Sorry, Pluto, I am not going to plan your game.
Post# of 11802
The Attorney Letter may be corrected
or
it may not be corrected (in which case, why has Mr. Scott's bio not been included in the Report (as stated in the Attorney Letter),
"although no matter how carefully prepared, company financial statements can contain errors. Flawed data, erroneous applications of accounting rules and simple mathematical mistakes can become apparent after a company issues its statements. When that occurs, U.S. accounting standards require that past statements be corrected and that the corrections be disclosed. The Financial Accounting Standards Board, which sets the rules for business accounting in the United States, says that a company should try to correct all statements going back to the original error."
I do believe Attorney Letters submitted with the Financial Reports are included in this requirement for corrections.
The answer to my question regarding Mr. Scott will be answered by one of the two latter actions stated.
I do think that Attorney Thomas C. Cook cares to look inept by submitting an Attorney Letter with "typos" (your excuse for Mr. Scott's mention, Pluto).
*SMILES*