Neither he nor Moore can ever be believed, like I said. But it remains that Mast insists he can not sell for less than $5 a share. And I believe you are wrong in this case because he never bought the shares. If he sells them I believe it constitutes an offering. The shares have never hitherto been part of the float, having never left the hands of a company official or former official and into the public float. The first time a share leaves the company domain it is an offering because cash goes to the company or the company officer for the first time. His shares are not part of the float. The only way they can become part of the float is through an offering...he sells them.
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