Posted On: 08/31/2015 5:23:13 PM
Post# of 11038
...Did COR receive additional information of some kind that persuaded it that immediate legal action was necessary?...
Maybe Janice and her minions contacted COR to persuade them that the company was a fraud, even though they couldn't prove it.
Quote:
janice shell Member Level Monday, 08/31/15 05:09:05 PM
Re: EarnestDD post# 28600
Post # of 28885
Obviously Carter and CRGP did not make restitution and COR chose to take immediate legal action.
Yes. But that's something else that makes me wonder. On the 25th, COR was still willing to talk to CRGP. Evidently it had first blamed Nobilis for the mess. Then CRGP got in touch with COR at the instance of Nobilis. "Carter" explained vaguely that there'd been a "huge glitch", and said, "We are currently in conversations with DTCC and will be resolving this issue over the next couple of days".
That was on the 25th.
The next day, COR sued CRGP, Carter, and the transfer agent. Why did it move so quickly? What was the urgency? It had already paid the $3.3 million; it wasn't as if DTCC was holding the threat of a legal action of its own over COR's head.
So what brought apparent efforts to sort things out amicably to an abrupt end? Did COR receive additional information of some kind that persuaded it that immediate legal action was necessary?
www.sidedraught.com/stocks/CRGP/Calissio%20Being%20Sued/Doc%201-3.pdf
Maybe Janice and her minions contacted COR to persuade them that the company was a fraud, even though they couldn't prove it.
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