rattlestock
4 weeks ago
Quarterly Check In:
$0.001 / Share! GO JAMIE ROTMAN!! That sure is "Building Shareholder Value.."
Oh, but it is really just Greg Rotman continuing to be a failure at everything he does being the Defacto CEO of Vystar, Corp. I am actually surprised it has taken Greg this long to come up with a new shiny carrot to dangle for a cash investment infusion, which he will just grift off, anyway. Maybe, just maybe, he has already used up the bottom of the barrel OTC Toxic Lenders and run out of High Net Worth Investors that will even talk to him. I mean, imagine presenting this resume to potential investors...
PAYD- Promised a $2-3B Valuation and got kicked out by a family member. (From people I know that invested)
UVFT- Never brought shareholder value, failed. Blamed the CEO and replaced him with a puppet. Still failed at shareholder value and placed brother in law as chairman of the BOD and steels all the UVFT technology and puts into Vystar Corp. and for compensation sends millions of worthless VYST shares to UVFT as payment that he knows are worthless and that will never be distributed to shareholders because he left UVFT with no $$$. Thus, basically stealing the UVFT Technology and screwing all the UVFT investors & note holders.
VYST- Greg and his father Steven Rotman FAIL bringing shareholder value by FAILING to:
1. Sell Vytex foam Mattresses, Toppers, and Pillows in their own family furniture store in Worcester, MA.
2. Secure Vytex foam licensing deals in the furniture industry (which they said they could accomplish)
3. Secure any of the many, many other licensing Vytex possibilities in other industries.. (Condoms, Gloves, Balloons, Threads for Clothing which was highly touted, and many others)
4. UVFT Technology- They could not sell Air Purifiers during a GLOBAL PANDEMIC! I mean of all the setups business wise you could ask for... A Global Pandemic from a virus and they could not capitalize on a UV Air Purifier with some of the best patents. A monkey could have sold more on a street corner durring the pandemic!
So, why?? My 100 person DD Team has boiled it down to the following after crunching all the data...
1. They don't pay their debts. Thus, manufacturers and resellers don't want to work with them.
2. They think they are smarter than everyone else and keep renegotiating until the other party is tired and backs out.
3. They over promise and NEVER deliver.
4. They are actually lazy, don't really work, and spend all their time trying to figure out how to make others work while they make $$.
The only way to make money in a Public Company that a Rotman, Specifically Greg Rotman is involved with is to Short it, if you can.
dukeb
2 months ago
In addition to Jamie being on the payroll, Greg Rotman is still part of the grift:
Blue Oar Consulting, Inc. (βBlue Oarβ) provides business consulting services to the Company. This entity is owned by Gregory Rotman, who is the son of the Companyβs CEO, Steven Rotman. Blue Oar provides business consulting services to the Company. In exchange for such services, the Company has entered into a consulting agreement with the related party entity. Per the consulting agreement, Blue Oar is to be paid $15,000 per month in cash for expenses, and $12,500 per month to be paid in shares based on a 20-day average at a 50% discount to market. During the year ended December 31, 2023, the Company expensed approximately $580,000 related to the consulting agreement. As of December 31, 2023, the Company had a stock subscription payable balance of $1,030,112, or approximately 72,612,000 shares to be issued in the future and $225,000 of consulting expenses in accounts payable.