Yes, I agree with you that there is the big difference in that the SEC oversight of Preston Tucker began almost immediately while Gary Davis’ problems came later, as you describe. I should have been clearer in saying that they were similar to the extent that both were trying to do too much with too little money at a time when governmental regulators were just coming of age as protectors of consumers.
For Tucker, it was also the time when the definition of a security was expanding to permit broader securities oversight (ordinarily one thinks of stock when thinking of securities but the SEC found that Tucker’s sale of dealerships was the sale of securities since the ultimate production and sale of the car was seen as such a long shot outside the control of dealers). For politicians looking for a “learning lesson” case that might lead to votes on election day, persons like Preston Tucker and Gary Davis were convenient to paint as fraud purveyors.
I also agree with you that Tucker’s failed “peashooter” contract caused the government to have concerns about him from the get-go (the Mark Dees book, The Miller Dynasty, has a discussion about this failed attempt by Preston and Harry Miller- info on the out of print book at
http://www.milleroffy.com/Racing%20History.htm).
However, aside from this, as the war was coming to an end Preston Tucker supposedly had a meeting of potential deep pocket investors where he said that if they investeted big dollars they could make even big return money even if the then proposed new company never sold a single car. I have not been able to verify the meeting or, if it happened, when or who might have been present. However, the SEC review of Preston Tucker claimed this was so- the SEC was supposedly tipped off by someone who at the meeting who thought Tucker was a big fraud. Could it also have been someone with significant then Big 3 stock?
Larry