Matt...you would be well advised to stay out of the middle of this, because you're being used. To address some of your points: 1) It is NOT common practice to take orders for items that you do not have the license to sell. This is a breach of the law. 2) Patches *were* purchased, people here have bought them. This is a breach of the law. 3) Posters wrongfully adapted from provided material were sold. This is a breach of the law. There was NO understanding at any point that this was agreed to for the Starfury deal. 4) CMC does NOT have signed contracts with all the B5 personnel, myself included. Neither have many of them been given any kind of advance. A Force For Good does not misrepresent contracts. Does not sell goods that it does not have the right to sell. Does not tell you that it's understood that material provided is there ONLY for one-time use in making a demo -- which was stated to me, and John Copeland, and others -- and then turn right around and start making bunches of them and selling them, without telling anyone, and at first *denying* it when confronted. Further, remember that this comes as the culmination of OTHER concerns raised during the Chicago visit. It was my feeling, upon returning from that visit, that CMC did not have the wherewithal or the capacity to deliver upon its promises, and that the convention would be a total disaster. It was that concern which prompted my lengthy fax to CMC. I could go down the list of things that went wrong behind the scenes of the first visit, but it would again require four pages. Understand clearly: every single one of us returned to LA *very* worried about how things were being handled. CMC had a lot of ideas, but it seemed to all of us that they didn't have the ability or the organization to pull off those ideas. The rest was icing on the cake. Please, everyone, don't get into the middle of this; this is now in lawyer territory. jms |
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