October 17, 2003
Diamond Joe walks away from Tahera
Company appoints new
boss
JIM BELL
Joseph Gutnick, or "Diamond Joe" as he's known in Australia, has
quit his position at the top of the firm that's planning to develop Nunavut's
first diamond mine.
In a terse press release issued just before the close of business last Friday,
Tahera Corp. announced that Gutnick has resigned as president, chief executive
officer, chairman, and director of the company.
Two other board members from Australia, David Tyrwhitt and Stephan Meyer, also
quit Tahera's board last week.
This past Wednesday, the company announced that Gutnick will be replaced by
Peter Gillin, a career investment banker with experience in mining-related financial
markets.
Gillin will take over as chairman and chief executive officer immediately,
and has been appointed to Tahera's board.
Colin Benner, the CEO of Breakwater Resources Ltd., which owned the former
Nanisivik Mine, has been elected to Tahera's board of directors. Benner serves
on the board of several Canadian mining companies.
Tahera's proposed Jericho diamond mine, in the Contwoyto Lake area of the Kitikmeot
region, is small but it would be Nunavut's first.
In May 2003, Tahera thought it had found a buyer willing to take all of the
diamonds that Jericho would produce, a firm called Lazare Kaplan of New York
City. But Tahera will now allow that letter of intent to expire, and will finish
plans to market Jericho diamonds by the end of this year.
The company must raise $50 million to build the mine, and it has to steer the
project through an environmental assessment process run by the Nunavut Impact
Review Board. Only after that happens will Tahera be able to apply for the necessary
permits and licences needed to operate a mine in Nunavut.
Gutnick has been in charge of Tahera since June 2001, when he ousted the company's
founder, Howard Miller, in a boardroom coup.
At one time, Gutnick's private family firm, Edensor, owned between 30 and 40
per cent of Tahera's shares.
Through Edensor, Gutnick invested $13 million in Tahera shares, at a price
of 15 cents a share. But when Tahera's share price rose to around 40 cents in
2002, the market value of his holdings in the company rose to an estimated $30
million or $40 million.
Gutnick now controls only about 2.5 per cent of Tahera, and the Australian
press has been predicting his departure from Tahera for several months.
Gutnick has been embroiled in an Australian legal action with his sister, and
one of his companies has started test drilling at a site in Western Australia.
"With things looking up at home, is Diamond Joe Gutnick turning his back
on Canada?" columnist James Chessell wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald
last August.
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