maintaining 49% ownership. If an audit of PDSG results in a valuation of a few million, that would certainly prove no obstacle for someone with Baroni's financial backing. I doubt the man has aspirations of being the CEO of a penny stock. He could, however, be very interested in positioning himself in a start-up at very little cost. With PDSG assembled and his government contacts, it certainly seems like this may be the direction Patriot is heading. Patriot would continue their current strategy of collecting revenue with minimal involvement. Baroni gets in on the cheap and Patriot gets a shot at the government without exerting much capital or resources. At this point I don't see what they have to lose. An ownership stake by Baroni would allow Patriot to retrieve some of their initial investment in PDSG and subsequently turn those operations over to someone who actually knows the business, or at the very least knows people in the business. I can't envision Patriot going forward with PDSG on their own.