\_A4=/681A0RT*3Q>`,QT%(*"F,N_C!(RI;MT$Q^-R:?-FRF34)#DAHAQJB_P_\':> MY"[`I_L>%S.64M';7CL6KF?/:O53M>G)U2SHHX%`@1Q@:B,?GH4$5(PTF!/M M%63K#='.=-OQW22VQ^/@MGX-1_VN0`;>K[Z_.8[#<.=>>>A.YHW'.A`6JSYJ M'LN(5W1MX79$:)V+9U:AD7K-3.-7Z;;#?Y_[\XR%&?N#VY`^O\` MCM!W?RY5]6U5WU3,]KZ7417]&P%G!7%A4:5LJ$5A=T(Z!S5T=31CG+$CBTHR MQ\28,@>RN79AP\T7,95*'':@\-__*/;G$$0 MK/H*M:*$N*YXO^M:,1JLG_1>^@!OS05WB$74=3"(5A.6IQZ]G9VLTF[9N?=_ MM\_NS#_&J:SIPKG;<+11'MNB"_,,'ZWLDN4YGJ6P&:+X%KT\W%T]+=$B9!^S MB[9]'#!ARLB8FS1CJ]#C4U%23UHY1^$-5MLHZA)#[I?GT52KKHXW<=>1VB6# M%T0(VM)I,.C4,&(L2RP!Z@5+GEAR0PFTD+?<7\_G^J070U6K8C1\QC`^UIA,F>@!5".CPZ>V2#=QLX;)+(K9V6"3Z.^Q?B7I%_9PZE MNAH;,EJ3CV)/VV`Z\5U=6=+_;8+L>2A'7*E.?3MRK=A+:[;NGW3=LU36OV!"89HGNW@ M0VSTJ-8G0=&1*3;II2O"0_=A*WVB;!@043QNI@.P1$?L&XEUHJ?W&VM^-5Y2 M]!,``N<&IW%9C2P*(M"$($S*&CPHFT8O!WY0?)H248.X_H.;+:%&CIMAIA3* MJ>N0D;C+HR1]9\[0/H2049/N>$+,3)R"(5W9S\&[G"E=N"3G,`F1UH`<.FH! MS.XK^U*X&*[[N1^CK"*NV^VOY[!:3P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P M/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\'G M&?C./Z_T^@[0NCCT0#^P'F M_E`7]>=63Y`?]?7)Q^Z(&2*=!R)YTI)`-@6?]AG=;-JWE%BFV<+CE)8:PV,R MYP>D;XZ8V(/4]MG'[-T&H^@),>(:CM=0M_SMTKT1;7;O4OV.1Z$=+]@!^<.0)E"J^Z%D]*2 M..\YQZ1NEU;5O.SN3Z?F[B//V(MA&(LRA=;Q$7L_E\QW>Y)RLFR;N7+A(/9" MR/2L1K,U]AE,4-9MH]F]0FJVIV2_87;%73^=0?@NIK?V"=-3",-CFO;/?76K[!C]85)`IMI'.L+1E!1V3!\I\<3$X'?1& MHJO@SL.EK:%HOMLV;(U]DQ[!BS8Y9"T0V;?7Y279_1T]C79O-$WW'3ZS;,(1['[>2V$;2`1]9QKG5L\.- MM5T7X=KS'],8Q\YS\8QCYS\?.C-!\,B]!)E938BX[^,E)*QU"YMZYFVE1KR_112)HV;M&B>(&K)TTL95WCZ< MHRUR\QK_`%RWQOX.O7`HY]A/0_&X'D&RJ^ZRE_6K.?1^U%>Z.M8+S_SY!.7K M+ATK%32&2N`BZ3G,\>WL[K&6!E$Q(T.QV'RE@LHU*$APMWG34*7]W\L?:U%. M8['YKK7D9_U5V5UG?E2S2S/L7BMN0LQ$9Z"INT(Y:D5!SVO[';0,ES=7<94C M@T8'@;+.(`E2);Z_YO;8?JEO/[G[0GE'] M#PV57CUWT`2W(?XW3W3%]O#D+3HCF=R=);JG!T04>D3`-T\2_FL.B1'*`>N' M_6]]RYV@ZRX,NWBX20KU*S`5DO6U=V'2<,H**1NRK2(VET/8G.KZC#"NDH784KJWE M.3S(N!G7&?$]"AG#)L'MWFVNLG$IK?'1]LCE%GZDA.B8QECG;1HX5'(H*"7( M?9.?K]Z*K[K;GHS8`F]OL6Y#YMJ>56%1E6*&NLPH3=6WTQI+IC50 M6T)*C%3BY45(EF+U-I(7+IWHS:N==,NP@_J'ZTNNKIOCE%K,>9ZND_'\-&VE M:!7C/GV:0&I>R.=O(ZHQ'B-=A3Q99\DW8A)/0?TV=/27ZWQ'*%.5\WK MVK?_`"!7/^0\PPVT8(1O:T`AZ7C]K]Z5Z8Z$E68G6]P=.$8O^\7!QA%PVA8( M@OHO_(&5!XG5D',=.?5#VS:9WA<.[B^K'A_E\>\6@?U^\>VQ6,!NSMRMIC=)JV"Q'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>! MX'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>! MX'@>!X'@]>Z**NZ*BJ**JC?;.R"BB2:FZ&VV,8VV1WWUSLEG;&N/G.N_QMC./R34TQMKG^^,XQG'@\8TTQLI MOC33&ZOX_J[XTUQLK^&OX:_J;8Q\J?CK_3'S\_&/`TT333U1T33T1UT_3U1T MTUU2U3^/C\,)ZXQIC3X_I\?'QX/W\Y_U_M_;X_I\?\/Z8Q_;P/G/]_G/SX*, M=[=-N^;ZUAB`F8@*ND%RSS>LA%RS2.D97#:A01ALLGDAF;F+C]/U9S./\;AS MIC#XQIM^K(Y8\'M/TU4=E],AJ_X;^MU:[^P?_P"T+K.!3-N3@X[:*\05ST`J MYD%]"0&JRV2O4_2?\KC]O'+KLE?.%XU"A[4:&K8'^@W08-2?ZF&H=B;Y^?[^ M!X'@\_.?[_.?G_7P>/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\ M#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\ M#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\$8V==E,4DP#%+GMVL*B&2(LB!CY&SY]%8"P.G7&= M,(!0SN5%13B!@W1 MHS=FR\DD)UZ@PC$8B(`0W?&)5*Y(5<)-QH]@@N[>.%-=4M-L^#7;RAUYTWV' MT=/"<1@]8UWQ33#Z4UY*SQ?06)RX$=95D-;U(0V41F2PQ*1 MCFIY+^%9E'CEN3V8!M2_+7\OP_+7\_Q_/\/RQ^?X?/X_G^'S^7X?E_3Y^/CY M\'Z\#P/`\#P/`\'"1V31N7BDCT2D(.4@UW)!F@9CA8><$K.Q)!R)*M4B(QPZ M9J.1A1DLV<:8WSLBX2W3WQC?7;&`YOP4JZEZX&TL<`5#"G$1>W=,HN7G*KJ< MEM15949481WH(-W_`'J42>,G0J`,#SA(8&&I+-R$N/[ZCF2J":;\@/#FN47- MP&VLTET[FDSF%>G](BC5SRR(H!A$V-KB6!1"=V)F&!(Q&5X)")Z3<--H\#(8 M<$6S!C^Z7VTV??I:!;OP/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P M/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P M/`\#P/!CLOE\5KZ*26=SJ1A(="H:"*RB6RR2DV86.QJ-@F*Y,T=.%R"R#$8) M%#VRB[A=;?1-)+3.VV<8QX--MIRGCB2=:*=&7F"A'3L6N#CVH!GU]@VT7#7: MWMQB8F-B'[TC_-T4>HD(U(YM.6YZOWQEZC^&<1M)F\=NVX=B^7;AJ?DEAR9= ML3Y8C=CL*CEU-%K_`(A8UM#Y(3G->?3QQ&[L&10X?!JO++!\.;/[ON>/:NH% M7N[9NZ-BPK'.!;=(>W4=%PKY)^CYR2K'DG_U\;_X7S`$L>+Q;Z4_K4:T&6)6 MGV>?BT>W'5CTSV2MK=\?TAM`Q2P0A25!")IV/5-:,'4D(#W3IHWUP%Z^2.VX MUS)==CW%?EL!.KIMT[?-;4'=W:FZ\?H?F^NIA$-'0D[SEQDG+Y=(RUY47S24 M,$GALLQ'`QC=;#I9Z;+GGR(],+)3'_<(U=%>L&_.RW-%D!ZX=2&%!%>F[)GL M&K"M8L@;A\JMF3+60!._N9C`9,QHZ%O96`BKIMO+I"UYVR.)OAA;7`[8/L*_P"Y_H+!R;S.)2&*CV82%S@P66PQ+KG5B*"2;75V*;O"8QD["7ZP^_H3(VD( MQ:?+$CJPV,821ITA'F5D-9V8K"XWK@UBG.0ZD&CX6)>="==SD&S:&Y1%F6HA MC689=561DFJS=9#0+D_4Q]@A[[%*:F=UR9>LP"YF6K26"TY`4#I>34S2I]\; M$U6$O.P%"I:%2:Z)J-B3F2O&87]EH+$%AV-VWZ:Z#ER$._8?]S(3D"PSU%4? M3&O2EZQ%"",Y9&7,\W@(-K8UN?"E*<]0]45$9_+;(Z*MQAKL291\8)PS"QW& MQDR_8,L:95"B5K?9%>G?\A@'%-=SK_TS26%!DN_NBZ)E,=O(0!2MU:3P6*\> M\C2IQ7RLDM3H68E$7".9K'Q']X\J^)2">.H3!FKC1H@LF(';(1X1%(Z]D+QLV566_9L=%W>4EG2V-] M_P!=;(5QZW^P&N(S5X3/+-IM>@[[GA%<135#D.&ZB.6&7#_:31 M>I*_B[I71W*9G(&>P>.,$M\KXW<[MVC@-232VZ>X#D,@EG1$IA'&,I/9UF:DG$3JV`Q$`WFLN+KEC;S<4S6 M=.$0GF;?=1=M:1^K8I:=*4U65MOJ_D_0O5T\)3N52OF[C'GZ&G6`8P(,28(+ M8R+HWI,@845C[.(PSX:YE&V[+]^IJP>J8"TO,/V%=,7_`')`0)?F[6*U5-=2 MLN.O049L*J(ETBGJFSE4S!*KX0BX0G@7OE4HUPH] M#!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X' M@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X,#M&L(#=5=3 M2I;4C`^:5S8D<)Q*:10KEQJ//1XPWW:D1SA1FNU>(861WS^*B*J:R6V,;Z;Z M[8QG`5G$_7MR:R06V.UP0L4[D>*$#)O:T^L&RK"B`D#LZ_@A=;3F72SHK/S,HDL_L. M724[9HTH%GTG=36P9;)Y-=.*5NID'@69=/QJ8K M/[71#5#.=,A)_/W&G,G+0@>#HJI0L*'AHXRAH+*Y*12Y_'(6.>Y)L(5&2TV, M2,I&X8T)_P#RM!3%9NP_=_\`R,I96SE3(<,+X3Y(#4E/>=6%(1?6H[2D\YG% MC`'+R0OS4TG=E.WCV;SZ0SU^9Q5-Q!8G63`^2E;&)MZT47VKLBT9RDPZ)) M+/1;ETF_6V<:JX5^-\!UW.G^"8KT5=UD_4WPAS)_ZG4O&#]2;=!='2.K;+EI M@5&`*;>ZXY(Z2M6SS:\8AT`@9>4*BHE&XR\>$C$R+$7.C4"(#O23\-S4'^AG MZJ(97$1K=]RG'K&;P]R7(MYG:G'+79\MLSBK1$;NGG?])TR0217U533TUU"7(S MS'SK#+3)7?$J0JZ-V\6C<=ASZQ@L*`CY;M%8D'VCL;C[8NV9)N&`H/']OV** M+?*6NK/71'.,IZ::X#+[.J.K;JC7^&V[7D-LN+:OT2J(*;1X9(QS0LV1$OZT$N2-<0]ZN+K@JV=,B=?CE7(=7=E"2+-\N MBN*3SJQ5274TV2SKOMC(9U%8G%8+'A<1A$9C\-B@-OEH%C$5##H]'A#7*JB^ M6PP,);-!S!#*RNV^=$D]=<[[9S\?.!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@> M!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@> M!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X(ZM2W*TI"%D;"MJ:@8'#ABB#9%?L'YS^Q2O9?9O-A.4DXO!IUBY)M)'$9!RW]NV&JOWCE\+R&D3 M51`FCC<61UWRHP.$&C-H@JZ=NW2J;=LU M;-T]E5W#A=7;1)!!!+3.V^^V<:ZZXSG.<8QX-:D3^RZ&VE;O/\0IBJI=8U/] M!SVP()"[XP9$QP9+&E;1&2R.7VQ5<`(HK2ZQ>?XL4",Q!";JX#@EWIP;_$+& M-':.=@V9>!X'@>!X*IU?U]5UQ7;T=3T"W?Q]M7_+D9 MB+J6B;\L:3LHJVFH4>EN1(38+$'C++H+4R(1%1RW/&G@QP0TUU6;,%&*B+U4 M*;&ON+S=E;D&BM6TM&KIE=G2F":CX^S;V#(1@"HZQ7A^A9Q;@R\K MPT*8?PV%/HZUE!T8W6=IL=&^$E%0YD/]KU)D[=.4DZ!+A)G2T"(6QVJ^)R^- M;PKB>!N4B68&$N":C-R`([>$_=Z,VS>$QU0H_:+;O/UW&NC33=V%WZ0M*:VZ M+.2T]3LGJ.%N7H_:L<6`0;L[%FL9!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X(F#7W14BE16"Q^ZJD. MS8%A_DW#@UD0TG*@^!:.C@GDK'F1E!_?^F/!&]>7'4EN9D>*KLV!61_B!70'*=H++`%I#'Q MLH'1J?@1Q`@XBLDW!%V[G+1SG53**NBFGY)[:[Y#-?`\#P5YO'IVJZ!DM%P6 M9D'CRP^DK5&U'3L``)-W\JEIY5DZ.R@VB/5M-V[XIHVT%9>Z[M6Z[A9!SJ@$M_P!_Z8\$?5G:U<7+''4PJN9`YY%&>[_C545:N\[5MFAV(4AT))'$MM>G9/#B<7KY+#H3 M^P%QX,.,%6AAXB[4;MQR'@XXAVK8UELK2"53=,T`<3\8CG%>](_86M%X5+KW MZGZ!CKAD`.47R)#1<0;5R]D.LD>IB2TK:1QZW=R=VF!C0[+O&Q!L$.7[UUU1 M5%"U70#QZP+GJ&.61+EL\]\84$)U#O8E9W;M];. MDHDR>98N=6K0?L:V:[N#`K;<-SG*@+H)Q$W5I],&'8BS;3:`RV:(%EF!>" M_.G3EWRB!PR-#N!X[2U!3^Z8D]92"*Z.+HD8&1QY@ZJ^K[W,S-18$3(3(G'O MV$28,-F;O1H1*95#K@7MVO%1_(B5J+LX1^2V&X2`;L:?$'XK'7[IBK+%0O[S#)?5+&^ MZ"VN@53NW[C^9HK1^;'YO?C']?[Y^,Y^,?ZY^,9S_`/3P5PN"5F)49Q1=>GWD=.DQ6INU[#$* M(IKT[5ZV5M%WK4@KO^@,L:>Z-UV4<_/&VS+1-V7VT4T'ZH.0TT_45`=>EN=9 MA,512`GG;H+H:Y;^FP9LDLW;6`&4F+2ON;Z`&O/U5G#ZKZNYXJR+[3#Y6W_F M#CG(=555)$ZBY#L-NF#%^T4'/631ZP73PBLP=MD'#-5''Q\)*-5M-T-TM?QQ M\:YUSC'QX.C%]AKJM.BNTKE^P^$U]&J]X,^OZ8NW4TO^%ME4;>^PO[$@L;85 M+`8#S2^SN1'E9'7LC;B(H+ES0>NB((MG;]'=ZNV9;CPVW?2U]7<]K.G!E[=O M5_&8K!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>#6/VG.TYG*%*ZC&H. M\872,6.3GJ_GJ*W_`%G3T@$K2(2.,T&4Z%,S"61IS'>;R8P!*'QQM^ION4PU M9[JL28U)ZT5#J?S6^+BL^$UG?G8L#KVK^!&O:D0+\L61SM74H?-)_(P4R'D2 MLKHJE(="&=HV!$`L-A"\2K-Z;8QV+D6!4K*"R!DDH''X#L>@?]PG]:\OEH^) MPN;6I-52\+C\L$FXG4$K.1XV;EJR`B+55%WK/3=S-+=D,X=IQEF#"H$%5Y#J MX::[_#`BHS"&[K^]ZOL.0S"S MI>R&52O%Z=.Q\-;];'7^W\7T#7C&229X07Y[%LWK-JI+GZS-F;=[X4$I.=%M M$M`VES6Z*\1CLVGD5BIV5:,%FK9]O&Q)XJP?G-&3A M^@FKEJFKA/=9/7;XSOKC(==3O[[(][AVMZI6EE!.?N)*SGP6LK2Z9JXR6N:T M.Q+2+%\L!7#?)\)C24!W-2V0*91UGI42:+,@S5;(1PLFHJ3V9A'$&^^#ZT.% MC=CU'&X?T[=$P,2B,ECN`YSJW_`'.7-L;'.$>1C`*;SB/SG,4&"[<8LHW5=QJ- M(L;5LY^,L\3-5C->5_SDY4;%CLE<`GS&4+,=PT>_>[.%"#0*V0G_`'7%<5YS M)&`5A0N27QV2]=[@\R9+:K*7Y]D92=N5GE8SY?9_,\3V%U"HX*)CMVRX%Q)F M#`0X<$DM5-M5EPVX6UUK(OJH^M]SU9TI:DGZLZ$O`_%"0]4VX)5[4CZ^+FC[ M;,"JV"AY*V#M.<^;HB@,U1_5)-TB2#-LY(E,.2[EQC<-M;D_P#KDZIN MO:6M!M\4(7JNVF_24@HB1[<,2R'6'U'%(\0J&OW`)NK.TH5"ZX*-(V4#4KV=T'2+^73"#NJ^ZT+=-4$L@+I2*T*PD4.L6^ MW=O04,:+QJHIJ$5>(,JO>ZX8#97+RW\*'C3]AOO_`"**K/?;`:**R[;[;XW$ M7GS[7O!MD-;^L68MZXF'38>G[3G]>5I>;G"J`4-7,-C4".K3GF3F&D!KH-7J M*[K)"PY*&W(*)YTD#Q]N'/I;J+ MHH/9F=4)!89YP(HTE&)UU=)+&;D"%1T-AXS#,8F^QMANT;!F/1OW=_:& M\CI2G:-^OZ01#I&-V!5)VP).``3*ZH9"Z=MXL&?4O#UXP'B#ZR8W:%NLQYU` MJK*(P"6CT:8X,(C5'!(8WU"TE1_>%T;T#WI:?&]2\*S!X*JR<0*'32;.F$O- MK5KEBDN8MG>S"@%G_P"+8\=D3)=B-B`YQ(V>C9THZ>%G6FC3#)P&\2U^@W%5 MV!#H)I1][6*A,8G+Y$C,ZSA3>31`.9C;@,U$0(V1V+LEAM$M,;9#31UU1W64DZ)K3H=2JYU/%:!Y\Z4O>Y`E=.-EC\QE<]B#JM MN?N&>796W::D6TA3B6TJ;2B1M&2FC3$F=%,?IOB(G0>$6_\`]A?W-B:T@L2I M'ZI![27J2`+``8F35]8E>5/%H["]$04@=90<2D<0C,6E$DD`T9$UGG[-HRC8 M5T>(;ZX=K#`88W9%_P#WC]4T'$;'?YV#&.V#T!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>"&>A MT;Z=4E9+/EY>MF70#^-.A]6$[?<&V];!),0419I2&5:1P+(#!!E'FJZKU-DD MUVU?N$$VRFZ*:NZV@:XP?UW6=S3RN`@G*5E.GG1INWX==75-ODI,'I^;==R- MD@_WF`8U9+*IK?1J>).BKAIH($BHTNQ$QL=@&RU9IN57FH<$7^N/HJUQG3'0 MEW]!B%.]+AY[LR@>>RL`5D#"@N'8//!^R#F,47H0':2TA*)B09,7$JG[YAI( M'ZC='5FT9-&J+/8)OYNX%1A\3JH7=#:!"(Q1L=;1[G?F&A%Y.%Y[YO3;!7`/ M26@3Q74-/+26F&DY*Z-<8=RCI?I.W7,V5L.ZKE`[I(BX8[?DU\1T9A937? M=TOC9`-K?0U2F+OHBTZ9C-ISJD#5B08S#A%M5L^V93V`.BC3+5"11LALLBZ1 M),\?T_427;NOPVVRDX06_!;0-?*7(7?=@5E&N<;"ZZBE&T'%HD(@!F2:)WR\I*;$C,1G%,2&DMIJ&FIQ[:H M,$?A[J&9DK"P9$Z-2$A.&+)S^YU*$%G;E=YK^JOLKMMOG8*`UYP'U]"Z4K_E M49W@,JCGBN8VRA3$GS=03N#]('HBQ11;_P`@IM,7 M]I;RAXZ M&KA[&`5!I6'HAM7LM8UR12C$#%#T!,=K$'JY3CS%LZ M>KN\A6&8_P"WIH&8)])MW=]W5OKT?9&MDRLT:Y+0DKTC M8%N4XF-&?P"0'4@#RJ`6R@]BAZX+*P%QM#G(DL]".W:;@BHZ?D'CL-A?-M M86O5L;G@^VK7_P#)KV36S-I;!!#($)"1FEZF?*L1E<4?#]QXH21.@H-&Q"6V MY(GJH0=OW;G.V_Z6$==0Q;H3D.$=!V!3-KE9%(8M8]!N9.[J^2"V<9D*$3(R M_`1,O)P\;FP21Q=M.6K4%HW8%E&:ZC1LY?F$AG MX`-:P(X"L6PQLH67N&5[2UBD&F4B)6"6;D">9A(0&-V.A+37546WREH.PTT: MM-$`Y=OSW$HQ!*0JVH#4FH*MJ'/PE[&(13N\>``#D+@@I\)&U')VQB/2#=:M MBB;E%0@@RW8DG*C1//[S3&RN%`Y2_*::7_69JIB\YG\#BLM5:,9LZK,VA%Y5 M)H9E3/\`D4$3EFK%V;BPB9,.01)6>'BBW\0$?O%%DP#5P]6 M9))O'R[GP3XZK##JY@URYL.TF^P:N#E<8JMK+]D:8)X.2,-(MIV9@F&.=2%D M"LAL,6)3+G&6PYRX0PGG]7;;P2AX'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>"K%L M#45WRR;E4 MWB+3&^V$M=,;;8R$VF:OKB1/H`2/02)F'M4D%BU9K$0(UUB`E7$??1-0G$4E MF^R`!_\`XN4;>=H@[BA"*4-349?P3+[:#O@-90L2\AV2F[+6M3]6V<["(K-@SJPZ^B4UW6WT2SIKLJ@GOG&=M-<.>4!NP9O0M+HA]W35]N)1J MR#)C=GK$M_/,GFS'0%AKETS.?_-24SI^:;O_`/-KG"G_`'>#[%*!HE;5_HM2 M=1JZDR8PV3U4K6&;ZD#(0N3D`8N_UV"YP[)B#QIX^:N%/R5;O':RVFVJBN^V MP<8MS1S@X0RU<<^T@NVS(R\QRW6J>!*H9ET@2:B&Q!J7;"I;'Q, MD&MRK'"N&1-!B9:/6J1%GA??"2^NF%4\;[?CMCYSX/3_`(!`_P##_P#Q[_A, M0_P']E_&_P"#?XT%_P`/_COUOW'[#_&?V7\+^R_GZBRNB"*>-M]M=?S664UTU MQ_?;;;&,?USX/W\[?ZY__P`?\_\`]O!0^N^$8S4G+EU<^5W:]D`[`Z"?6O,[ M6ZB7V`.[ME]QW!^XQ([;+.D!;`!L=&--FHX4U;MFS04&&LV+35%)LEG4)!XR MX_I7B"D1U)T@.SJ(U/'Y9-98_P!1>THLBRI"\_5E\YF3L,R'#ESY%VWT;ZHH M((-!K)JW8-446K5%'0+7?/@?/_V_MX'S_P#K_P"W_P#'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@ M>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@\_&?],_T_OX/'QX'@>!X'@>!X'@>#A)#)8Y$1+D] M+)`#BX)EC\GAJ1%F`02TU_';;\G)$FX:LT,?CKG/SMOC^F,^#UQB5Q:;!6N=MMMLXUUUQG.<_'@Q6%V# M`;)%NCE=3F'3\*Q+/P+XO"9,%E0MD=%;::%`KL@">OVC!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X-2WVCW3<%.- MZ>=L'/0,;YM*_P"<8N"2\F1V,R;H656(S3CBE-TR%='\N7U7U_.$]SK\]+13 M%V0::AD&>'`Q)VH\\&MOZYY[8?8KDK9+^V.X>2^9=*<&V76=FF.N$Y1'+_8; M2PB*G=GC0W7#BVKIC%>C#:&1X]=07'&:@[5`NLIIDZ.'#0W,4EV?`+1G,QC\ M'D$7(\Y4_&3<:<=+SNQAC+>X+,KPBR#V1I5[1VW:-IW7=2)IY;2ZM__8"25=2I@2F]-/*CB='0RAK)!R9=H-KX:E,[4L*> MM-]XF%$'UT4E==1@O`6"H%CR)1,=B%M37[0S-IHB)7+1I&16#WM_)4,^L5Z% M=GC\%&1TY99$(L)@4>*X5$@"9$J\&#$&SIVHYC-A1N;3F#UU'&XYP6E1>OX>_.3;4.SWH4"><%X]'F+,PN@,8;;OEVZRJ:&0OA%^D.>)Q8Q:GX3>].3&V0"4F M6/5E%++ALBGP)*%E!(.7[&HB',O#PG_%S1YDT(?N$$\M'+I-)7\=]\:Y":/` M\#P8A84\BM60&;V=.RR`&$5U$9).I@<=9^&P>+Q(.\/'B:^)'84L>,R+=9 MN"1636#$*)^PK[#H&QZIZN[5B88/0SAJM`>).?P4;%@I5T/T#*)2H,I:LZ(: MN!J=GS)":-FZ;?8R257#9HW357W3TW#2Y MT/\`8;TY2IF5R`GT-8$4:7@4#-Z;Y]GG-<`96U4$.F4G,EX*JU6CT2)MA5]7 MF%CF(S7<,G3]XX$L=C4RE*>J`=R!8ABK<82.A*FG'3'^!B;)B]LS^P+Y MY:+T]*I+'S]<"I,?FS")P*:5=;S73F&AUHQ_BQL\5;Z20G*SH9MIKLKL]1U# M,>I^XYJ]LJF>3>3Y+&0F MN@9I+A973<+:S"$'1V@5S4USW4 MUC5?A&)3[KYNQ:/X!3U/Q="%-;TOJ4\WA(F06MZ;X5:1-U)BZS(4U;A1+A_X M%0]+?8;7`DQSW?MNE]+3DY2)678Y6Y]8C`+6L;+[, MZ7D$:+&W&6[)>`5?#,8+.$OQ<-M-`["W-L7M*&4=74=NR3JR^U6@59W-2ZI+ M^!X'@>! MX'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X(\M9K:3Z`2%C2Q:%`++>IL&<;/V&,+FXF`PZ*,4#!U^" M!NAY`^\#`5'3EBP_X M1A572>42ZJ[7:P#G>$D!2\NZ[JZAH=AOOITM=LA.NX;7\/3`1.)CR+%!)YK( M'*;]ZW"3OKNZL[$[0N24R.N"QJ*APNAZDN-ZW+SJ46I5/.O-42*.(?9?=_3\ MQ2..O_:"[[9E(=S'*V%D2VS(T0$EGS+\0R#LUN'9_H^E0U&0[>,#Y?9-B&"9 M#8],;$MJ;%IU.YO*%V;1D]D!A^^W1#A=7"+)/5$4$9"@0Y+7"+%BV1UU3P%5 M^R>J;$AD_J7D#E1A&I-V/T)H\/"W$J'$#\"YSH2,OVS6R>G;B$!WHUVXC@7= M;4-%A"CP?M*Y<\;,4U]$$7ZS<+GDK'A$7 M,(`W"*S4F)8ZX4URV!:R!ENXQ^?PGAUIC'SX,\\'YVVUTUSMOMKIKCX^=M]L M:ZX^<_&/G;;.,8^SZBZJL+H&&4BWE4NBW.4U95A+;K0'BL4W*[33 M:+.YG7M:R9(TL4F)JL/_`(R$@IC1[\D MJBZ<)#V3I\J@Q;[NGJZ;1!1QNBS:IXRHY=*ZIYU33U_[M]\XQC^N?!UIZJ7K M^X:"K_['^X8Y'.P.M.KG;F3<"<5GG8R:5[30JN2`8T(*+N&C(9A/MEG*2>V/PUU1UWW45S MJGIC;?;77(:&ZIN+H/[97IFW4N?9VWYD4AHEHS#@QC-IIE79+ M==4+*8_KG&/]<^#KEBOMLO:RNNZJ)N'[,,PF7V)6-/I?-*AIA_5<$!IJDL#(@QW0_DDWQ)=,5N'!PW[!^C[!'4#RM5 MT.B$F[LDM2Q^W^J9;88$I'ZAXBJ61HJE(A+>D(M&RZ+M&_I_&56N1E9L2@U= MR2U?.5W0P0UT74#ZQ'V"W7&Z7@86+@67471G3M^6A`.*MR@MM4L;L2BH-NQ_ MR+KJY-(RV,)0/F^!9R]()$V395Y(`#J/)M=%7YI-;(6EX'ORSKY3OE>66-`K MP@M;6..K:)7G6D$5K^`6#/@)K9@I+IIM(JUK.:/4XZR,;/G2KDNP*- M]W#C]KA3P;"?`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\&KNP?K7,VQ);TCMC=F=,2 M/ECHBPB%C65S/_.#&&"FI@!&8X8IH?<+1"/[AE5M7KE)8B MJW7615"C'3'^VZYBZ=M.P[5DG0_1\0(3!P@PC4M:Z&P2/P:-4S$1 MAFO2NK2I82WB[)T%"Z91:,G:6KC.JKQ-%VD$E9_V\W$1:0G"LZE%VV`"+1VM MH"QA1Z31NDU?UM7K_#L-E(?BZJX[R"WXKCIZR(W53.OQ];C3$6E MRD3G(6/BD6"#!..&(NR#C8PBW;C4DL,QS)J.RW_-++?.BJN-PK]<7U5TMT8P MF+OH"U+VL^QII&X[`5;6=GX-'I%$JK#3,#-C=35U%HY7XZLH5`K0(QIHWFB3 M<'L]EK!+5H3^O>N(G_`(F, MF?41-)Q:E4VR9+$K1BC4G)RE/ZX6BT7EFL?K<(-E,+V,[;E=VA!NY7;F%-W[ M1=L\W47W#X85_MB/K>B9$H\-F^E[08OXM-@+(%9EKAS`T%(9S+'!8 M-'I(I9+.3;M'29%T_<8=;BV6'R;S#=/&`M9QU]('"'#EU`;[I&/6)K/HK6XR MMHVK)9QLY&,6Z;",;DJ6*WI6LFJ><;D\0^8IBVDD;"7+=LN6#L#8PR]C[S9TT?-UP-.2-AJFS1%5-OME/P8.:\"[X:Q_*C_`&P#133U8X;X M23_`.;J+A'GBFY\.LX.#D,NFD4;R035A.R).1FK:D(O+7>SV0QFFPY+.`\&T M/+[[_P`J8104DQ[&^W\L3?9S\^"S$M@$'GNT7VF\1CLN_P`)EPF?1'21B&1A M*.3<`D]2`RT0B_1729R$'_(+;LG>FN%FJNV%$MM5-==L![R\)AY^1Q*7G8N! M,RF`JFW$'D!06S?%X@ZD@O8&?>1I\Y247"OC`111DX7;Y354:*J(YV_354UV M#$:^HNF:G+R>05G5D"@AZ:.UGDK-Q:+B`Q<\JN0>%MTB)%DU2>+L=2I)RZT; M?GALDX"S(46.A7^)9H;?IIM\*_I M:IXUUQK^.NN,!G7@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>"OO2G1<4YHKAS-C@.4 M3N4%'7^.U=4%>BU#]FW+8CQJX6`5[`02./ER5*J(9VG55JSBSOY]Z(,_;C]C(IB-Z;O(6FY/TU]2G`)I!R`+5%4$GURF MR?VS,X7HI%!VC%PF6E"RA5\DJU8-G91X%2P?7?0?*+W7A7ZU1EA?:;]@EAV;M;E2T#U1=;6J:4K:M^-ZK'UA8\4KZWNH>DW3R(&;([GG MT.%1&DYD:J>N`NIPI'HWLE%(::-N1[=THX&N3+0,-Y9M'[.^0)']D'6\[:6; MUG>9?=M5AZ()B]0-Z[IV4W//[)A,#<=2=-=5[(O6<84CT3C3YMO84L5>.#Q1U'0S9-4B%"$LLN81S(*-,' MKI8.T.;?QNZX8S<\Q^V2R:*H3CGH[_VZLRFNLQ$QG'85]A^57%5<*B, MA5Y.X_JN)5J-,11[(F3EN/9V%8C4.6DYW!`PUT&BAR6[P,JX^5[_`*PA(3K; ME/DUQS)1-?$SEC3OBR%U>2YTJ1I3PFO)I!H=6#'^T>N#_`"#"XK,@?*G3/4^DA//1!,1S3"ATX+PIFQ$KD]34 MI&+&F!=-@572U9,LLVKO&[U375;9NGG]3P:(^AK)DM[,2%7<+?6[UCP(KT^! M6==9]G+<'%JZOX=7AE[^M*:CI-E"PK_]]?EE8W535DE*$&1PA6&;/"-+>H0Q M<45CP0*_L*?<]0>Y(E/[.K./.'^&I`B-DC./Z9("&[QLJ5'Z.&R/YKK:)J!$ M5$P?I^TNEJVMZ0#[9'VC7M;6''(6-0:YT$4^I:4=DD`=V1+GKO\`3;/#B.!(QFU< M[[_+E5IG4*<7SR;9DCXILP?27.Q^J+_Z*D-9Q+H5^%N>'RSL64\Y.Y[&DKH$ MI=%RT^QC2UM$JQR89CF:DI5CX?9YON/=_JZI)^#B)WPST0>YVE1F`!(+2%IT MW2,EK+ZY.8ZJ.M<5QR2Y+1;>%Z6FXDI3`J)SOJ;6*O7:`L]Z[AE(4/SY&]3',')IH^C8SF37P+T=2"/W_V_-X\I MO';.F[2R[&E(1^E;]"CJWKV3.W5I M]E;K3D?8'0'?O3F.W8?6M=]MNH76R$7!22O[XM:@YG)83.;SJ`O8H:>*!X'@>!X' M@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@C=( MU%YKS+HI+,2BXLD2SQR1$BQ3M&.RV..AS?$2%#I3,$T$`HIVY=G3@)18WLV& MC=1RY<-BW@XY\8$C'`EH2*C1SH^1V#@FS]\U9KFBV@X@8W%B47"J:A(CJ)$N MG64$<;JX;-E5?Q_!/?;`83!;AJBST6[BN;(A$X1>9E7[%2+R429P12@\GWA< MP>#<,72VQ$=&I=ID:\=(84;H/OA';?&^<:Y"1_CX_OX.&D$1LEP[^I-&TAM&2@I:A*S8H4)?H1"9`9'N2%1`25FLS3 M;8'1!)F<,-XM^L5/KQ]VN-$N0V[>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X M'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@_.=--M]%-M-,J)_E^GOG77.Z?YX_'?]/?./RT_/7^F? MCX^<>#]8QC'S\8QC\L_EM\8QC\MOC&OSM\?WS^.N,?U_X8\'G\L_ZY\#YS_K MG_KX'SG_`%S_`-?!@EH9L7-:S_%0_P"-_P#E;,-DN*V_S)1VE$L3K(AYB+;2 M11B@Y>:A-364#5_P`=_6,RK3I,YW;TD086/U:2ASBO8$X< M&'D\TJ&&$WCM_*2BM@'@X(C-[?L=R\W_`)SP/G_`._]_`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P M/`\#P/!I;^QV3_="K1#Z[JTKUK1C<(!+3ZURB&@"VG M+QI'HZP"Q\:ST(-1+]UJ[D/[W75RF-4'.PI@T,_[HQ(M,)"8AG)S]C*8:TWC M%>1@Y5PDE#;YNPE,@5.EYY*Z/`@T`*:Q#]`$^)'W)+*9QL.;M'`;"> M/.YG5_B!CUH7E? MO3KZ.H#&DJY:B8N+"2,XK>FZV%US7M$CY2+T),PO-D@&#*ID,MC'.K(>/8Z# M'$<=ZR+.R!0+A+]@J'+Q*A_OPF4*=!K`ZYJFH)V>D`",ZSZ)@:ZL,?!( MZQ=.K'DUJ,(.ZJJ-,9(_/G\:PYI'%G>FK2/?MM=G>7*#\T6#'+=X[^XSH&'' MZUN6YZ3D$)-W'!8#(ZS%)H;/B`5S$\?_`'[TA4E)Q/GZKGF0F,GI$7W8ZL42X]DNJIL$1@>*/]R^_#V.56ZTYK MJXO8#BN(&*K2$V6?"UI4%3-U'!:Q5*'$1OG78+5<@U28"X^&>+,Y$6'BM7BJ M;I1\MA]L%M(+P[]VD=YSN^7R7[%0=5SRI-K@D7-;"4LK$E]:1MAH%0D#B7FXLSV#,!`DZ?;BT2;C]JQ+/_S3 M'[N<)[[8##.NNY:/X^AVA*8F4YC:$D-C834]`0=\/+W!;ED2!/\`*/0Z+11% M94BW363S^[(E'*28X,*26?.U-$$LYR%:DNHNHZSW93^[(T,?O+,'*5U07+43 M#)@)IY!!@0=LQSAX/;NOSU265;H;J)XQMLG MIG.=0/6H8=A5VS+;-0N^B[:N-UDF[ILNHWV_%PFB MNDJHAMA15'.J^B>^VR6V%4-]?C;&,_EIMC^^,^#Z/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P M/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/!@%GS,Y7\*+2N.5C.[B+C=V&K6O:U7@K:8F\/"# M5DNH+6LB:5[#M-!B#C9TO^Z+-LY01WPEA17\$MPIT2[,Z`;ZYR+^K_MLIO\` MMEE,:JR[AP;C+K1=IH@USNOV"KC71=!593*OQ\:91QKG&<[XS@/LQU)UMG&, MY^L;H3&4M.-Y:F]T?;/EAF]/6)/DQNH;9JEJKA_EKE7]SIE']3&JGX!._@>!X' M@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@@2/=0T!+7$,:QF MT8T><61-9I7]!X'@>!X&/^?]O!K]"4%UI)Q99>_P"Y:IL>15Y*K+G'/30'!B49 MASV;$'IY_2$GNL.VVTR3:4D@3;,QHICAQC9RSU,N7CPIHRW8AUM^C^&^M>9+ M+H/A+ZZ^D+`DUA.*5K&*/(\W5K<@-E1R$E1ESG MX4P6C0I4S)Y$V0D%ZN#DKLF46&0<(ID"KS`\?%4D!35DBTRNU5#]BL"$A)]+G;L@\1'+226N%BLH*;-(F@)$-A;=RP MC`4:&:-1(IGIHNHY#FNE^'G%O73#K[K*10*O;&$P>65F?/2"`.S;Q2-S,Y!C MI@\*(Q.1P>1.#[O6NQPLBU=$?V9D#KN,<;Z,5G:#L*56/]+4HF\RT+LNV;=8 MQ7^(J>%+"23$FK+=:PA@YZ4L>O([-(S-(GI6D3NVVE6LJD[")#P")C4:T"., MY#-6S1`/GM?Z-D[8%SML^[NZMC;RV$B42MEL!E9;2)V#3XD+HRK.LB`)23:E M@6@&Q.F>0"%&<=J\IP"ZI-%B3:KW->Q* MU8C%(M&W5:DE(>C%VLOKV%ZHD10MZV)H['-D7SHCE0PY7WPKJCLD@B$=V9]? M*%[T7850WE>4ZF\@MV)1.I;%LD<,8@#7_@(6>`/Y[3T!:J/2Z\):W.#"JLY2 MEU5J(E+=<76U=0>`Q9D&HJ. M"``&)U=&ZU>*'_V!:MFC3+8T67,Z?@4Q^ZV"):Q_P!KK0%3')+* MH?UOT@$F$HH"SZ6=38+N&'S485L3^8#HS*.RI=P1-1YL+@SUN'>,&:J+PQKJ M^57(ZX+$$50GD[_MV^8#"L,PWMNVP85B';I63``FXP34\YELZ)7,)](R@VSIXT=OR1>RWT%W(;P^/20P^)K:Z)#FR+,!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@KCT!UKS_P`Q9A[&X)^W#RZR M2+@+5M8QT.>GEO6L<:IZ*N1%9U1"!D@G\V=M-5=,N=V`]9NRTWPHY412^=\! M-L2D&\KBX"3*1^1Q78^)9%LQN7L$!4H"?O4-%\#3XUL\((#RS7&_XKHZK*?I M;XSKG/SC/@R'X_X_\/!Y^,_Z9\$1QR[(+*[GM&APBQ9U.J)0.YV_;.Y'EK7SMV[9:X_4:LW3-7;_M"6_`^/C^_@\_&?],_ M]/`^,X_OC/@8QG/]L>#\[9UUSKKMMKKMMM^.N,[8QG?;&NV^==<9S\[9QIKG M/]/^&/GP>ETZ:L6ZKM\Y;LFJ&-=EG+M9)LW1QMMKIKE59;;1-/&V^V,8^&8/2I=^R%"QK99Z1)DG:#$>P9MD]E7#MZ]=*)-FK9!+7.VZBFV MNFNN,YSG&/![V[A!V@@Z:KHN6KE%)PV!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@B2\KFC- M`5J:M*7B)D=!`WT<'.1D"C#V725=>42,5&&"C<0QRGG5@T?%TUGCI91)LS:: M*+J[ZII[9\'7Q^W#ISHJ[G[?F"G:DZ12YIWHRR.E^GS]:0R=12=6]S]72!7] MA4`>Q&8=1[63/HD]'W0?0N+-JZC>4N<`,";V)#^1>)8JA3!L*4KFGH+L+2=X;N@0Z: MS=RLXW*/6[-8B,##;B[T^S:TY,>LT2(ZQJ^O;'IA.4BZ>JKG*6M"\"J&Q++3 M%U17<*LIZ7;QO3I66X:)YM6TS"+:/U4`1V8Q?#HPXW=.PO\`RG[KNJ:L8-)+ M/?JAZ&TJN.BPT0FTOC!.;2B3LK[D%?R68Q2JQ-?KU0C,R``EEJ%;OY8XURT$ MK%/VSM'^4SH/W#<5Q':]RWARU3]I]!UV2JBY)C'-BT\@).$&:YWC9==^\VU& M,XC)9+*92P&L6F4T$%R:[9\0U3_=J,F'Z^&:(6J\#P/`\#P?G">F-]U-4],* MJ:II[J8TUPHIHEE39+3??&/SWT3V5VSKC.?C&=L_']\^"A*/V+\]%;%6C`&4 M1O:L@-E6>`N`9LVN8[,8O79Z>0\-/ILF\6A\))R,2REV/GYQ\>#'XQ>]*35.P5H?;%>RI"J'#]I9;B.RP*:;P= MR*1=KE$9(N.>.$1B@S`YSHXPIMC]!9JNEO\`BHBKIJ&05C-T+-KB!6.T%O@C M.?0^.3)B()[);D1["3"6IEBV??H9RGJ[T:/-/U-Y2VVQNW6QH$,:=W\;*B`IU+I2HU14AF1^`!G24M8*Y?RJ*+"T94Q2;)[;.M M&<7R=8[DGV^FK!BB^;*KK)IKI;[A8R:32)US%3\YGDB$1*'Q8:X,2&1GGJ(\ M2(&M=?R59F\C$@$L7 M+IQ9ZJ0?"V;1+>1M0JK]BAMOAPZ$*M2*6FS!ZS<+A/O@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@> M!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X*I]M]1#.-^8K/O]U>\/QAB'`5K6@G934W:MQV!(14 M"I^K@OZ*+EQJ1GUCR0:,PIHDKENFXW6SKG1/;P:"NH:YNKZZN0GG5C8" M@4%6AVIVA)YU+93,X!%#"YQDC_CS500ZD+R.)I-6`Y^Z>-VX2U$K;O\`J*,] MM]A5SVB6MAA4W/%F\_0"_P#KFW,1/G'M'O\`*RD;+#Y[G*FUS[&HH72?.#R) MN8;#V\79I?Y2:+%F.[PBF.V?N`P[ZM93TQ03CI7[0N[)9?U'<8Q&A#FQTCUA M.IP&(_'X5SI2;K&6K-RB]K2@ MHA'VY-%9/170^N1SOKC??;Y"NWW771:\4Y)7LZDY21D'/E:3:1,>Q4Z(MAC" M+<="Q*3>.1RMFD^"D&IN%Q+>RRS5.?:@R(N8:BD<,6CABF[>/F@5PCG4-E?6 MGPUU!5:0%>Y^NZ5KBQ>AK!A]6.-'_-W&9RV0:KCGVC'<\LH^Q6DQXL]0'/$8 MN(P5/'B9-V]28M!Q!AON&3LZUVYOBCRCKDF5I6#VGW/15^NFDZ"YK M#78UBG4C*V9>D)W#@8O'9_)&PZ,1PGO(VKT$R7U32PFX>GFR04!/?8E34GOF M/-.?+K&5-47/=0V!`^,X$^CD[TTJ6AP=;,2?2?VM6L.FPG4O-@PFL-'D.HP" M]R0S-BS]9YG]5(FZ59!.1L!99-_HSD:FH<*BG^WD9M()7BXRU^E155K6C M"W:,WF%8-&/!GUZV9LI*XESK1;--**".[_L9!*JK!9[:VX-%!R-CA;"C$2\V MU!"DEY`X*DV`;\:7JT'1]/U93$9=/WT=J>O(;7`-\4V2W)/14+CX^/,7C_+= M-%MJ[=-Q^JBFJ6B:.FVV=4]--,:ZX"3/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\#P/`\# MP/`\#P/`\#Y^/[>#S\Y_US_U\#YS_KG_`*Y\#YS_`*Y_Z^!\Y_US_P!?!X\# MP/`\#P/!3WN=Y8KN@GE;5,6D<8GU]SBO*!&SJ*M"*YNMX]:OECA))"'#><:!B]VQSG*P!-=(=H]-]% MOE0]@6_7-=@L(1WCSG""#W.J`FO"V2C@=)I2UQH#U!."#88^.D'^"0T-K?>\ M6ZAE/.,KBG)*\;:3,J-=!2(1RU=,Y%)0#]ID8WAT)EB$]KP?5F#;UPDV+RC+ MAV0C\>R]=B&:Y=-CC`:II_\`6=TFO4]4Y"K0`)S658#JNPL"WXDG'4\Y)6 M_P!#T*G3%IUD-&@Z?#326PZTZ9G;N#RZ1RRN9E>(^G[$CTPO%SM)C>9&7'/, M0IEJ7V_;;)%-$DWW@R7JOE/K_J^QHW7]GRO=7FR)2_G>QB@JJY5M4L5LS2G- M6=G6%'#XMI)REIO)5:EW@!0P2R=%48[$XHUV(8?OC6^-4PK!'OK_`+OLF-6# MT_8?*L8I/MRLH\$8\MUA%[+KN4\^0J60=M*AE83^'QL<51!V/.*C%RIZ2`F) M^N)2?R5\IE46);I(N_!!VGU"=NQGFRY8M3<^@L$?=/W/$Y?:'.=L/G70XZ3B MA\DBC)6=]*WI,I&W_P`]G-A#EC\BN="-`_TYNW_BH:*6:@1V5GH=@'C[FY#E M&@893R\NS94O'?R)VS;==@,1H]<5ER%XH0EEER<5_,R']H;D+K?37]OH\5:, M&J*#)EHW8MFK5`+.>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@>!X'@J!T'0LGN^ M]N.3+]...Z5H"R)U?,U$E';K^7+VR!@+V$4'J/$)M=V)$;&B<_-GU%EUM/V1 M4.-52344_%1$*EP7ZNI[!NI9GTVGW_TA(WMHR+>0V1&Y/`.;C1M1DV*X?`ZV MJRV7U1.+,I6EA0YN@.WC`-_HV<-L+JY5T>NEG>PLD:PY]HN"!^;=:&J.O!<98#E8#2 MD:L"@YZPIB03(B'2RO,FR#XV/T6RFG^;1!!JF&5US]8JEIZS;SNB,"21&V>BI2/D=GV)+"[F2RM^.`#$0\-KX, M5(?DM':N@8Y-34-'V?Z0]DJZP8?3' M&E%TG(K3G@P(6G]JW?ANUMRWK>,K6+8\ZCXW+G0!!GQHTE^S#5M%VKK=$9&A M34>"9Z;;;:-,*J**;A@K7Z[>7=G'39611:1SB6==&1)&Y9]+YD>?SUR&BCA@ M\KJ!0R5L'(PI7U=58\&(KQT,'W:-![G79?\`'=?=138)17Y'H%Y4=CTF0A"A M2$W`BZQ:KDK)923G%B$':+9!0_,;(?&7$]/2-)-DAJ@^<$=UVNB"::.4TD]$ M]0SVK:5KBFVQS2"`EVQ26/6I2:2T\:-R^>3@LR:89-"<_/\`Q^?G_GX/'@>!X'@> M!X'@>!X'@>!X/SC;&=MM,?E\Z?C\_.F^-<_EC.
-----END PRIVACY-ENHANCED MESSAGE-----