Scopus BioPharma Inc. (Nasdaq:
“SCPS”) today issued a second letter to its stockholders
in connection with the Company’s Annual Meeting of Stockholders
(the “Annual Meeting”) that will be reconvened on Monday, December
20, 2021 at 11:30 a.m., Eastern time. The record date for the
Annual Meeting remains August 16, 2021.
If stockholders have not already voted their
shares, please vote “FOR ALL” of Scopus’ director
nominees today by telephone, by Internet or by signing,
dating and returning the WHITE proxy card
in the postage-paid envelope. If stockholders have already voted
and do not wish to change their vote, stockholders do not need to
vote again. Each stockholder’s vote matters regardless of
how many shares they own!
The full text of the letter to stockholders is
below:
December 17, 2021
Dear Scopus Stockholders,
Scopus’ Annual Meeting of Stockholders (“Annual
Meeting”) will be held on Monday, December 20, 2021 at 11:30 a.m.
ET. Time is running short to cast your vote “FOR
ALL” Scopus’ highly qualified and experienced director
nominees:
- Raphael Hofstein,
Ph.D., an independent director with broad experience
across multiple scientific and medical sectors for numerous public
and private biopharmaceutical, biotechnology and pharmaceutical
companies; and
- David S. Battleman,
M.D., an independent director with extensive experience
spanning across academia, the pharmaceutical industry and
management consulting, as well as widespread investor
relationships.
Your board of directors strongly urges
you to re-elect Dr. Hofstein and Dr. Battleman.
Your vote in incredibly important at this year’s
Annual Meeting. Morris C. Laster, M.D. continues his campaign to
elect two unqualified individuals who your board believes will be
more focused on advancing Laster’s agenda than on the interests of
all stockholders.
Your board believes Laster’s campaign is entirely
self-serving. Please consider the following when you go to
cast your ballots for the Annual Meeting.
LASTER REFUSES TO END HIS VALUE
DESTRUCTIVE CAMPAIGN
Laster would have you believe that Scopus and
its board are preventing this campaign from being resolved.
This is false. The truth is your board has
made numerous settlement proposals and Laster has
refused every effort at a reasonable compromise. Here are
the facts:
- To mitigate rising expenses
and the continued disruption caused by Laster’s legal and
proxy campaign, record ownership of the contested shares
was ceded to Laster and the Company proposed
paying reasonable legal fees.
- Scopus notes that HCFP, Scopus’
co-founder and principal financial sponsor, and Laster originally
agreed that the contested 3.5 million shares would be
designated for charity.
- If Laster’s stockholder
group, comprised solely of himself and his daughters,
truly had the best interests of stockholders at
heart, it is reasonable to assume they would
have declared victory and walked away
with a total of 6 million shares, or a windfall of nearly
$12 million even at the Company’s current depressed stock
price.
Since Laster began his all-out assault
on the Company, more than $100 million in stockholder value has
been destroyed. Since beginning his campaign earlier this
year, Scopus’ stock price has decreased from
approximately $10 per share to less than $2 per share. This is
despite the acquisition of new assets, achievement of
regulatory milestones, a non-dilutive fundraise, and appointment of
highly-regarded leaders who are well-positioned to advance
Scopus’ assets.
LASTER WANTS TO REALIZE OUTSIZED REWARDS
FOR A DE MINIMIS INVESTMENT AND NEAR ZERO EFFORT
Laster purports to own approximately one-third
of the outstanding shares of Scopus’ stock. A position of
this size would typically be owned by a major investor or
contributor to the Company. Laster is
neither.
- Laster’s entire investment
in Scopus is a mere $6,000.
- By contrast, HCFP has been
a major investor and contributor to the Company. As
Scopus’ financial sponsor, HCFP has funded and secured more
than $25 million since founding the Company.
- The recent $9.75 million
financing was only made possible by HCFP’s contribution
back to the Company of warrants to purchase six million shares of
common stock. This was done to facilitate the financing and for the
purpose of making the financing non-dilutive for the benefit of all
other stockholders at an extremely high cost to HCFP itself.
- Throughout Laster’s tenure,
his attention to Scopus was inconsistent and
haphazard.
- Laster regularly refused to come to
the United States to meet with prospective investors prior to
Scopus’ public listing, except when it was convenient for Laster’s
own schedule, with near complete disregard for the needs of the
Company and its management.
- Towards the end of his
tenure, Laster had very limited
involvement with the Company and mostly declined
to communicate with Scopus’ management
team.
- Given Laster’s lack of
involvement and the general disruption he was causing, the Company
and Laster discussed the possibility of allowing Laster to resign.
Laster resigned and Scopus accepted.
The only logical reason why
someone who wanted to do next to nothing to help build
Scopus is now fighting tooth and nail for more
shares with no restrictions is boundless selfishness and
greed. If Laster owned shares with no trading
restrictions, we believe he would sell the shares without regard to
the damage this would cause to all other stockholders.
Your board and management are focused on the
interests of all stockholders. By contrast, Laster is focused only
on himself and his own interests.
LASTER ASSOCIATIONS ARE
DUBIOUS
Laster surrounds himself with people who
appear to have questionable backgrounds.
One of Laster’s proposed nominees is
Joshua Levine, who has attempted to hide his past
affiliation with disgraced stockbroker Patterson Travis,
Inc., a firm that was expelled by the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority, Inc.
Another such individual is James
Tanenbaum, who originally reached out to the Company on
behalf of Laster regarding his share ownership. This outreach was
notwithstanding Tanenbaum’s specific knowledge that Scopus was
represented by counsel. Aware of Tanenbaum’s disrepute, Scopus was
hardly surprised by his outreach. As widely reported, including in
The Wall Street Journal, Tanenbaum was allowed to resign
from his position at Laster’s other current counsel,
Mayer Brown LLP. It has been reported this
occurred after Mayer Brown learned that Tanenbaum was fired as a
Partner at his prior law firm after an investigation conducted by
that law firm following allegations of sexual harassment found
evidence of inappropriate conduct and behavior.
LASTER HAS EFFECTIVELY ADMITTED, IN SWORN
STATEMENTS, FACTS THAT DIRECTLY UNDERCUT HIS CLAIM OF OWNERSHIP OF
SIX MILLION SHARES
Laster had every opportunity to declare
victory and walk away with the disputed 3.5 million shares
that were designated for charity. However, Laster
refused. In fact, a few days after calling for Scopus to
completely resolve the litigation between the parties in his most
recent letter to our stockholders, Laster brought a new set of
legal claims against the Company, stating
he never agreed to trading restrictions on the six
million shares. Laster’s statement calls into question his
entire ownership stake in Scopus. Here’s why:
- All of Scopus’ stockholders
who received founders shares were required to agree to the trading
restrictions as a condition to receiving their shares in the
Company. Laster was intimately aware of this
requirement.
- By making these new claims,
Laster has now put himself in the following irreconcilable
position: he either 1) owns shares subject to restrictions on
resale or 2) does not own the shares he purports to own and he has
been blatantly lying to Scopus stockholders.
Stockholders should be aware that in response to
Laster’s latest legal action, a party related to Scopus’ management
had a duty to its own stakeholders to bring legal action
against Laster in Delaware regarding the status of his purported
ownership position. Your board is committed to
protecting the Company and its stockholders from the nefarious
actions of an individual whose only holding in Scopus may be 6,000
shares.
DON’T BE FOOLED BY LASTER; HE DOES NOT
CARE ABOUT SCOPUS’ STOCKHOLDERS, OTHER THAN HIMSELF AND HIS
DAUGHTERS
SUPPORT SCOPUS NOMINEES BY VOTING
“FOR ALL” AND
“FOR” THE APPOINTMENT OF ITS
ACCOUNTING FIRM ON THE WHITE PROXY CARD
If Laster is allowed to prevail
at this Annual Meeting, he will be one step closer to
seizing control of the Company at the 2022 Annual Meeting
without paying other stockholders for that right. We urge
you not to support his self-serving campaign in which all other
stockholders will be harmed!
Your board is committed to acting in the
best interests of all stockholders and urges you to
support the Company by voting “FOR ALL” of its
director nominees – Raphael Hofstein, Ph.D. and David S.
Battleman, M.D. – and
“FOR” the
appointment of Citrin Cooperman & Company, LLP as our
independent registered public accounting firm for the 2021 fiscal
year on the WHITE proxy card today.
Sincerely,
Joshua R. LamsteinChairman of Scopus
Morrow Sodali509 Madison Avenue,
Suite 1206New York, New York 10022Call Collect:
(203) 658-9400Call Toll Free: (800)
662-5200Email: SCPS@investor.morrowsodali.com
About Scopus BioPharma
Scopus BioPharma Inc., both directly and through
subsidiaries, is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company
developing transformational therapeutics for serious diseases with
significant unmet medical need. The Company’s lead drug candidate
is a novel, targeted immuno-oncology RNA therapy for the treatment
of multiple cancers. This drug candidate is highly distinctive,
encompassing both RNA therapy and immunotherapy by synthetically
linking siRNA to an oligonucleotide TLR9 agonist, creating the
potential for targeted gene silencing with simultaneous TLR
stimulation and immune activation in the tumor microenvironment.
Additional STAT3-targeting immunotherapy drug candidates include
bi-functional antisense and DNA-binding inhibition therapies. The
Company is also seeking to develop additional drug candidates and
to identify additional compelling technologies for potential
acquisition, in-licensing and/or other similar transactions.
Receive updates by following Scopus BioPharma on Twitter here.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release may include forward-looking
statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking
statements are statements that are not historical facts. Such
forward-looking statements are subject to risks (including those
set forth in the Company’s Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2020, as amended, filed with the SEC) and
uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ from the
forward-looking statements. The Company expressly disclaims any
obligations or undertaking to release publicly any updates or
revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to
reflect any change in the Company’s expectations with respect
thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on
which any statement is based. Investors should realize that if our
underlying assumptions for the projections contained herein prove
inaccurate or that known or unknown risks or uncertainties
materialize, actual results could vary materially from our
expectations and projections.
Contacts
Rodd Leeds/David WaldmanCrescendo
Communications, LLCTel: (212) 671-1020Email:
SCPS@crescendo-ir.com
Hugh Burns/Delia Cannan/Nicholas
LeasureReevemarkTel: (212) 433-4600Email: scopus@reevemark.com
Stockholder Contact
Mike Verrechia/Bill DooleyMorrow Sodali, LLCTel:
(203) 658-9400Email: SCPS@investor.morrowsodali.com
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