Major Knightscope (NASDAQ: KSCP) holder reports 1,724,418 shares
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
3
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Knightscope, Inc. disclosed an initial ownership report showing that major shareholder Eric James Rose directly holds 1,724,418 shares of Class A Common Stock. This Form 3 filing records his status as a ten percent owner and does not reflect any recent share purchases or sales.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
1 transaction reported
Mixed
1 txn
Insider
Rose Eric James
Role
10% Owner
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| holding | Class A Common Stock | -- | -- | -- |
Holdings After Transaction:
Class A Common Stock — 1,724,418 shares (Direct)
Footnotes (1)
Key Figures
Direct holdings: 1,724,418 shares
1 metrics
Direct holdings
1,724,418 shares
Class A Common Stock held directly after reported entry
Key Terms
Form 3, ten percent owner, Class A Common Stock
3 terms
Form 3 regulatory
"This Form 3 filing records his status as a ten percent owner"
Form 3 is the initial public filing that officers, directors and large shareholders must submit to report their ownership of a company’s securities when they become insiders. It acts like an opening inventory sheet that gives investors a starting point to see who holds significant stakes and to spot later trades or potential conflicts of interest, helping assess insider confidence and transparency.
ten percent owner regulatory
"showing that major shareholder Eric James Rose directly holds and is a ten percent owner"
Class A Common Stock financial
"directly holds 1,724,418 shares of Class A Common Stock"
Class A common stock is a category of a company’s shares that carries a specific set of ownership rights—most commonly defined voting power and claims on dividends—set out in the company’s charter. For investors it matters because the class determines how much influence you have over corporate decisions, the share’s likely dividend and trading behavior, and how it compares in value to other share classes, like choosing a particular seat with different privileges at the company’s decision-making table.