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Information Demands
Second 2004 Demand for Records
Information was requested concerning the company's management of its investment funds, for purposes of evaluating investment performance and determining the company's compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("ICA"). The records were eventually provided to the shareholder in February 2003, but were made subject to confidentiality restrictions.
In 2003, a Forum participant legally authorized to act as a shareholder "Delegate" asked the company to publicly report the information that had been provided with confidentiality restrictions in response to the 2002 information demand. Alternatively, the Delegate's letter formally demanded the relevant records, repeating the list to which the company had responded previously, but without confidentiality restrictions. The company initially stated its intent to provide the information, but then engaged a new attorney who raised arguments about the confidentiality provisions. After several exchanges of letters, and as other issues required more immediate attention, the Forum asked the SEC to address the arguments raised by the company's attorney. The information demands remained unsatisfied at the beginning of 2004 and were renewed as part of the Delegate's second 2004 demand for records.
After management failed to respond to informal requests for information relating to issues being presented for voting at the annual meeting in February 2004, the Forum's authorized shareholder Delegate demanded either publication or non-confidential production of seven listed items. The company initially ignored the demand, but publicly reported six of the items immediately following the initiation of a court enforcement proceeding and request for SEC intervention.
Second 2004 Demand for Records
As Forum attention returned to unresolved shareholder concerns after the company's February 23, 2004 annual meeting, another effort was made to encourage management's voluntary reporting of information needed by investors, including information that the company would be required to report under the Investment Company Act of 1940. In the absence of any management response, the Delegate presented another formal demand for records. The company's attorney responded with arguments concerning confidentiality requirements, to which the Delegate's attorney replied with a proposal of conventional provisions for restricted counsel review of any material claimed to be confidential. A month later, the company's attorney had not responded to the proposed provisions for producing the required information.
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