Summary: A new disclosure of names of those who fund SCO's lawsuit against Linux reveals many former members of SCO
A day ago
we wrote about SCO receiving $2 million. SCO is desperate for money because it can hardly pay lawyers any longer and
its never-ending lawsuit against Linux is virtually all it has left. Based on
SCO's 8-K which covers
the Ralph Yarro cash injection, those who are involved in the transaction are "private lenders including Seung Ni Capital Partners, LLC, Jan Loeb, Leap Tide Capital Management, Inc., Steven Shin, Henry C. Beinstein, Stanley A. Beinstein, Neil J. Gagnon, Robert Dyson, WBS LLC, Ne Obliviscaris, Ltd., Darcy Mott, Clemons F. Walker and Herbert W. Jackson (collectively, the “Lenders”). Other than WBS LLC and Robert Dyson, all of the other Lenders listed above are direct or indirect shareholders of the Company."
"So now we know the list of names," says Pamela Jones. "It's that same ole gang of SCOfolk." Did they put their own money in the jar or could someone have helped them out and provided assurance (as in the case of BayStar, which offered $50 million)?
⬆
"[Microsoft's] Mr. Emerson and I discussed a variety of investment structures wherein Microsoft would 'backstop,' or guarantee in some way, BayStar's investment.... Microsoft assured me that it would in some way guarantee BayStar's investment in SCO."
--Larry Goldfarb, BayStar, key investor in SCO