alexdali01

Alex Dali, Founder G31000

Documents obtained by Oxebridge reveal that the founder of the risk management group G31000 Global Institute for Risk Management Standards, Alexis Dali, is wanted in Singapore under a 2003 arrest warrant. Officials in Singapore have alerted Oxebridge that Dali will be arrested upon re-entry into the country.

According to a former business associate of Dali, the arrest warrant was issued after Dali engaged in defamation and intimidation while working in Singapore. The source, who alleges to have helped Dali form his original company Atlascope, reported that the dispute began after he lent Dali “a few hundred dollars.”  This escalated to Dali distributing “leaflets defaming me among my neighbors, announced in writing that he will disrupt my wedding ceremony, and even threatening my parents-in-law.” The associate claims he maintains the documents printed by Dali as evidence, if they are needed.

Based on this, Dali’s former associate then obtained an arrest warrant for “criminal defamation and intimidation,” however Dali left the county immediately thereafter, and has not returned.

The arrest warrant remains in force, under Warrant No: 001378/03 and Summons No: PSS14-16/03. The Singapore government has stated that it has issued a stoplist for Alex Dali to be arrested at checkpoint.” If Dali were to return, and if the Singapore government were to determine that he fled the country because of the arrest warrant, more serious criminal charges may be laid on him.

The Singapore Central Police Division have asked that anyone with knowledge of Dali’s plans to re-enter the country alert them by calling +65 65575017 .

Oxebridge reporting on G31000 has revealed that Dali has been engaged in serial plagiarism, and that the G31000 pricing structure may be a violation of trade laws prohibiting pyramid schemes. He was discovered to be promoting G31000 through a fake LinkedIn profile featuring the photo of a woman taken from various cosmetics sites, and falsely claims that G31000 has over 10,000 employees.  G31000 issues unaccredited risk manager certificates to students of its courses, and requires its trainers to continue to provide students to G31000, or lose their certification, a violation of ISO 17024.

Despite the scandals, various ISO experts and international professionals have supported G31000 in some capacity, including TC 262 Chair Kevin Knight, TC 176’s Paul Palmes and Manhattanville College’s Dean of Graduate Studies, Anthony Davidson.

The group is now repositioning itself to be an expert authority on “risk based thinking,” a concept invented by ISO for its upcoming ISO 9001:2015. The concept had never existed prior to ISO’s invention, and therefore experts in the area do not exist.

Disclosure: G31000, Alex Dali and Allen Gluck failed to sue Oxebridge for “defamation” due to this and other reporting on their organization; the case was thrown out of court in New York City. Gluck and Dali subsequently broke up their partnership, but Dali continues to list Gluck’s employer, Manhattanville College, as a “partner” of the G31000 group.

 

Advertisements

ISO 17000 Series Consulting

Why we report on these topics

Since 2000, Oxebridge has worked to improve ISO and related certification schemes by identifying problems and then proposing solutions. We report on issues affecting standards users because so few other news outlets do. Our belief is that in order to fix the problems in these schemes, we must first understand the nature and breadth of those problems. Our reporting aims to do just that. Elsewhere on the Oxebridge site you will find White Papers and other articles proposing ideas to correct these problems.