What we do know is the filings that he dumped his shares. I'm going by available filings and daily volume and common sense, not emotion. I follow the science and have demonstrably made my money on plays I've mentioned here over the past few years so losing on this one isn't the end of the world to me. I don't need a bogeyman and will continue to follow the science despite Silverman's shortcomings and a poor capital structure that we've know about since before results came out. Some days folks want to bash management for not promoting the stock and some days they claim its a pump and dump. We all know it wasn't pumped. Wouldn't that made it so much easier to have made money both on the pumps and shorting the way down instead of keeping the price low so they could end up with all these shares that continue to fall in value while warrants remain worthless? If they didn't have enough shares at time of shareholder meeting they obviously had lost their asses while selling. Look at the volume leading up to the results and then the millions sold at that time. They certainly weren't above the price they bought them for.