Updates to our Terms of Use

We are updating our Terms of Use. Please carefully review the updated Terms before proceeding to our website.

Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Shareholders Say PR Firm EMAK Blew $100M

(CN) - Shareholders claim EMAK Worldwide CEO James Holbrook drove "one of the best marketing services agencies in the world to the brink of financial ruin," costing them $100 million, and rejecting a buyout offer of $15 per share before the price sank as low as 8 cents.

Plaintiffs, led by Take Back EMAK, include majority shareholder Donald Kurz, who says Holbrook and a complicit board turned a once lucrative business into a "nearly worthless penny stock."

According to the Los Angeles Superior Court complaint, a "conflicted, inattentive and overly deferential board focused on catering to a bullying preferred shareholder, protecting their own self-interest and bending over backwards to enable an overpaid, underperforming and untrustworthy CEO, chairman and outside lawyer to milk the company coffers for as long as possible."

The plaintiffs say Holbrook and the board displayed "extraordinary ineptitude" when they refused a buyout offer of $15 per share and then "relentlessly pounded" the share price down to "a recent record low of $0.08 per share, obliterating an incredible 99 percent of the market value of the company," which has been delisted from the NASDAQ.

And they claim that "the recent uptick in the company's share price exists only because the board has unlawfully concealed the loss of its largest client [Burger King] from the public."

Plaintiffs, which include Trinidad Capital Master Fund, and Sems Diversified Value, demand $100 million in compensatory damages and $300 million in punitive damages.

They are represented by John Kirkland with Luce Forward.

Categories / Uncategorized

Subscribe to Closing Arguments

Sign up for new weekly newsletter Closing Arguments to get the latest about ongoing trials, major litigation and hot cases and rulings in courthouses around the U.S. and the world.

Loading...