SCHEDULE 14A

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. )

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|_| Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss.240.14a-12

THE GOLDFIELD CORPORATION
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

eRaider.com Inc.
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if
other
than the Registrant)

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Messages posted on Yahoo.

Re: Dinner & condos
by: AaCBrown (44/M/New York City, New York)
06/12/01 08:52 am EDT
Msg: 4287 of 4335

I look forward to seeing you in Melbourne.

My main objections to the condo project has always been that it is a
distraction. Goldfield already has two major businesses which make a
full plate for a tiny public company. And three projects with a total
investment of $12.5 million over six years is not the scale of investment
necessary to succeed. Even if the investment is wildly successful, it
could only add a penny or so in annual earnings per share, about what
Goldfield is spending on this proxy fight.

That kind of return is not worth the focus of a $400,000 per year CEO,
plus a full-time staff member. Real estate development on this scale can
be done much better by private individuals who do not pay double
income tax as corporations do, do not have the overhead expense of a
public corporation and can pay complete attention to every phase of the
design, approvals, construction and sales. Goldfield outbid these
individuals for these projects (and Florida is world famous for
aggressive and shrewd real estate developers). How can Goldfield, with
all the disadvantages of a public company and no experience in luxury
condos, make more from the properties than private developers? And if
they do, how much will the stock go up based on a one-time penny-per-
share foray into real estate development. I think the stock price would
suffer, even if the projects were successful, because the perception of
increased risk and lack of focus would chase more investors away than
the penny per share would bring in. If the projects are unsuccessful, it
would be infuriating to lose the company to bankruptcy from real estate
debt, when Goldfield refuses to borrow money to support its core
businesses.

I also think Goldfield's timing was almost exactly wrong, that they
bought in at the peak. You cannot look at overall Florida luxury real
estate, that is dominated by the areas popular with out-of-state and
wealthy people. Melbourne is not that, nor is it close to any such area.
Buyers of Melbourne luxury homes will be people who work in the area.
I think most of those people want houses, not beachfront or riverfront
condos.

In 1999 and early 2000, it seemed reasonable that high-technology
expansion would bring a lot of high-paid, relatively young engineers and
programmers to Melbourne though relocation and foundation of high-
tech companies. The proximity of Cape Canaveral gives Melbourne a
skilled technical workforce and the costs of business are much lower
than in big cities with comparable available labor. The location could be
a recruiting attraction for, say, a recent engineering graduate who likes
the idea of living on the beach in good weather, but cannot afford
beachfront rentals near big cities like Los Angeles or Miami.

The young top executives of these companies might snap up luxury
waterfront condos. But where are they today? Without them, there are
not many jobs in Melbourne that pay enough to allow someone to afford
one of these. Most people who have those jobs (like John Sottile) are
older, with families, and want houses, not condos. Not many wealthy
people retire to Melbourne because it does not have the attractions of
larger cities or wealthier resort areas.

I hope I'm wrong and Goldfield can unload these sites to get its money
back. But the profit or loss from getting out of the business is small in
my opinion compared to the damage to the Company from staying in it.

Aaron Brown

Disclaimer: eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfield's annual meeting.
eRaider strongly advises all shareholders to read the proxy statement. If
you want a free copy of the proxy statement and/or the information on
the participants, please write us at:

Privateer Asset Management
POB 20170
Park West Station
NY, NY 10025


The Good News for Everyone
by: AaCBrown (44/M/New York City, New York)
06/13/01 12:47
pm EDT
Msg: 4313 of
4335

in the ISS analysis was the exceptional praise for the company.
Performance since the bottom in 1998 has been exlempary and the stock
seems deeply undervalued.

This is important because it is the first institutional analysis of Goldfield
in a long time. I think the eRaider analysis is actually deeper, we spent a
lot more time and money on it, but it might be seen as biased because we
only made it public after we bought the stock.

Whoever wins this election, it is important to build on this good review. It
will be much easier to pitch GV to institutions after this report. Proxy
fights have a way of concentrating attention on a company, usually bad
things become visible but sometimes, like now, good news emerges.

This redoubles my determination to preserve cumulative voting and fight
the meeting adjournment. Now I am fighting for institutional reputation
as well as shareholder rights. When I try to persuade institutions to invest
in GV, I want to say that ISS's recommendations were adopted. It won't
do much good to show a good report, but say the company immediately
acted against the three recommendations.

By the same token, it increases my support for an independent director
who is both a shareholder and an expert in one of Goldfield's core
businesses. The only person I know who fits this description is Joe
Cocalis, although I'm open to other suggestions. I'd also love to see the
existing board recruit an expert who was willing to buy stock. I think this
would be a major selling point to institutions.

Someone might suggest that I withdraw eRaider nominees in the spirit of
adhering to ISS recommendations. I'm not willing to go that far. But it
has increased my relative concentration on the cumulative voting and
adjournment issues, because these have a double benefit.

Institutional ownership could ignite this company. First of all, it would
increase the stock price. Second, a lot of individuals like companies with
institutional ownership. Third, it increases visibility and analyst coverage
which further increase the price.

The higher price is not just an end in itself. It allows the company to raise
capital cheaply to take advantage of business opportunities. A high stock
price could make one of the major disagreements go away, I think
Goldfield should expand, John Sottile doesn't want to borrow money. A
high stock price could allow expansion without borrowing.

eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfield's annual meeting. eRaider
strongly advises all shareholders to read the proxy statement. If you want
a free copy of the proxy statement and/or the information on the
participants, please write us at:

Privateer Asset Management
POB 20170
Park West Station
NY, NY 10025

Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder
Re: Dinner & condos
by: AaCBrown (44/M/New York City, New York)
06/13/01
06:25 pm EDT
Msg: 4320 of
4335

Did I say that? I meant to say that retirees and others will
flock to the serenity, vitality, beauty and friendliness of
Melbourne. The city brings together the world-class
technology of the space program with the economic
dynamism of a fast-growing city, the physical beauty of
the Florida coast with the graciousness of the Old South.

Aaron Brown
Re: Question for ABrown
by: AaCBrown (44/M/New York City, New York)
06/14/01 09:23
am EDT
Msg: 4335 of
4335

We have prepared a step-by-step voting guide at:

http://www.eraider.com/article.cfm?topicID=50&catID=158&articleID=7
04

or you can email me at Aaron.Brown@PrivateerAM.com and we can take
it from there.

There is still plenty of time. I can email you a proxy today and you can
fax it back. We prefer physical signatures, but faxed proxies are legal.
Although I don't recommend waiting until then, I can even receive
proxies faxed to my hotel in Melbourne until I have to leave for the
meeting at 9:00 AM next Tuesday.

eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfield's annual meeting. eRaider
strongly advises all shareholders to read the both our proxy statement and
the Company's. If you want a free copy of our proxy statement write us
at:

Privateer Asset Management
POB 20170
Park West Station
NY, NY 10025

or email Aaron.Brown@PrivateerAM.com.

Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder


Messages posted on eRaider
There is a brief mention of eRaider's Goldfield campaign at The
Corporate Library.
Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder
For the first time, Goldfield has answered the question we have been
asking since November. Why was management paid $510,000 for a
transaction that also resulted in the cash surrender value of life insurance
declining by $498,311?

We couldn't get a straight answer, but the Company explained things to
Institutional Shareholder Services. When the employee benefit
agreements were terminated in June 2000, Goldfield borrowed $600,000
against the policies. I cannot find this transaction in any financial
statements, not the quarterly report covering the period, not the original
2000 annual report, not the amended 2000 annual report revising these
disclosures. I have no idea why this was left out of the financial
statements or why the Company didn't simply tell us this when we first
asked.

Although this clarifies things somewhat, it still leaves questions. In this
account, when the executives gave up their rights to the insurance
policies, Goldfield's interest in those policies increased by $101,689.
That makes sense, this is then the amount of undisclosed compensation
that had been paid to the top four managers from 1989 to 2000. When
Goldfield borrowed $600,000 against the policies, the value declined by
$600,000 (of course). $101,689 - $600,000 gives the decline in cash
surrender value of life insurance policies of $498,311. That checks.

Now Goldfield is saying managers were paid $527,000 in compensation
for the termination, instead of the $510,000 shown in all subsequent
reports. So there's still a missing $17,000. But if we overlook that,
$527,000 - $101,689 gives the net expense of the transaction, $425,311.
Another check.

Questions:

If the value that employees gave up was $101,689, why were they paid
$527,000 in compensation for doing that? Some of that might be for
giving up future contributions but (a) that amounts to prepaying salary,
which doesn't make much sense and (b) still can't get anywhere near
$517,000.

If it was really worth $101,689 for the executives to give up their rights
under the policies, why were those rights immediately given back to the
executives, with no associated compensation expense? Executives were
allowed to name the beneficiaries of the policies, less premiums paid
and loans outstanding.

However, at least we have eliminated the possibility of double payment.
My best guess is that the Company was paying managers about $10,000
per year in undisclosed compensation expense from 1989 to 2000. In
2000 it made an extra payment of $527,000 which was misdescribed as
a payment in consideration of giving up their rights under the insurance
policy. I say "misdescribed" because (a) only $100,000 of it for giving
up the rights, the other $425,000 was a straight gift and (b) those rights
were returned to the executives immediately afterwards.

Of course, I could be wrong again. But it's the appearance of these
things that chases many careful investors away from the stock. If you
don't trust that the company is fully and clearly disclosing all
compensation paid to management, you aren't going to trust the stock.

eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfield's annual meeting. Click on
the link to get summarized information on the participants to the proxy
solicitation. Also, eRaider strongly advises all shareholders to read the
proxy statement when it is available on the eRaider.com website. If you
want a free copy of the proxy statement and/or the information on the
participants, please email Aaron Brown or write us at:

Privateer Asset Management
POB 20170
Park West Station
NY, NY 10025
Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder

"Management has admitted to ISS that it proposed the elimination of
cumulative voting due to the advent of the proxy contest. . . . . Without a
doubt, management intends to eliminate cumulative voting at this
meeting in an attempt to thwart eRaider's nominees from getting
elected. . . . In any circumstance, the rules of the election process should
not be distorted to favor one group over the other. The elimination of
cumulative voting may result in an unfair disadvantage to the
dissidents."

Funny how that admission didn't make it into Goldfield's proxy
statement. That said the board wanted to get rid of cumulative voting for
four reasons, none of which mentioned eRaider or anything to do with
this year's election. All were long-term general considerations like the
fact that only 10.7 percent of S&P Smallcap companies have it, the
California State Bar doesn't like it and it makes takeovers easier.

I'm not really complaining here, I doubt Goldfield fooled anyone. A
very generous person might conclude that between eRaider's February
19 notification of intent to run directors and the board's March 6
decision to eliminate cumulative voting, a sudden change of heart took
place among board members. But that wouldn't explain the
extraordinary effort and expense to make the change retroactive to affect
the re-election of sitting board members.

eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfield's annual meeting. Click on
the link to get summarized information on the participants to the proxy
solicitation. Also, eRaider strongly advises all shareholders to read the
proxy statement when it is available on the eRaider.com website. If you
want a free copy of the proxy statement and/or the information on the
participants, please email Aaron Brown or write us at:

Privateer Asset Management
POB 20170
Park West Station
NY, NY 10025
Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder
Hmmm. They gave up on us after two such mailings. I was beginning to
weaken.

By the way, we are challenging all Proxy Services votes because they do
not contain the protections, options and disclaimers the Company filed
with the SEC. On Goldfield's side, ADP is trying to give the Company
all the unvoted shares, despite the clear language in the Company's
proxy (and the law) saying broker non-votes will not count except for
quorum purposes.

Like the Florida Presidential election, this may come down to voting
technicalities rather than the will of the voters. That would be very
unfortunate. Whether we win or lose, I think investor interest in
Goldfield has skyrocketed. It would be a shame to lose that interest to
frustration.

eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfield's annual meeting. Click on
the link to get summarized information on the participants to the proxy
solicitation. Also, eRaider strongly advises all shareholders to read the
proxy statement when it is available on the eRaider.com website. If you
want a free copy of the proxy statement and/or the information on the
participants, please email Aaron Brown or write us at:

Privateer Asset Management
POB 20170
Park West Station
NY, NY 10025
Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder

There is a 12 paragraph discussion of voting for directors, we and the
Company both extracted the portions most favorable to ourselves.

We emphasized that ISS recognized the need for an outside director
with expertise in one of Goldfield's key businesses, to provide advice,
contacts and informed oversight. This was our first proposal to
management (although we added the stipulation that this person should
either own or buy upon appointment a substantial share in the
company).

However we couldn't recruit such a person in a contested situation, so
we ended up running shareholders without particular expertise in mining
or construction, in order to provide better oversight and to open the
Company up for consensus appointment of an expert director later.

Goldfield emphasized that ISS did not feel electing eRaider's director
candidates was necessary. ISS correctly pointed out that we are running
as watchdogs, and Goldfield's board is not entrenched (it has cumulative
voting, annual election of all directors and no poison pill). ISS felt that
with open annual corporate elections, watchdog directors are not
necessary. I understand that point of view, although I still think the
Company will be better off with an eRaider-nominated director or three.

Anyway, it's up to the shareholders now.

eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfield's annual meeting. Click on
the link to get summarized information on the participants to the proxy
solicitation. Also, eRaider strongly advises all shareholders to read the
proxy statement when it is available on the eRaider.com website. If you
want a free copy of the proxy statement and/or the information on the
participants, please email Aaron Brown or write us at:

Privateer Asset Management
POB 20170
Park West Station
NY, NY 10025
Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder

eRaider's proxy fight with Goldfield is getting coverage in the Truth or
Consquences Herald, the local newspaper for Goldfield's New Mexico
mining operations.
Aaron Brown
eRaider co-founder