I believe you’ve misrepresented the facts. LP and Cognate were in the muddled of that lawsuit you referenced when Ondra (the PR firm Neil Woodford had recommended) sent Katheryn Wolfe to Northwest to strategize. She asked strange questions and wanted to take home paperwork that didn’t seem relevant to the project. When she left, the company discovered that Ms. Wolfe was on the board of the Israeli company that Roger Smith (who had a Cognate company laptop, not a notebook) was now working for. They felt uncomfortable at that point with working with Ondra, but not necessarily with Woodford who’d recommended them. Of course, within a month of that unfortunate occurrence, Woodford wrote his letter to the company making it public via an SEC filing, indicating his concern over the Phase Five report, which prior to that point, had been given no traction. This account may help give more color to your assertion.