EX-19.1 2 g085455_ex19-1.htm EXHIBIT 19.1

Exhibit 19.1

CoJax Oil and Gas Corporation

 

Insider Trading POLICY

 

Adopted as of March 5, 2025

 

CoJax Oil and Gas Corporation, a Virginia corporation (the “Company”) has adopted the insider trading policy (the “Insider Trading Policy”) and the Trading Procedures included in Part II of this Insider Trading Policy (the “Trading Procedures”) in connection with trading in the Company’s securities or disclosure of information concerning the Company by corporate officers, directors, and employees, as well as other “Insiders” (as defined in Section A below). Our Insider Trading Policy is intended to prevent the misuse of material nonpublic information, insider trading in securities, and the severe consequences associated with violations of insider trading laws. “It is your obligation to review, understand, and comply with this Insider Trading Policy and applicable laws. Our Board of Directors has approved this Insider Trading Policy, and we have designated Jeffrey Guzy, our Chief Financial Officer, to answer questions about and to provide information about this Policy (the “Policy Officer”). Please contact the Policy Officer at c/o CoJax Oil and Gas Corporation, 4830 Line Ave. #152, Shreveport, LA 71106; or send an email at [email protected], if you have any questions.

 

PART I. OVERVIEW

 

A       Covered Persons.

 

This Insider Trading Policy applies to all of the Company’s directors, officers, employees, and certain designated consultants and contractors that potentially have access to material, nonpublic (“material” and “nonpublic” are each defined below) information in the course of their service to the Company (each such director, officer, employee, or designated consultant or contractors (the “Insiders”), and continues to apply following the termination of any such individual’s service to or employment with the Company until any material, nonpublic information possessed by such individual has become public or is no longer material. In addition, all Insiders must comply with the Trading Procedures; we will refer to these individuals in this policy as “Insiders.” The Trading Procedures provide rules for when Insiders can trade in our securities and explain the process for mandatory pre-clearance of proposed trades. You will be notified if you are considered to be an Insider who is required to comply with the Trading Procedures.

 

This Insider Trading Policy and, for Insiders, the Trading Procedures also apply to the following persons (“Affiliated Persons”):

 

●       your “Family Members” (“Family Members” are (a) your spouse or domestic partner, children, stepchildren, grandchildren, parents, stepparents, grandparents, siblings and in-laws who reside in the same household as you, (b) your children or your spouse’s children who do not reside in the same household as you but are financially dependent on you, (c) any of your other family members who do not reside in your household but whose transactions are directed by you, and (d) any other individual over whose account you have control and to whose financial support you materially contribute. (Materially contributing to financial support would include, for example, paying an individual’s rent but not just a phone bill.));

 

all trusts, family partnerships and other types of entities formed for your benefit or for the benefit of a member of your family and over which you have the ability to influence or direct investment decisions concerning securities;

all persons who execute trades on your behalf; and

 

 

all investment funds, trusts, retirement plans, partnerships, corporations and other types of entities over which you have the ability to influence or direct investment decisions concerning securities; provided, however, that the Trading Procedures do not apply to any such entity that engages in the investment of securities in the ordinary course of its business (e.g., an investment fund, venture fund or partnership) if the entity has established its own insider trading controls and procedures in compliance with applicable securities laws and it and/or its affiliated entities: (a) engage in the investment of securities in the ordinary course of their respective businesses; (b) have established insider trading controls and procedures in compliance with securities laws; and (c) are aware the securities laws prohibit any person or entity who has material nonpublic information concerning the Company from purchasing or selling securities of the Company or from communicating such information to any other person under circumstances in which it is reasonably foreseeable that such person is likely to purchase or sell securities.

 

You are responsible for ensuring compliance with this Insider Trading Policy, including the Trading Procedures contained herein, by all of your Affiliated Persons.

 

B.       What is Prohibited by this Insider Trading Policy?

 

You and your Affiliated Persons are prohibited from engaging in insider trading and from trading in securities in violation of this Insider Trading Policy. “Insider trading” is (1) trading (buying or selling) the securities of a company whether for your account or for the account of another, while in the possession of material nonpublic information (see definition below) about that company or (2) disclosing material nonpublic information about a company to others who may trade on the basis of that information. Insider trading can result in criminal prosecution, jail time, significant fines and public embarrassment for you and the Company.

 

Prohibition on Trading in Company Securities

 

When you are in possession of material nonpublic information about the Company, whether positive or negative, you are prohibited from trading (whether for your account or for the account of another) in the Company’s securities, which include common stock, options to purchase common stock, any other type of securities that the Company may issue (such as preferred stock, convertible debentures, warrants and exchange-traded options), and any derivative securities that provide the economic equivalent of ownership of any of the Company’s securities or an opportunity, direct or indirect, to profit from any change in the value of the Company’s securities, except for trades made pursuant to plans approved by the Policy Officer in accordance with this policy that are intended to comply with Rule 10b5-1 under the Exchange Act.

 

The trading prohibitions in this Insider Trading Policy do not apply to: (1) an exercise of an employee stock option when payment of the exercise price is made in cash or (2) the withholding by the Company of shares of stock upon vesting of restricted stock or upon settlement of restricted stock units to satisfy applicable tax withholding requirements if (a) such withholding is required by the applicable plan or award agreement or (b) the election to exercise such tax withholding right was made by the Insider in compliance with the Trading Procedures.

 

The trading prohibitions in this Insider Trading Policy do apply, however, to the use of outstanding Company securities to pay part or all of the exercise price of a stock option, any sale of stock as part of a broker-assisted cashless exercise of an option, and any other market sale for the purpose of generating the cash needed to pay the exercise price of an option.

 

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Prohibition on Tipping

 

Providing material nonpublic information about the Company to another person who may trade or advise others to trade on the basis of that information is known as “tipping” and is illegal. You are prohibited from providing material nonpublic information about the Company to a friend, relative, or anyone else who might buy or sell a security or other financial instrument on the basis of that information, whether or not you intend to or actually do realize a profit (or any other benefit) from such tipping. Additionally, you are prohibited from recommending to any person that such person engage in or refrain from engaging in any transaction involving the Company’s securities, or otherwise give trading advice concerning the Company’s securities, if you are in possession of material nonpublic information about the Company.

 

Prohibition on Trading in Securities of Other Companies

 

Whenever, during the course of your service to or employment by the Company, you become aware of material nonpublic information about another company (1) with which the Company has an existing business relationship, including but not limited to, the Company’s distributors, vendors, customers or suppliers or collaboration, marketing, research, development or licensing partners, or (2) with which the Company is in active discussions concerning a potential transaction or business relationship, neither you nor your Affiliated Persons may trade in any securities of that company, give trading advice about that company, tip or disclose that information, pass it on to others, or engage in any other action to take advantage of that information.

 

If your work regularly involves handling or discussing confidential information of companies in either of the foregoing categories, you should consult with the Policy Officer before trading in any of those company’s securities.

 

Additionally, if you believe you may be in possession of nonpublic information about the Company that could potentially have a material effect on the stock price of a company with which the Company does not have an existing business relationship or with which the Company is not discussing a potential transaction or business relationship, you should exercise caution when trading in the securities of that company because the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) has successfully brought an insider trading claim against an insider in those circumstances.

 

Duration of Trading Prohibitions

 

These trading prohibitions continue whenever and for as long as you know or are in possession of material nonpublic information. Remember, anyone scrutinizing your transactions will be doing so after the fact, with the benefit of hindsight. As a practical matter, before engaging in any transaction, you should carefully consider even the appearance of improper insider trading and how enforcement authorities and others might view the transaction in hindsight.

 

This Insider Trading Policy applies to you and your Affiliated Persons so long as you are associated with the Company. If you leave the Company for any reason, this Insider Trading Policy, including, if applicable, the Trading Procedures described in Part III, will continue to apply to you and your Affiliated Persons until the first trading day after any material nonpublic information known to you has become public or is no longer material.

 

C.       What is Material Nonpublic Information?

 

This Insider Trading Policy prohibits you from trading in a company’s securities if you are in possession of information about the company that is both “material” and “nonpublic.” If you have a question whether certain information you are aware of is material or has been made public, you should consult with the Policy Officer.

 

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“Material” Information

 

Information about our Company or any other company is “material” if it could reasonably be expected to affect the investment decisions of a stockholder or potential investor or if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to significantly alter the total mix of information in the marketplace about us or any other company. We speak mostly in this Insider Trading Policy about determining whether information about us is material and nonpublic, but the same analysis applies to information about other companies covered by this policy that would preclude you from trading in their securities.

 

In simple terms, material information is any type of information that could reasonably be expected to affect the market price of our securities. Both positive and negative information may be material. While it is not possible to identify all information that would be deemed “material,” the following items are examples of the types of information that could be material:

 

developments regarding any programs in preclinical or clinical development, including recent regulatory interaction and/or data that have been recently generated from ongoing or recently completed preclinical or clinical trials;

developments regarding the intellectual property and/or freedom to operating for any of the current programs or product candidates under development;

projections of future earnings or losses, or other earnings guidance;

quarterly financial results that are known but have not been publicly disclosed;

potential restatements of the Company’s financial statements, changes in auditors or auditor notification that the Company may no longer rely on an auditor’s audit report;

pending or proposed corporate mergers, acquisitions, tender offers, joint ventures or dispositions of significant assets;

changes in senior management or member of our Board of Directors;

significant actual or threatened litigation or governmental investigations or major developments in such matters;

cybersecurity risks and incidents, including the discovery of significant vulnerabilities or breaches;

significant developments regarding products, customers, suppliers, orders, contracts or financing sources (e.g., the acquisition or loss of a contract);

changes in dividend policy, declarations of stock splits, or proposed securities offerings or other financings;

potential defaults under our credit agreements or indentures or potential material liquidity issues; and

bankruptcies or receiverships.

 

The above items will not always be material. For example, some new products or contracts may clearly be material while others may not be. No “bright-line” standard or list of items can adequately address the range of situations that may arise; information and events should be carefully considered in terms of their materiality to the Company.

 

“Nonpublic” Information

 

Material information is “nonpublic” if it has not been disseminated in a manner making it available to investors generally.

 

To demonstrate that information is public, one must be able to point to some fact that establishes that the information has become publicly available, such as the filing of a report with the SEC, the distribution of a press release, publishing the information on our website or posting on social media if those are regular ways we communicate with investors, or by other means that are reasonably designed to provide broad public access. Before a person with material nonpublic information can trade, the market must have adequate time to absorb the information that has been disclosed. For the purposes of this Insider Trading Policy, information will be considered public after the completion of one full day of trading following our public release of the information.

 

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For example, if the Company publicly discloses material nonpublic information of which you are aware before trading begins on a Tuesday, the first time you can buy or sell Company securities is the opening of the market on the following Wednesday. However, if the Company publicly discloses material information after trading begins on a Tuesday, the first time that you can buy or sell Company securities is the opening of the market on the following Thursday.

 

D. What are the Penalties for Insider Trading and Noncompliance with this Insider Trading Policy?

 

Both the SEC and the national securities exchanges, through the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”), investigate and are very effective at detecting insider trading. The U.S. government pursues insider trading violations vigorously, successfully prosecuting, for example, trading by employees in foreign accounts, trading by family members and friends of insiders, and trading involving only a small number of shares.

 

The penalties for violating rules against insider trading can be severe and include:

 

forfeiting any profit gained or loss avoided by the trading;

payment of the loss suffered by the persons who, contemporaneously with the purchase or sale of securities that are subject of a violation, have purchased or sold securities of the same class;

payment of criminal penalties of up to $5,000,000;

payment of civil penalties of up to three times the profit made or loss avoided; and

imprisonment for up to 20 years.

 

The Company and/or the supervisors of the person engaged in insider trading may also be required to pay civil penalties or fines of $2.5 million or more, up to three times the profit made or loss avoided, as well as criminal penalties of up to $25,000,000, and could under some circumstances be subject to private lawsuits.

 

Violation of this Insider Trading Policy or any federal or state insider trading laws may subject you to disciplinary action by the Company, including termination of your employment or other relationship with the Company. The Company reserves the right to determine, in its own discretion and on the basis of the information available to it, whether this Insider Trading Policy has been violated. The Company may determine that specific conduct violates this Insider Trading Policy whether or not it also violates the law. It is not necessary for the Company to await the filing or conclusion of a civil or criminal action against an alleged violator before taking disciplinary action.

 

E. How Do You Report a Violation of this Insider Trading Policy?

 

If you have a question about this Insider Trading Policy, you should contact the Policy Officer. In addition, if you violate this Insider Trading Policy or any federal or state laws governing insider trading or know of any such violation by any director or employee of the Company, you should report the violation immediately to the Policy Officer. However, if the conduct in question involves the Policy Officer, or if you have reported such conduct to the Policy Officer and you do not believe the Policy Officer has dealt with it properly, or if you do not feel that you can discuss the matter with the Policy Officer, you may raise the matter with the Chief Executive Officer.

 

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PART II. TRADING PROCEDURES

 

A. Special Trading Restrictions Applicable to Insiders

 

In addition to needing to comply with the restrictions on trading in our securities set forth above, Insiders and their Affiliated Persons are subject to the following special trading restrictions:

 

1)Insider Trading Policy Modification.

 

The Company may at any time change this Insider Trading Policy or adopt such other policies or procedures which it considers appropriate to carry out the purposes of its policies regarding insider trading and the disclosure of Company information. Notice of any such change will be delivered to you by regular or electronic mail (or other delivery option used by the Company) by the Company. You will be deemed to have received, be bound by and agree to revisions of this Insider Trading Policy when such revisions have been delivered to you, unless you object to any revision in a written statement received by the Policy Officer within two (2) business days of such delivery.

 

2)Prohibited Transactions

 

       No Short Sales. You may not at any time sell any securities of the Company that are not owned by you at the time of the sale (a “short sale”).

 

●       No Purchases or Sales of Derivative Securities or Hedging Transactions. You may not buy or sell puts, calls, other derivative securities of the Company or any derivative securities that provide the economic equivalent of ownership of any of the Company’s securities or an opportunity, direct or indirect, to profit from any change in the value of our securities or engage in any other hedging transaction with respect to our securities.

 

       No Company Securities Subject to Margin Calls. You may not use the Company’s securities as collateral in a margin account.

 

●      No Pledges. You may not pledge Company securities as collateral for a loan (or modify an existing pledge).

 

3)Gifts and Other Distributions in Kind.

 

No Insider may donate or make any other transfer of Company securities without consideration when the Insider is not permitted to trade unless the donee agrees not to sell the shares until the Insider is permitted to sell. In addition to charitable donations or gifts to family members, friends, trusts or others, this prohibition applies to distributions to limited partners by limited partnerships that are subject to this Insider Trading Policy.

 

B. Pre-Clearance Procedures

 

No Insider may trade in our securities, even during an open trading window, unless the trade has been approved by the Company’s Chief Executive Officer in accordance with the procedures described below. In reviewing trading requests, the Chief Executive Officer may consult with our other officers and/or outside legal counsel and will seek approval of their own trades from the Chief Executive Officer.

 

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1)Procedures. No Insider may trade in our securities unless:

 

The Insider has notified the Policy Officer of the nature of the proposed trade(s) using the then-current version of the Company’s Stock Transaction Request form. If you are unsure about where to locate the current version of such document, please contact the Policy Officer. To provide adequate time for the Company to process such request and, where applicable, to allow preparation of any required reports under Section 16 of the Exchange Act, a Request form should be received by the Policy Officer at least two (2) business days before the intended trade date;

 

The Insider has certified to the Policy Officer in writing before the proposed trade(s) that the Insider does not possess material nonpublic information concerning the Company;

 

If the Insider is an executive officer or director, the Insider has informed the Policy Officer (or in case of the Chief Financial Officer, has informed the Chief Executive Officer), of the amount of the proposed trade and whether, to the Insider’s best knowledge, (a) the Insider has (or is deemed to have) engaged in any opposite way transactions within the previous six months that were not exempt from Section 16(b) of the Exchange Act and (b) if the transaction involves a sale by an “affiliate” of the Company or of “restricted securities” (as such terms are defined under Rule 144 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (“Rule 144”)), whether the transaction meets all of the applicable conditions of Rule 144; and

 

The Policy Officer or, the Chief Executive Officer, if the Insider is the Chief Financial Officer, has approved the trade(s) and has certified their approval in writing (which may be by email).

 

The Policy Officer does not assume responsibility for, and approval by the Policy Officer does not protect the Insider from, the consequences of prohibited insider trading.

 

2)Additional Information.

 

Insiders shall provide to the Policy Officer any documentation that is reasonably requires in furtherance of the foregoing procedures. Any failure to provide such information will be grounds for the Policy Officer to deny approval of the trade request.

 

3)Notification of Brokers of Insider Status

 

Insiders who are required to file reports under Section 16 of the Exchange Act shall inform their broker-dealers that (a) the Insider is subject to Section 16; (b) the broker shall confirm that any trade by the Insider or any of their affiliates has been precleared by the Company; and (c) the broker is to provide transaction information to the Insider and/or Policy Officer on the day of a trade.

 

4)No Obligation to Approve Trades.

 

The foregoing approval procedures do not in any way obligate the Policy Officer to approve any trade.

 

From time to time, an event may occur that is material to the Company and is known by only by a limited number of directors and employees. The Policy Officer may decline an Insider’s request to preclear a proposed trade based on the existence of a material nonpublic development – even if the Insider is not aware of that material nonpublic development. If any Insider engages in a trade before a material nonpublic development is disclosed to the public or resolved, the Insider and the Company might be exposed to a charge of insider trading that could be costly and difficult to refute even if the Insider was unaware of the development. So long as the event remains material and nonpublic, the Policy Officer may decide not to approve any transactions in the Company’s securities. The Policy Officer will subsequently notify the Insider once the material nonpublic development is disclosed to the public or resolved.

 

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5)Completion of Trades.

 

After receiving written clearance to engage in a trade from the Policy Officer, an Insider must complete the proposed trade within three (3) business days or make a new trading request. Even if an Insider has received clearance, the Insider may not engage in a trade if (i) such clearance has been rescinded by the Policy Officer, (ii) the Insider has otherwise received notice that the trading window has closed or (iii) the Insider has or acquires material nonpublic information.

 

6)Post-Trade Reporting.

 

The details of any transactions in our securities (including transactions effected pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 Plan) by an Insider who is required to file reports under Section 16 of the Exchange Act must be reported to the Policy Officer by the Insider or their brokerage firm on the same day on which a trade order is placed or such a transaction otherwise is entered into. The report shall include the date of the transaction, quantity of shares, the price and the name of the broker-dealer that effected the transaction. This reporting requirement may be satisfied by providing (or having the Insider’s broker provide) a trade order confirmation to the Policy Officer if the Policy Officer receives such information by the required date. Compliance by directors and executive officers with this provision is imperative given the requirement of Section 16 of the Exchange Act that these persons generally report changes in ownership of Company securities within two (2) business days. The sanctions for noncompliance with this reporting deadline include mandatory disclosure in the Company’s proxy statement for the next annual meeting of stockholders, as well as possible civil or criminal sanctions for chronic or egregious violators.

 

C. Exemptions

 

1)Pre-Approved Rule 10b5-1 Plan.

 

Transactions made pursuant to an approved Rule 10b5-1 Plan (as defined below) will not be subject to our trading windows or pre-clearance procedures, and Insiders are not required to complete a Stock Transaction Request form for such transactions. Rule 10b5-1 of the Exchange Act provides an affirmative defense from insider trading liability under the federal securities laws for trading plans, arrangements or instructions that meet specified requirements. A trading plan, arrangement or instruction that meets the requirements of the SEC’s Rule 10b5-1 (a “Rule 10b5-1 Plan”) enables Insiders to trade in Company securities outside of our trading windows, even when in possession of material nonpublic information.

 

If an Insider intends to trade pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 Plan, such plan, arrangement or instruction must:

 

satisfy the requirements of Rule 10b5-1;

be documented in writing;

be established during a trading window when such Insider does not possess material nonpublic information; and

be pre-approved by the Policy Officer.

 

Prior to approving a Rule 10b5-1 Plan, the Policy Officer and the Company’s outside counsel, as applicable, may require that the plan exclude or include certain provisions (e.g., cooling off period, minimum number of trades requirement, limited term) that ensure compliance with SEC regulations and practices the Policy Officer deems to be in the best interests of the Company.

 

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Any proposed deviation from the specifications of an approved Rule 10b5-1 Plan (including, without limitation, the amount, price or timing of a purchase or sale) must be reported immediately to, and be approved by, the Policy Officer. All transactions pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 Plan must be timely reported in accordance with the procedures set forth above.

 

Any modification or termination of a Rule 10b5-1 Plan previously approved by the Policy Officer requires a new approval by the Policy Officer.

 

2)       Employee Equity and Retirement Plans.

 

Exercise of Stock Options. The trading prohibitions and restrictions set forth in the Trading Procedures do not apply to the exercise for cash of an option to purchase securities of the Company. However, the exercise is subject to the current reporting requirements of Section 16 of the Exchange Act and, therefore, Insiders must comply with the post-trade reporting requirement described in Section C above for any such transaction. In addition, the securities acquired upon the exercise of an option to purchase Company securities are subject to all of the requirements of this Insider Trading

 

Policy, including the Trading Procedures. Moreover, the Trading Procedures apply to the use of outstanding Company securities to pay part or all of the exercise price of an option, any net option exercise, any exercise of a stock appreciation right, share withholding and any sale of stock as part of a broker-assisted cashless exercise of an option or any other market sale for the purpose of generating the cash needed to pay the exercise price of an option.

 

Tax Withholding on Restricted Stock/Units. The trading prohibitions and restrictions set forth in the Trading Procedures do not apply to the withholding by the Company of shares of stock upon vesting of restricted stock or upon settlement of restricted stock units to satisfy tax withholding requirements if (a) withholding is required by the applicable plan or award agreement or (b) the election to exercise the tax withholding right was made by the Insider in compliance with the Trading Procedures.

 

Employee Stock Purchase Plan. The trading prohibitions and restrictions set forth in the Trading Procedures do not apply to periodic wage withholding contributions by the Company or its employees that are used to purchase Company stock pursuant to the employees’ advance instructions under the Company’s Employee Stock Purchase Plan. However, an Insider may not: (a) elect to participate in the plan or alter their instructions regarding the level of withholding or purchase by the Insider of Company securities under the plan; or (b) make cash contributions to the plan (other than through periodic wage withholding) without complying with the Trading Procedures. Any sale of securities acquired under the plan is subject to the prohibitions and restrictions of the Trading Procedures.

 

D. Waivers

 

A waiver of any provision of this Insider Trading Policy or the Trading Procedures may be authorized in writing by the Policy Officer. All waivers shall be reported to the Board of Directors.

 

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PART III. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

 

We will deliver a copy of this Insider Trading Policy to all current employees and directors and consultants and to future employees and directors and consultants at the start of their employment or relationship with the Company. Each of these individuals must acknowledge that they have received a copy and agree to comply with the terms of this Insider Trading Policy, and, if applicable, the Trading Procedures contained herein. The attached acknowledgment must be completed and submitted to the Company within ten days of receipt.

 

At our request, directors and employees and consultants will be required to re-acknowledge and agree to comply with the Insider Trading Policy (including any amendments or modifications). For that purpose, an individual will be deemed to have acknowledged and agreed to comply with the Insider Trading Policy, as amended from time to time, when copies of those items have been delivered by regular or electronic mail (or other delivery option used by the Company) to the Policy Officer.

 

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EXHIBIT A

 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

 

I hereby acknowledge that I have read, that I understand, and that I agree to comply with the Insider Trading Policy of Cojax Oil and Gas Corporation (the “Company”). I further acknowledge and agree that I am responsible for ensuring compliance with the Insider Trading Policy and the Trading Procedures by all of my “Affiliated Persons.” I also understand and agree that I will be subject to sanctions, including termination of employment, that may be imposed by the Company, in its sole discretion, for violation of the Insider Trading Policy, and that the Company may give stop-transfer and other instructions to the Company’s transfer agent or any brokerage firm managing the Company’s equity incentive plan(s) against the transfer of any Company securities that the Company considers to be in contravention of the Insider Trading Policy.

 

This acknowledgement constitutes consent for the Company to impose sanctions for violation of the Insider Trading Policy, including the Trading Procedures, and to issue any stop-transfer orders to the Company’s transfer agent that the Company, in its sole discretion, deems appropriate to ensure compliance.

 

         
Date:  March 24, 2026   Signature:  /s/ William R. Downs
     
  Name:  Willam Downs
     
  Title:  Chief Executive Officer and President

 

 

 

 

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