I am still amazed that Miller would try to pull off a shareholder meeting claiming he did not know there were over two billion shares out and so did not know what was required for a quorum, when Yahoo reports 2.39 billion shares. If someone were going to take over a shell, the first questions would be the share structure, market cap, and is it clean.
I heard there was some discussion about Salomonsky's votes, so there was probably an issue about counting votes. What is puzzling is who has the Series A preferred share, which supposedly is all it takes to win a shareholder vote. Does that mean Salomonsky doesn't have it, or perhaps in light of the prior fraud under Talbot no one wants to admit they had control.