How is it, then, that there was no understanding or appreciation of how deficient the minutes were? I've looked at the minutes of those meetings and they're bare bones. They deal with significant financial issues. They're much more involved with regard to companies than...even the minutes when I sat at not-for-profit organizations. They're rather shocking, in fact, in the lack of detail to them.
How is it that board members, sitting on so many boards, didn't actually come to the conclusion that your board minutes were basically a fraud?