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Re: davemc post# 32104

Tuesday, 03/14/2017 5:01:59 PM

Tuesday, March 14, 2017 5:01:59 PM

Post# of 42188
Rolo731: It's called 'Going Dark'. A company would want to Go dark for many reasons, such as to avoid time and expenses to comply with reporting requirements, or have to divulge in quarterly, annual reports, and 8k reports - 'trade secrets' or on-going negotiations of acquisitions (such as marijuana growing farms, etc) - that some competitor may swoop in and take away.

There are of course other actual 'dark' reasons a company may want to 'go dark' - such as not wanting to divulge the true state of things to its shareholders. Here is a good article on 'going dark': https://www.dorsey.com/newsresources/publications/2009/03/going-dark--voluntary-delisting-and-deregistrati__

Just maybe - and I hope - after KGET finishes with all its planned acquisitions - like marijuana farms, and related MJ businesses, etc that it will come back on the scene with a bang as a fully reporting company. I believe it will go dark 90 days after its December 2016 SEC filing. It will likely get a new trading symbol when that happens I believe.

What if Mr. Linton lucked into that Northern California CaliPharm purchase - and it will give his company say $2 million within 6 months from what is already growing on it. Perhaps his intention is to snowball that money into other marijuana farm purchases - so to have to divulge these real estate purchases would put him at risk of loosing out to competitors by having to report them and deposits placed on them, etc. In real estate, a property is not sold until it closes. Until a property actually closes there are often an awful lot of 'sharks' circling about.