If you know anything about sub-penny stocks, you'd know that an extremely small, small number of them have "audited" financials. Most of them can't even afford audits. VGID can't, by law, have audited financial statements due to its ownership history.
Even your large companies don't usually have "audited" interim financial statements, only their annual statements.
In answer to your question, I don't really give a damn whether their statements are audited. They're sub-penny stocks, for crying out loud.