INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

           PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A) OF THE SECURITIES
                              EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Filed by the Registrant /X/
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant /_/

Check the appropriate box:
/X/    Preliminary Proxy Statement
/_/    Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only
       (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
/_/    Definitive Proxy Statement
/_/    Definitive Additional Materials
/_/    Soliciting Material Pursuant toss.240.14a-12

                                 IMAGING3, INC.
                    ----------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)


        ---------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

/_/  No fee required.
/_/  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

       (1)     Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

       (2)     Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

       (3)     Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction  computed
               pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which
               the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

       (4)     Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

       (5)     Total fee paid:

/_/    Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/_/    Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided  by  Exchange  Act
       Rule  0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was
       paid previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration  statement
       number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

       (1)     Amount Previously Paid:

       (2)     Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

       (3)     Filing Party:

       (4)     Date Filed:




                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                         TO BE HELD ON DECEMBER 21, 2010JANUARY 18, 2011


DEAR STOCKHOLDER:


         Notice is hereby  given that the 20102011  Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders
("Annual Meeting") of Imaging3,  Inc. ("Imaging3" or the "Company") will be held
at 10:00 a.m.  Pacific  Time,  on Tuesday,  December 21, 2010January 18, 2011 at 3200 W. Valhalla
Drive, Burbank, California 91505.

         At the Annual Meeting,  you will be asked to consider and vote upon the
following proposals:

1.       An amendment to the  Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  in order to
         increase  the  number  of  authorized   shares  of  common  stock  from
         500,000,000,  par value  $0.001 per share,  to  750,000,000,  par value
         $0.001 per share, and to authorize 1,000,000 shares of preferred stock,
         par value $0.001 per share.

2.       An  amendment  to the  Company's  Bylaws  to  increase  the size of the
         Company's  Board  of  Directors  from two (2) to a range of five (5) to
         nine (9), with the exact number of directors to be seven (7).

3.       Provided the amendment to the Company's Bylaws is adopted, the election
         of three  members of the Board of  Directors  to hold office  until the
         next  annual  meeting  of  stockholders   or  until  their   respective
         successors  have been elected and  qualified.  If the  amendment to the
         Company's  Bylaws is not  adopted,  then the election of two members of
         the Board of Directors to hold office until the next annual  meeting of
         stockholders or until their respective successors have been elected and
         qualified.

4.       Ratification  of the  appointment  M&K CPAS,  PLLC as Imaging3,  Inc.'s
         ("Imaging3")  independent  registered  public  accounting  firm for the
         fiscal year ending December 31, 2010.

5.       The  transaction  of such other  business and act upon any other matter
         which may properly come before the annual meeting or any adjournment or
         postponement of the meeting.

         The foregoing  items of business are more fully  described in the Proxy
Statement accompanying this Notice.

         The Board of Directors  has fixed the close of business on December 1,10,
2010 as the record date for the determination of stockholders entitled to notice
of and  to  vote  at  this  20102011  Annual  Meeting  and  at  any  adjournment  or
postponement thereof.

         A copy of the  Company's  Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended  December
31, 2009 is included with this Proxy Statement.  A copy of the Annual Report and
Proxy Statement can also be found on the Internet at www.imaging3.com.

                                 Sincerely,

                                 /s/ Dean Janes
                                 Dean Janes
                                 Chairman and Chief Executive OfficerCHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER



                                    IMPORTANT

PLEASE SIGN AND  PROMPTLY  RETURN THE  ENCLOSED  PROXY CARD IN THE  ACCOMPANYING
POSTAGE-PAID  RETURN ENVELOPE SO THAT YOUR SHARES MAY BE VOTED IF YOU ARE UNABLE
TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING.




                                 IMAGING3, INC.

                             3200 W. VALHALLA DRIVE

                            BURBANK, CALIFORNIA 91505

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                     FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                                DECEMBER 21, 2010JANUARY 18, 2011

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                 INFORMATION CONCERNING SOLICITATION AND VOTING

GENERAL

         The  enclosed  proxy  ("Proxy")  is solicited on behalf of the Board of
Directors (the "Board") of Imaging3,  Inc., a California corporation ("Imaging3"
or the  "Company"),  for use at its 20102011  Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  (the
"Annual  Meeting") to be held 10:00 a.m.  Pacific Time, on Tuesday,  December 21,
2010January 18,
2011 at 3200 W. Valhalla Drive, Burbank, California 91505 and at any adjournment
or postponement thereof.

         This  Proxy  Statement  and the  accompanying  form of Proxy were first
mailed to all  stockholders  entitled to vote at the Annual  Meeting on or about
November 22,December 10, 2010.

         The  Company's  principal  executive  offices  are  located  at 3200 W.
Valhalla  Drive,  Burbank,  California  91505.  Its  telephone  number  is (818)
260-0930.

RECORD DATE AND VOTING

         Stockholders  of record at the close of business  on November  22,December  10, 2010
(the "Record Date") are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting.
As of the close of business on the Record Date, there were 380,377,668 shares of
the  Company's  Common Stock (the "Common  Stock")  outstanding  and entitled to
vote.  Each  stockholder  is entitled to one vote for each share of Common Stock
held by such stockholder as of the Record Date.

         The  required  quorum for the  transaction  of  business  at the Annual
Meeting is a majority of the shares of Common  Stock issued and  outstanding  on
the Record  Date.  Shares that are voted  "FOR,"  "AGAINST,"  or  "ABSTAIN" on a
matter are treated as being present at the meeting for purposes of  establishing
a quorum.  Broker  non-votes  (i.e.,  the  submission  of a Proxy by a broker or
nominee specifically  indicating the lack of discretionary  authority to vote on
the matter) are also  counted for  purposes  of  determining  the  presence of a
quorum for the  transaction  of  business.  Shares  voted  "FOR" or  "AGAINST" a
particular  matter  presented to stockholders for approval at the Annual Meeting
will be treated as shares  entitled to vote ("Votes  Cast") with respect to such
matter.  Abstentions also will be counted toward the tabulation of Votes Cast on
proposals  presented  to the  stockholders  and will  have the  same  effect  as
negative votes. Broker non-votes will not be counted for purposes of determining
the number of Votes Cast with  respect to the  particular  proposal on which the
broker has expressly not voted.  Accordingly,  broker  non-votes will not affect
the  outcome of the voting on a proposal  that  requires a majority of the Votes
Cast (such as an amendment to, or adoption of, a stock purchase plan).

         All votes will be tabulated by the inspector of election  appointed for
the Annual Meeting, who will separately tabulate affirmative and negative votes,
abstentions  and  broker  non-votes.  Stockholders  may  cumulate  votes  in the

                                      -1-


election of  directors.  If a choice as to the matters  coming before the Annual
Meeting has been  specified by a  stockholder  on the Proxy,  the shares will be
voted  accordingly.  If a Proxy is  returned  to the  Company  and no  choice is
specified,  the shares will be voted "FOR" each of the  Company's  nominees  for
director and "FOR" the approval of each of the proposals described in the Notice
of Annual Meeting of Stockholders and in this Proxy Statement.

         Any  stockholder  or  stockholder's  representative  who,  because of a
disability,  may need special assistance or accommodation to allow him or her to
participate  at  the  Annual  Meeting  may  request  reasonable   assistance  or
accommodation from the Company by contacting the Corporate Secretary, in writing
at 3200 W. Valhalla Drive,  Burbank,  California  91505 or by telephone at (818)
260-0930.  To provide the  Company  sufficient  time to arrange  for  reasonable
assistance, please submit such requests by December 15, 2010.January 10, 2011.

REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES

         Any stockholder giving a Proxy pursuant to this  solicitation,  and any
beneficial owner of the stock who has voting power over it for which a Proxy has
been  submitted,  may revoke it at any time prior to the meeting.  Revocation is
accomplished  by filing  with the  Secretary  of the  Company  at its  principal
executive  offices at 3200 W.  Valhalla  Drive,  Burbank,  California  91505,  a
written notice of such revocation or a duly executed Proxy bearing a later date,
or by attending the Annual Meeting and voting in person.

SOLICITATION

         The Company will bear the entire cost of this  solicitation,  including
the preparation, assembly, printing and mailing of the Notice of Annual Meeting,
this  Proxy  Statement,  the Proxy  and any  additional  solicitation  materials
furnished to stockholders. Copies of solicitation materials will be furnished to
brokerage houses,  fiduciaries and custodians holding shares in their names that
are  beneficially  owned by others so that they may  forward  this  solicitation
material to such beneficial  owners.  To assure that a quorum will be present in
person  or by proxy at the  Annual  Meeting,  it may be  necessary  for  certain
officers, directors, employees or other agents of the Company to solicit proxies
by  telephone,  facsimile  or other  means or in person.  The  Company  will not
compensate such  individuals for any such services.  Except as described  above,
the Company does not presently intend to solicit proxies other than by mail.

DEADLINE FOR RECEIPT OF STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

         The deadline for submitting a stockholder proposal for inclusion in the
Company's proxy statement and form of proxy for the Company's fiscal 20112012 annual
meeting  of  stockholders  is the  close of  business  on  August 31,September  30,  2011.
Proposals of stockholders  intended to be presented at the Company's fiscal 20102012
annual  meeting of  stockholders  without  inclusion  of such  proposals  in the
Company's  proxy  statement  and form of proxy  relating to the meeting  must be
received by the Company no later than the close of  business  on  JulySeptember  30,
2011 and no earlier than the close of business on August 31, 2011.

                                    * * * * *

                                       -2-

                            PROPOSALS TO BE VOTED ON

                                 PROPOSAL NO. 1
            AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION TO INCREASE AMOUNT
                           OF AUTHORIZED COMMON STOCK

         As described in the accompanying  NOTICE, the Company proposes to amend
its  Articles of  Incorporation  in order to increase  the number of  authorized
shares of the Company's common stock from 500,000,000 to 750,000,000,  par value
$0.001 per share (the  "Common  Stock  Articles  Amendment").  As of November 1,
2010,  and  before the  increase in  authorized  shares and not  including a total of
13,761,471  shares  reserved  for  potential   issuance  upon  the  exercise  of
outstanding  Series A Warrants  (4,587,157),  Series B Warrants  (4,587,157) and
Series C  Warrants  (4,587,157)  recently  issued  by the  Company  in a private
placement  to  two  investment  funds  (collectively,   the  "Warrant  Shares"),
119,622,332  shares  of the  Company's  common  stock are not  reserved  for any
specific use and are available for future issuance. (The Company registered 133%
of the Warrant Shares on a Form S-3  Registration  Statement in accordance  with
the applicable registration rights agreement to cover a possible increase in the
number of Warrant Shares due to their anti-dilution  provisions.) As of November
1, 2010 and after the increase in authorized  shares,  369,622,332 shares of the
Company's  common stock are not reserved for any specific use and are  available
for future  issuance  (355,860,861  if the Warrant Shares are deducted),  except
that the Company may set aside shares (currently  estimated to be 16,000,000) to
be authorized  for a customary  stock option plan for the  Company's  directors,
officers,  employees and key  consultants in the future.  The Company's Board of
Directors  has not yet adopted such a plan and is not certain when the plan will
be adopted. If and when such a plan is adopted,  the Company will then submit it
to the shareholders for a vote to ratify it.

         The Board of Directors of the Company  voted  unanimously  to implement
the Common Stock Articles Amendment because the Board of Directors believes that
an increase to the number of  authorized  shares of the  Company's  common stock
will allow the Company to raise part of the capital necessary for the Company to
grow its business in the future.

         The Company is not expected to experience a material tax consequence as
a result of the  Common  Stock  Articles  Amendment.  Increasing  the  number of
authorized  shares of the  Company's  common  stock may,  however,  subject  the
Company's existing shareholders to future dilution of their ownership and voting
power in the Company.

POTENTIAL ANTI-TAKEOVER EFFECT

         The additional  shares of common stock that would become  available for
issuance  if the  proposal  were  adopted  could also be used by the  Company to
oppose a hostile  takeover  attempt  or delay or  prevent  changes in control or
management of the Company.  For example,  without further stockholder  approval,
the  Board  could  strategically  sell  shares  of  common  stock  in a  private
transaction  to  purchasers  who would  oppose a takeover  or favor the  current
Board.  Although this proposal to increase the authorized  common stock has been
prompted by business and financial  considerations  and not by the threat of any
hostile  takeover attempt (nor is the Board currently aware of any such attempts
directed  at the  Company),  nevertheless,  stockholders  should  be aware  that
approval of this Proposal No. 1 could  facilitate  future efforts by the Company
to deter or prevent changes in control of the Company, including transactions in
which the stockholders  might otherwise  receive a premium for their shares over
then current market prices.

REQUIRED VOTE

         Approval  of  the  Common  Stock   Articles   Amendment   requires  the
affirmative  "FOR" vote of a majority of the Votes Cast on the proposal.  Unless
marked to the contrary,  proxies  received  will be voted "FOR"  approval of the
Common Stock Articles Amendment.

RECOMMENDATION

         OUR  BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE  "FOR"  THE  COMMON  STOCK
ARTICLES AMENDMENT.

                                    * * * * *

                                       -3-


                                 PROPOSAL NO. 2

       AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION TO AUTHORIZE PREFERRED STOCK

         As described in the accompanying  NOTICE, the Company proposes to amend
its  Articles  of  Incorporation  in  order to  authorize  1,000,000  shares  of
preferred  stock,  par value  $0.001 per share (the  "Preferred  Stock  Articles
Amendment").

         The Board of Directors of the Company  voted  unanimously  to implement
the Preferred Stock Articles  Amendment because the Board of Directors  believes
that the  authorization  of shares of preferred  stock will allow the Company to
raise part of the capital  necessary for the Company to grow its business in the
future. At this time,  however,  the Company does not plan to create a series of
preferred  stock.  When the Company  determines  to create a series of preferred
stock, the terms of the preferred stock,  including  dividend or interest rates,
conversion prices, voting rights, redemption prices, maturity dates, and similar
matters will be determined by the Company's Board of Directors.

         The Company is not expected to experience a material tax consequence as
a result of the Preferred Stock Articles Amendment.  Authorizing preferred stock
may, however,  subject the Company's existing shareholders to future dilution of
their ownership and voting power in the Company.

POTENTIAL ANTI-TAKEOVER EFFECT

         The shares of preferred stock that would become  available for issuance
if the  proposal  were  adopted  could  also be used by the  Company to oppose a
hostile takeover attempt or delay or prevent changes in control or management of
the Company. For example,  without further stockholder approval, the Board could
strategically  sell  shares  of  preferred  stock in a  private  transaction  to
purchasers who would oppose a takeover or favor the current Board. Although this
proposal  to  authorize  preferred  stock  has been  prompted  by  business  and
financial  considerations  and not by the threat of any hostile takeover attempt
(nor is the Board currently aware of any such attempts directed at the Company),
nevertheless,  stockholders should be aware that approval of this Proposal No. 2
could  facilitate  future efforts by the Company to deter or prevent  changes in
control of the Company,  including  transactions in which the stockholders might
otherwise receive a premium for their shares over then current market prices.

REQUIRED VOTE

         Approval  of  the  Preferred  Stock  Articles  Amendment  requires  the
affirmative  "FOR" vote of a majority of the Votes Cast on the proposal.  Unless
marked to the contrary, proxies received will be voted "FOR" the Preferred Stock
Articles Amendment.

RECOMMENDATION

         OUR BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR" THE  PREFERRED  STOCK
ARTICLES AMENDMENT.

                                    * * * * *

                                       -4-

                                 PROPOSAL NO. 3

                               AMENDMENT TO BYLAWS

         As described in the accompanying  NOTICE, the Company proposes to amend
its  Bylaws  (the  "Bylaws  Amendment")  in  order to  increase  the size of the
Company's  Board of  Directors  from two (2) to a range of five (5) to nine (9),
with the exact number of directors to be seven (7) (the "Bylaws Amendment").

         The Board of  Directors  of the Company  approves of  implementing  the
Bylaws  Amendment  because the Board of Directors  believes that  increasing the
size of the  Company's  Board of  Directors is necessary to allow the Company to
add additional  advisors to the Board of Directors,  including  advisors who are
independent as defined in Rule 4200 of Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's
listing standards.  In particular,  the Board is motivated to recruit,  appoint,
and in the future nominate candidates for director who are qualified to serve on
the Audit Committee. Furthermore,  California law requires that the Company have
at least three directors.

         The Company  last elected  directors  on October 1, 2004,  prior to the
Company becoming a reporting company.

         The Company's  Bylaws  permit the Company's  Board of Directors to fill
the vacancies on the Board created by the proposed  Bylaws  Amendment.  Although
the  Company's  Board of  Directors  does  not  intend  to fill  the  vacancies,
circumstances  may  change,  such as the  opportunity  to fill a vacancy  with a
strong  independent  director,  and  there is no  assurance  that  the  Board of
Directors  will not  fill one or more  vacancies  prior  to the  Company's  next
shareholder meeting.

         The Company is not expected to experience a tax consequence as a result
of the Bylaws Amendment.

REQUIRED VOTE

         Approval of the Bylaws Amendment requires the affirmative "FOR" vote of
a majority of the Votes Cast on the  proposal.  Unless  marked to the  contrary,
proxies received will be voted "FOR" the Bylaws Amendment.

RECOMMENDATION

         OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE BYLAWS AMENDMENT.

                                    * * * * *

                                       -5-

                                PROPOSAL NUMBER 4

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         The Board  recommended and nominated Dean Janes,  Xavier Aguilera,  and
Christopher  Sohn as nominees for election at the annual meeting.  At the Annual
Meeting,  three  directors will be elected to the Board of Directors.  Except as
set forth  below,  unless  otherwise  instructed,  the persons  appointed in the
accompanying  form of proxy  will  vote  the  proxies  received  by them for the
nominees named below, who are all presently directors of Imaging3.  Your proxies
cannot be voted for a greater  number of  persons  than the  number of  nominees
named in the proxy statement. In the event that any nominee becomes unavailable,
the proxy holders will vote in their  discretion for a substitute  nominee.  The
term of office of each person elected as a director will continue until the next
annual meeting or until a successor has been elected and qualified, or until the
director's earlier death, resignation or removal.

         After the Annual  Meeting,  the Company's Board of Directors will still
have four vacancies. The existing directors have not at this time identified any
candidates to fill those  vacancies,  but will have the right to fill them until
the next Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders.  Accordingly,  the  vacancies  may be
filled by resolution of the  Company's  Board of Directors,  or may be filled by
election at the next Annual Meeting of Stockholders in 2011.2012.

         If Proposal Number 3 is not adopted by the shareholders,  then only two
directors  will be elected at the Annual Meeting of the  Shareholders.Shareholders  until the
Bylaws can be amended in a different procedure to comply with California law. In
that case, the two directors with the highest number of votes will be elected to
the Board.  California  law  requires  that the Company  have a minimum of three
directors,  so if Proposal  Number 3 is not adopted,  the Company may petition a
California  court for an order amending the Bylaws to provide for at least three
directors.

NOMINEES FOR ELECTION TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

The following  information  provided  with respect to the principal  occupation,
affiliations and business  experience during the last five years for each of the
nominees has been furnished to us by such nominees. We identify and describe the
key experience,  qualifications and skills our directors bring to the Board that
are important in light of the Company's  business and structure.  The directors'
experiences,  qualifications  and  skills  that the  Board  considered  in their
nomination are included in their individual biographies.

o        Leadership  experience.  We believe that directors  with  experience in
         significant  leadership  positions such as chief executive  officer and
         chief  financial  officer  provide the Company with  special  insights.
         These people generally possess leadership  qualities and the ability to
         identify and develop those qualities in other people.  They demonstrate
         a practical understanding of organizations,  processes,  strategy, risk
         management  and the methods to drive change and growth.  Through  their
         service  as leaders in other  organizations,  they also have  access to
         important  sources of market  intelligence,  analysis and relationships
         that may benefit the Company.

o        Finance  experience.  We believe that an  understanding  of finance and
         financial  reporting  processes is  important  for our  directors.  The
         Company  measures its operating and strategic  performance by reference
         to financial  targets.  We seek to have  directors who are  financially
         knowledgeable.

o        Industry  experience.  We seek to have  directors  with  experience  as
         executives,  directors or in other leadership positions in the industry
         in which we participate.

o        Government experience.  We seek directors with governmental  experience
         because of our interactions with a variety of governing agencies,  both
         as  customers  and  regulatory   bodies.  The  Company  recognizes  the
         importance  of  working  constructively  with  governments  and  values
         directors with this experience.

                                      -6-
o        Technology and education experience;  As a technology based company, we
         seek directors with backgrounds in technology and education because our
         success depends in part on developing and accessing new ideas.


                                      -6-


         The name and certain  information  regarding each nominee are set forth
below as of November 1, 2010. There are no family  relationships among directors
or executive officers of Imaging3.

NAME                 AGE   CURRENT POSITION WITH IMAGING3
- ------------------------ --------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- ----- -----------------------------------------------------
Dean Janes           44    Chairman and  Chief Executive Officer

Xavier Aguilera (1)  61    Executive Vice President,  Chief Financial Officer,
                           Corporate Secretary and Director

Christopher Sohn     49    President and Chief Operating Officer

- ---------------------------------------------
(1)      Member of Audit Committee.

         DEAN JANES has been the  Chairman  and Chief  Executive  Officer of the
Company since its inception in October 1993. Mr. Janes founded Imaging Services,
Inc. in October 1993 which changed its name to Imaging3, Inc. in 2002. Mr. Janes
was the President and Chief  Executive  Officer of Imaging  Services,  Inc. from
1993 to 2001,  where his  responsibilities  included  business  development  and
overseeing operations, sales and marketing,  operations and finance. In 2001 Mr.
Janes brought Mr.  Christopher Sohn on as President and Chief Operating  Officer
with Mr. Janes taking the position of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.  His
duties remain the same with the exception of directly overseeing  operations and
finance.  Prior to founding the Company,  Mr. Janes worked for COHR,  Center for
Health Resources,  from 1992 to 1993 as a Senior Field Service Engineer. His job
responsibilities  included  technical  support for junior engineers and business
development of service  contracts and revenues for all makes of medical  imaging
equipment.  From 1991 to 1992,  Mr.  Janes worked for Toshiba  American  Medical
Corporation,  where his job title was National  Technical Support Engineer.  His
primary  responsibilities were to assist Service Engineers throughout the United
States  with  problems  and design  errors with Cath Labs and Angio  Suites.  He
served as a  conduit  between  Japan and the  Service  Engineers  in the  United
States.  From 1990 to 1991, Mr. Janes worked for OEC Medical Systems,  Inc. as a
Senior Field  Service  Engineer,  where his  responsibilities  were to maintain,
repair and install c-arms and urology systems in the Southern  California  area.
From 1988 to 1990 Mr.  Janes  worked for Kaiser  Medical  Physics as an in-house
X-ray Service  Engineer for Kaiser Harbor City  Hospital.  His  responsibilities
were to maintain and repair medical  imaging  equipment  within the hospital and
three outlying clinics. Mr. Janes also served in the United States Army Reserves
as a Biomedical  engineer,  where his service was from 1983 to 1991, with a tour
in the  first  Gulf  War  from  December  1990 to  April  1991.  He  majored  in
Bio-Medical  Electronic  Engineering  at the  University  of Colorado  Technical
Institute (1984-1988). Mr. Janes is the principal inventor of Imaging3 real-time
3D medical diagnostic imaging technology. Mr. Janes is a member of MENSA.

         Mr. Jane's qualifications:

         o        Leadership  experience  - Chairman  of the Board,  founder and
                  Chief Executive  Officer of the Company since its inception in
                  October 1993.

         o        Finance  experience - As founder and Chief Executive  Officer,
                  Mr.  Janes has  supervised  the  financial  management  of the
                  Company since its inception.

         o        Industry  experience - Mr. Janes is the founder of the Company
                  who has developed and implemented the Company's  business plan
                  since inception,  and is managingmanging the Company's  submissions to
                  the Food and Drug  Administration.  He has  senior  management
                  experience  with OEC Medical  Systems,  Inc.,  Kaiser  Medical
                  Physics,  the Center for Health  Resources  and other firms in
                  the industry.

         o        Government  experience - Mr. Janes served in the United States
                  Army Reserves as a Biomedical engineer.

                                      -7-


         o        Technology and education experience - Mr. Janes is an inventor
                  of the Company's  proprietary real time 3D medical  diagnostic
                  imaging  technology,  is a member of  MENSA,  and  majored  in
                  Bio-Medical   Engineering   at  the   University  of  Colorado
                  Technical Institute.

         XAVIER AGUILERA has been the Executive Vice President,  Chief Financial
Officer and Corporate  Secretary of the Company since June 1999. Mr.  Aguilera's
responsibilities  include managing the Company's  finances,  accounting,  taxes,
credit  facilities and interfacing and developing new  relationships  with banks
and other financial institutions. Prior to working for the Company, Mr. Aguilera
was  self-employed as a consultant for Xavier Aguilera & Associates from 1997 to
1999. His responsibilities were to manage and open primary healthcare facilities
throughout  Southern  California.   He  provided  property  management,   estate
planning, credit facility and Import/Export consulting for several businesses in
Southern   California.   From  1995  to  1997,   Mr.   Aguilera  was  the  Chief
Administrative  Officer  for  East  Los  Angeles  Doctors  Hospital,  where  his
responsibilities  were to manage  administrative  personnel within the hospital,
manage public relations, business development and JCAHO compliance. From 1992 to
1995, Mr. Aguilera was the Chief Executive  Officer for El Centro Human Services
Corporation,  where  his  responsibilities  were  to  develop  and  implement  a
community based mental health facility consisting of eight satellite centers. He
managed a $9.4 million budget and a full time staff of 240 employees.  From 1990
to  1992,  Mr.  Aguilera  was  a  Deputy  Director/Administrator  for  Northeast
Community Clinic,  where his  responsibilities  were to implement and administer
the clinics  health  programs  and oversee  operations.  From 1988 to 1990,  Mr.
Aguilera  was  self  employed  as  a  consultant  for  finance,  management  and
international finance. He provided these services to banks as well as businesses
throughout  Southern  California.  From  1987 to  1988,  Mr.  Aguilera  was Vice
President of International Banking Marketing for California Commerce Bank, where
his  responsibilities  were to manage and  administer  a $14 million  portfolio,
develop new business in the Southern  California  with Hispanic  Businesses  and
develop business  relationships  with Northern Mexico businesses and banks. From
1981 to 1987, Mr. Aguilera was an Assistant General Manager/Deputy  Director for
Banco Nacional de Mexico  (BANAMEX).  He was  responsible for $60 million in new
deposits as well as new business  development  and  management of commercial and
personal  lending  departments.  He holds a  bachelor  degree in  business  from
California  State  University at Northridge  (1983) and a Certificate of Medical
Management from the University of California at Los Angeles (1995).

         Mr. Aguilera's qualifications:

         o        Leadership  experience - Mr.  Aguilera served as our Executive
                  Vice  President,   Chief   Financial   Officer  and  Corporate
                  Secretary  since June 1999 and Chairman of the Audit Committee
                  since 2003.

         o        Finance  experience  - Mr.  Aguilera  is  currently  the Chief
                  Financial Officer of the Company and had extensive  experience
                  in financial  management with other companies prior to joining
                  the Company in June 1999.

         o        Industry  experience  - Mr.  Aguilera  has  over 25  years  of
                  financial and management experience in the medical and banking
                  industries.

         o        Technology  and  education  experience  - Mr.  Aguilera  has a
                  Bachelors  Degree in Business from California State University
                  at Northridge and a Certificate of Medical Management from the
                  University of California at Los Angeles.

         CHRISTOPHER SOHN has been the President and Chief Operating  Officer of
the Company since June 2001.  As a Chief  Operating  Officer for  Imaging3,  Mr.
Sohn's  responsibilities  include developing  international sales, marketing and
resourcing network, organizing and strategizing with manufacturing companies and
researching  new sources of products from  developing  countries for import into
the United States, overseeing of business operations and human resources.  Prior
to working for the Company,  Mr. Sohn was President and Chief Executive  Officer
of DMI, Inc. from 1994 to 2000. As Chief Executive  Officer for an international
-8-
trading  company  of  diagnostic   medical  imaging  system,   Mr.  Sohn's  main
responsibility  was to develop  business  relationships  and dealer  networks in
Central  and South  American  markets,  connecting  this with the needs of Asian
medical equipment  manufactures as well as manufactures in the United States and

                                      -8-


North America. Mr. Sohn has also organized and participated in more than a dozen
medical   exhibitions  during  this  period  including  the  Hospitalar  (Brazil
1995-2000),  and RSNA during the same  period.  From 2000 to 2001,  Mr. Sohn was
Chief  Executive  Officer  of ISOL  America,  Inc.,  where his  responsibilities
included starting up an overseas  headquarters for the parent company ISOL Korea
in the United States as well as setting up a distribution  and dealer network in
the United States, Central and South America for ISOL's products, which included
MRI,  Magnetic  Resonance  Imaging and Bone Desitometry  Systems.  Mr. Sohn also
assisted in the Company's efforts to achieve FDA and UL approval of its products
as well as researching  manufacturing  partners for the assembly and manufacture
of ISOL products within the United States.  Mr. Sohn majored in biochemistry and
computer science at the University of California at Los Angeles (1978-1982).

         Mr. Sohn's qualifications:

         o        Leadership  experience - President and Chief Operating Officer
                  of the Company since June 2001, and  previously  President and
                  Chief Executive Officer of DMI, Inc., an international trading
                  company for diagnostic medical imaging systems.

         o        Industry  experience - Mr. Sohn has organized and participated
                  in more than a dozen  medical  exhibitions  and serves and has
                  served in senior  management  positions  with the  Company and
                  other firms in the medical imaging systems industry.

         o        Technology  and  education  experience  - Mr. Sohn  majored in
                  biochemistry   and  computer  science  at  the  University  of
                  California at Los Angeles.

         No officer or  director  is  required  to make any  specific  amount or
percentage of his business time available to us. Each of our officers intends to
devote  such  amount of his or her time to our  affairs as is required or deemed
appropriate by us.

REQUIRED VOTE

         If the Bylaws  Amendment is adopted,  the three nominees  receiving the
highest number of affirmative "FOR" votes shall be elected as directors.  If the
Bylaws Amendment is not adopted,  the two nominees  receiving the highest number
of  affirmative  "FOR" votes  shall be elected as  directors.  Stockholders  may
cumulate  votes in the election of  directors.  Unless  marked to the  contrary,
proxies received will be voted "FOR" these nominees.

RECOMMENDATION

         OUR BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR" THE  ELECTION  TO THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF EACH OF THE FOREGOING NOMINEES.

PREVIOUS ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         At the time of the  election  of  directors  on October  1,  2004,  the
Company was still subject to the reporting and proxy  solicitation  rules of the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange  Act"),  because the
Company did not file its Form 15 voluntarily withdrawing from those requirements
until  July 9, 2004.  Under Rule 12g-4 of the  Exchange  Act,  the  Company  was
required to comply with the Exchange Act rules and  regulations for a transition
period of 90 days after the filing of Form 15,  which means that the Company was
required to comply until October 8, 2004.  Consequently,  by electing  directors
without   Exchange  Act   compliance   before   October  8,  2004,  the  Company
inadvertently  committed a technical violation of the Exchange Act at that time.
The Company  has not been  notified  of any  planned  enforcement  action by the
Securities and Exchange  Commission nor shareholder  lawsuit.  While  management
does not  believe  that the  Company  will  incur  damage or be subject to legal
proceedings because of the inadvertent violation,  there is no assurance that an
adverse action relating to that election of directors may not be brought against
the Company in the future.


                                    * * * * *

                                       -9-

                                PROPOSAL NUMBER 5

                   RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT
                        REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

         The Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors  has appointed M&K CPAS,
PLLC  as  the  independent  registered  public  accounting  firm  to  audit  our
consolidated  financial  statements  for the  year  ending  December  31,  2010.
Notwithstanding  its selection,  the Audit  Committee,  in its  discretion,  may
appoint another independent registered public accounting firm at any time during
the year if the Audit Committee believes that such a change would be in the best
interest of Imaging3 and its stockholders. If the appointment is not ratified by
our stockholders,  the Audit Committee may reconsider  whether it should appoint
another  independent  registered public accounting firm.  Representatives of M&K
CPAS,  PLLC are  expected  to attend  the  Annual  Meeting,  where  they will be
available to respond to  appropriate  questions  and, if they desire,  to make a
statement.

         Our prior accounting  firm,  Kabani & Company,  Inc.,  Certified Public
Accountants  ("KC"), was dismissed in April 2009 after it completed the audit of
our  financial  statements  for the fiscal year ending  December 31, 2008.  KC's
report on our financial statements for our past two fiscal years ending December
31, 2008 did not contain an adverse  opinion or a disclaimer of opinion,  or was
qualified or modified as to uncertainty,  audit scope, or accounting principles,
other  than  the  "going  concern"   qualifications.   The  decision  to  change
accountants was recommended by the Company's  Audit  Committee.  During the past
two  fiscal  years the  Company  did not have any  disagreements  with KC on any
matter of accounting principles or practices, financial statement disclosure, or
auditing  scope  or  procedure,  which  disagreements,  if not  resolved  to the
satisfaction of KC, would have caused it to make reference to the subject matter
of the disagreement in connection with its reports. The Company did not have any
disagreements with KC with respect to accounting principles, financial statement
disclosure,  or  auditing  scope or  procedure,  nor were there any  "reportable
events" during that time period.  The Company reported the change of accountants
on its Report on Form 8-K,  dated April 13,  2009,  and has  provided KC and M&K
CPAS, PLLC with a copy of this disclosure in this Proxy Statement.

REQUIRED VOTE

         Ratification  of the  appointment of M&K CPAS,  PLLC as our independent
registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2010 requires
the  affirmative  "FOR"  vote of a majority  of the Votes Cast on the  proposal.
Unless marked to the contrary, proxies received will be voted "FOR" ratification
of the appointment of M&K CPAS, PLLC.

RECOMMENDATION

         OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE RATIFICATION OF THE
APPOINTMENT OF M&K CPAS, PLLC AS OUR INDEPENDENT  REGISTERED  PUBLIC  ACCOUNTING
FIRM FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2010.

                                    * * * * *

                                      -10-


               BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MATTERS

         We are  committed  to  maintaining  the highest  standards  of business
conduct and corporate governance,  which we believe are essential to running our
business  efficiently,   serving  our  stockholders  well  and  maintaining  our
integrity in the  marketplace.  We have  adopted a code of business  conduct and
ethics for directors,  officers  (including our principal  executive officer and
principal  financial  officer)  and  employees,  known as the  Imaging3  Code of
Conduct. The Imaging3 Code of Conduct is available at:  http://www.imaging3.com.
Imaging3  will  post on this web site any  amendments  to the  Imaging3  Code of
Conduct or waivers of the Imaging3  Code of Conduct for  directors and executive
officers.

         Stockholders  may request free printed  copies of the Imaging3  Code of
Conduct from:

                               Investor Relations
                                  Imaging3 Inc.
                             3200 W. Valhalla Drive
                            Burbank, California 91505

         Our Board of Directors held a total of five meetings  during our fiscal
year ended December 31, 2009. Each director attended all of the fiscal year 2010
meetings of our Board of Directors  and each  committee  on which he served.  We
have no formal policy  regarding  attendance by our directors at Board meetings,
although we encourage  attendance  and most of our directors  have  historically
attended the meetings.  Our executive officers are elected annually by our Board
of  Directors  and  serve  at the  discretion  of the  Board of  Directors.  Our
directors  hold office until the expiration of their  respective  terms or until
their successors have been duly elected and qualified.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS INDEPENDENCE

         The  Board  of  Directors  has  determined  that  none of the  director
nominees  standing for election is an "independent  director" as defined in Rule
4200 of Financial Industry Regulatory  Authority's  ("FINRA") listing standards.
In determining  the  independence  of our directors,  the Board of Directors has
adopted  independence  standards that mirror  exactly the criteria  specified by
applicable laws and  regulations of the Securities and Exchange  Commission (the
"SEC") and FINRA rules. In making the  determination  of the independence of our
directors,  the Board of Directors considered all transactions in which Imaging3
and any director had any interest,  including  those  discussed  under  "Certain
Relationships  and  Related  Transactions"  below,  and  transactions  involving
payments made by Imaging3 to companies in the ordinary  course of business where
the  candidate  serves on the board of directors or as a member of the executive
management of the other company.

BOARD LEADERSHIP STRUCTURE AND COMMITTEE COMPOSITION

         Mr.  Dean  Janes  serves  as both our  Chairman  of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer. At this time, the Board of Directors believes that Mr. Janes'
dual role serves the best  interests  of the Company  and our  stockholders.  As
Chairman of the Board, Mr. Jane consults with the chairpersons of the committees
of the Board of  Directors  and  establishes  the agenda for each meeting of the
Board of the  Directors.  As our founder and our Chairman of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer since inception, Mr. Jane is uniquely suited to lead our Board
of Directors and to ensure that critical  business issues are brought before the
Board of  Directors.  We believe that Mr. Janes'  guidance  enables the Board of
Directors  to  efficiently  and  effectively   develop  and  implement  business
strategies and oversee our risk management efforts.

         The Board of Directors appreciates that the advantages gained by having
a single  Chairman of the Board and Chief  Executive  Officer  must be viewed in
light of potential  independence  concerns. The Board of Directors believes that
we have adequate  safeguards in place to address  those  concerns.  The Board of
Directors  meets  regularly,  and each director is an equal  participant in each
discussion made by the full Board of Directors.

         Each of our  directors is involved in our  management.  As necessary or
appropriate,  the Board of Directors and its  committees may also retain outside
legal, financial or other advisors.

                                      -11-


         The Board of Directors has appointed an Audit Committee. As of November
1, 2010, the sole member of the Audit Committee is Xavier Aguilera,  who may not
be  considered  to be  independent  as  defined  in Rule  4200  of the  National
Association of Securities Dealers' listing standards. The Board of Directors has
adopted a  written  charter  of the Audit  Committee.  The  Audit  Committee  is
authorized by the Board of Directors to review,  with the Company's  independent
accountants,   the  annual   financial   statements  of  the  Company  prior  to
publication, and to review the work of, and approve non-audit services performed
by,  such  independent  accountants.   The  Audit  Committee  will  make  annual
recommendations   to  the  Board  for  the  appointment  of  independent  public
accountants  for the  ensuing  year.  The Audit  Committee  will also review the
effectiveness  of the financial and accounting  functions and the  organization,
operations  and  management  of the Company.  The Audit  Committee was formed on
August 31, 2003.  The Audit  Committee held one meeting during fiscal year ended
December 31, 2009.

         The Company  established a  Compensation  Committee on August 31, 2003,
which  consists of one  director,  Dean Janes.  The  Compensation  Committee  is
responsible for reviewing  general policy matters  relating to compensation  and
benefits of directors and officers,  determining  the total  compensation of our
officers  and  directors.  The  Board of  Directors  does not have a  nominating
committee.  Therefore,  the  selection  of persons or  election  to the Board of
Directors was neither independently made nor negotiated at arm's length.

BOARD ROLE IN RISK OVERSIGHT

         The Board of  Directors  carries out its role in the  oversight of risk
both  directly  and  through  committees.  The Board of  Directors'  direct role
includes the consideration of risk in the strategic and operating plans that are
presented to it by management.  The various committees  established by the Board
of Directors carry out the Board of Directors' oversight of risk as follows:

         o        The Audit  Committee  oversees the  integrity of the Company's
                  financial reporting process and internal control  environment,
                  legal  and  regulatory   compliance,   qualifications  of  our
                  independent  registered public accounting firm, performance of
                  our  internal   audit   function,   financial  and  disclosure
                  controls,  adherence to the Company's Code of Business Conduct
                  and  Code  of  Ethics,  and  makes  determinations   regarding
                  significant transactions with related parties.

         o        The Compensation  Committee determines the compensation of our
                  executive  officers and directors,  administers  benefit plans
                  and  policies  with  respect  to our  executive  officers  and
                  considers  whether any of those plans or policies create risks
                  that are  likely  to have a  material  adverse  effect  on the
                  Company.

         At this  time  all of our  committees  lack  independence  because  all
directors are also executive officers,  in part because of the small size of our
Board.  The  Company  intends  to try to expand the Board of  Directors  and its
committees  in  the  future  by  appointing  and  nominating  for  election  new
independent members to fill the four vacancies that currently exist on the Board
of Directors.  While our Board of Directors  oversees our  management of risk as
outlined above, management is responsible for identifying and managing risks.

NOMINATIONS PROCESS AND DIRECTOR QUALIFICATIONS

         The  Board  of  Directors  has not yet  established  a  Nominating  and
Corporate Governance Committee.  The current small size of the Board has not yet
made the  formation  of those  committees  feasible.  Accordingly,  the Board of
Directors reviews the skills and characteristics  required of Board members. The
two current  members of the Board of  Directors,  Mr. Dean Janes and Mr.  Xavier
Aguilera,  are both involved in the nomination  consideration process. The Board
will consider a candidate's independence,  as well as the perceived needs of the
Board and the candidate's  background,  skills, business experience and expected
contributions.  At a  minimum,  members of the Board must  possess  the  highest
professional ethics,  integrity and values, and be committed to representing the
long-term interests of our shareholders.  The Company does not have a particular
policy regarding considering potential candidates for nomination for election as
directors  that may be suggested by our  shareholders.  We believe that we would
give them the same consideration as other candidates.

         They must also have an inquisitive and objective perspective, practical
wisdom and mature judgment. The Board may also take into account the benefits of
diverse   viewpoints,   as  well  as  the  benefits  of   constructive   working
relationships  among directors.  The Board considers diverse viewpoints based on
-12-
the diversity of the career experiences among potential candidates, diversity of

                                      -12-


their  respective   expertise,   diversity  of  their   respective   educational
backgrounds,  and the  diversity of their  respective  charitable,  cultural and
social  interests as those  interests  may pertain to the advice they render and
the  network of  relationships  they bring for the benefit of the  Company.  The
success of the nomination process, and in particular its achieving diversity, is
evaluated by the whole Board based on whether its members  fulfill the Company's
needs for advice, expertise, guidance and relationships,  or whether and to what
extent the Company must hire outside professionals to fulfill those needs.

         The Board of Directors  also reviews and  determines  whether  existing
members of the Board should  stand for  re-election,  taking into  consideration
matters  relating to the number of terms served by individual  directors and the
changing  needs of the  Board.  We do not have a limit on the number of terms an
individual may serve as a director on our Board.

         The Board of  Directors  utilizes a variety of methods for  identifying
and  evaluating  nominees  for  director.   The  Board  regularly  assesses  the
appropriate  composition,  size and  independence of the Board,  and whether any
vacancies are expected due to change in  employment  or otherwise.  In the event
that vacancies are anticipated,  or otherwise arise, the Board considers various
potential  candidates  for  director.  Candidates  are  evaluated  at regular or
special  meetings of the Board of Directors,  and may be considered at any point
during  the year.  The  Board  will  consider  shareholder  recommendations  for
candidates  for the Board  that are  properly  submitted  in the same  manner it
considers nominees from other sources. In evaluating such  recommendations,  the
Board will use the  qualifications  standards  described  above and will seek to
achieve a balance of knowledge, experience and capability on the Board.

         In the future the Company will seek to add new independent directors to
its Board of Directors by  appointing  or  nominating  them for election to fill
vacancies  that now exist on the Board.  When  making  determinations  regarding
independence, the Board of Directors will periodically evaluate the independence
of each member and  prospective  member of the Board of Directors.  The Board of
Directors  will  analyze  whether a director  or  candidate  is  independent  by
evaluating, among other factors, the following:

         1.       whether the person,  or any of such person's  family  members,
                  has  accepted any  compensation  from us in excess of $120,000
                  during  any  period of twelve  consecutive  months  within the
                  three years preceding the determination of independence, other
                  than (i) as compensation for Board or Board committee service,
                  (ii)  compensation  paid to a family member who is employed by
                  us other than as an executive officer, or (iii) benefits under
                  a   tax-qualified   retirement   plan   or   non-discretionary
                  compensation;

         2.       whether  the person  has any  material  relationship  with us,
                  either directly, or as a partner, stockholder or officer of an
                  organization with which we have a relationship;

         3.       whether the person is our  current  employee or was one of our
                  employees   within   three   years   preceding   the  date  of
                  determination;

         4.       whether  the person is, or in the three  years  preceding  the
                  date of determination has been, affiliated with or employed by
                  (i) a present  internal  or  external  auditor  of ours or any
                  affiliate  of such  auditor  or (ii) any  former  internal  or
                  external  auditor of ours or any  affiliate  of such  auditor,
                  which  performed  services for us within three years preceding
                  the date of determination;

         5.       whether  the person is, or in the three  years  preceding  the
                  date  of  determination  has  been,  part  of an  interlocking
                  directorate,  in which one of our executive officers serves on
                  the   compensation   committee   of   another   company   that
                  concurrently employs the director as an executive officer;

         6.       whether the person  receives any  compensation  from us, other
                  than fees or compensation for service as a member of the Board
                  of   Directors   and   any   of  its   committees,   including
                  reimbursement  for reasonable  expenses incurred in connection
                  with such service,  and for  reasonable  educational  expenses
                  associated  with Board of Directors  or  committee  membership
                  matters;

         7.       whether an immediate family member of the person is one of our
                  current executive  officers or was an executive officer within
                  three years preceding the date of determination;

                                      -13-


         8.       whether an immediate family member of the person is, or in the
                  three  years  preceding  the date of  determination  has been,
                  affiliated with or employed in a professional  capacity by (i)
                  a present  internal or external  auditor of ours or any of our
                  affiliates  or (ii) any of our  former  internal  or  external
                  auditors or any affiliate of ours which performed services for
                  us within three years preceding the date of determination; and

         9.       whether an immediate  family member of the person is or in the
                  three years preceding the date of determination  has been part
                  of an  interlocking  directorate in which one of our executive
                  officers  serves  on the  compensation  committee  of  another
                  company that concurrently  employs the immediate family member
                  of the  member  of the  Board  of  Directors  as an  executive
                  officer.

         The above list is not exhaustive  and the Board of Directors  considers
all other factors which could assist it in its  determination  that a person has
no  material   relationship   with  us  that  could   compromise  that  person's
independence.

RISK CONSIDERATIONS IN OUR COMPENSATION PROGRAMS

         We have  reviewed  our  compensation  structures  and  policies as they
pertain to risk and have determined that our compensation programs do not create
or encourage the taking of risks that are  reasonably  likely to have a material
adverse effect on the Company.  In reaching this conclusion,  the Board examined
all of its  compensation  arrangements  and the  authority  and  autonomy of its
employees  and  consultants  who receive the  compensation.  The Board  assesses
whether the compensation  arrangement is excessively weighted towards incentives
that would  encourage  an  autonomous  employee or  consultant  to endanger  the
Company.  Based on a review of these factors, the small size of the Company, the
limited autonomy of its employees and consultants, and the fact that bonuses are
discretionary  and  subject to the  approval of the whole  Board,  the Board has
determined that our compensation  programs do not encourage the taking of excess
risk.

COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

      Stockholders  may contact the Board of Directors about bona fide issues or
questions   regarding   Imaging3   by   sending   an  email  to  Dean  Janes  at
djanes@imaging3.com  or by writing  the  Corporate  Secretary  at the  following
address:

                                 Imaging3, Inc.
                            Attn: Corporate Secretary
                             3200 W. Valhalla Drive
                            Burbank, California 91505


                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         Executive  officers  of the  Company,  and their ages as of November 1,
2010, are as follows:

NAME                 AGE    CURRENT POSITION WITH IMAGING3
- ------------------------ --------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ----------------------------------------------------
Dean Janes           44     Chairman and  Chief Executive Officer

Xavier Aguilera (1)  61     Executive Vice President,  Chief Financial Officer,
                            Corporate Secretary and Director

Christopher Sohn     49     President and Chief Operating Officer

         See section entitled "Nominees" under Proposal 4, Election of Directors
above,  for a brief  description  of the  business  experience  and  educational
background of Mr. Janes, Mr. Aguilera, and Mr. Sohn.

                                      -14-


                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

         The  following  Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis  describes  the
material elements of compensation for our executive  officers  identified in the
Summary Compensation Table ("Named Executive Officers"),  and executive officers
that we may hire in the  future.  As more fully  described  below,  our Board of
Directors (the "Board") makes all decisions for the total direct compensation of
our executive officers, including the Named Executive Officers. The Company does
not have a Compensation  Committee,  so all decisions with respect to management
compensation are made by the whole Board.

COMPENSATION PROGRAM OBJECTIVES AND REWARDS

         Our  compensation  philosophy  is based on the  premise of  attracting,
retaining and motivating exceptional leaders, setting high goals, working toward
the common objectives of meeting the expectations of customers and stockholders,
and rewarding outstanding performance. Following this philosophy, in determining
executive   compensation,   we  consider  all  relevant  factors,  such  as  the
competition for talent,  our desire to link pay with  performance in the future,
the use of equity to align executive  interests with those of our  stockholders,
individual contributions,  teamwork and performance,  and each executive's total
compensation  package.  We strive to accomplish these objectives by compensating
all executives with total compensation  packages  consisting of a combination of
competitive base salary and, once we grow more and increase our staff, incentive
compensation.  Because  of our  small  size and  staff to date,  we have not yet
adopted  a  management  equity  incentive  plan,  nor  have we yet  used  equity
incentives as part of our management compensation policy.

         While we have not  hired at the  executive  level  significantly  since
inception because our business has not grown  sufficiently to justify increasing
staff, we expect to grow and hire in the future.  Our Named  Executive  Officers
have been with the Company for many years and their  compensation  has basically
been  static,  based  primarily on levels the Company can afford to retain them,
and their  responsibilities and individual  contributions.  To date, the Company
has not applied a formal  compensation  program to determine the compensation of
the Named  Executives.  In the future,  as the Company and its  management  team
expands,  the Board  expects to add  independent  members,  form a  Compensation
Committee  comprised  of  independent  directors,   adopt  a  management  equity
incentive plan and apply the compensation  philosophy and policies  described in
this section of the Proxy Statement.

         The primary purpose of the compensation and benefits described below is
to attract, retain and motivate highly talented individuals when we do hire, who
will engage in the  behaviors  necessary  to enable us to succeed in our mission
while  upholding  our  values  in a highly  competitive  marketplace.  Different
elements are designed to engender different behaviors,  and the actual incentive
amounts which may be awarded to each Named Executive  Officer are subject to the
annual  review of the Board.  The  following is a brief  description  of the key
elements of our planned executive compensation structure.

         o        Base salary and  benefits  are  designed to attract and retain
                  employees over time.

         o        Incentive  compensation awards are designed to focus employees
                  on the business objectives for a particular year.

         o        Equity incentive  awards,  such as stock options and nonvested
                  stock,  focus executives'  efforts on the behaviors within the
                  recipients'  control  that they believe are designed to ensure
                  our  long-term  success as reflected in increases to our stock
                  prices  over  a  period  of  several  years,   growth  in  our
                  profitability and other elements.

         o        Severance   and  change  in  control  plans  are  designed  to
                  facilitate   a   company's   ability  to  attract  and  retain
                  executives  as  it  competes  for  talented   employees  in  a
                  marketplace  where such protections are commonly  offered.  We
                  currently  have not given  separation  benefits  to any of our
                  Name Executive Officers.


                                      -15-


BENCHMARKING

         We have not yet adopted  benchmarking but may do so in the future. When
making   compensation   decisions,   the  Board  may  compare  each  element  of
compensation  paid to our Named  Executive  Officers  against  a report  showing
comparable  compensation metrics from a group that includes both publicly-traded
and  privately-held  companies.  The Board  believes  that while such peer group
benchmarks are a point of reference for measurement,  they are not necessarily a
determining factor in setting executive compensation as each executive officer's
compensation  relative to the benchmark varies based on scope of  responsibility
and time in the position.  We have not yet formally  established  our peer group
for this purpose.

THE ELEMENTS OF IMAGING3'S COMPENSATION PROGRAM

BASE SALARY

         Executive officer base salaries are based on job  responsibilities  and
individual  contribution.  The Board  reviews the base salaries of our executive
officers,  including our Named Executive  Officers,  considering factors such as
corporate  progress  toward  achieving  objectives  (without  reference  to  any
specific  performance-related targets) and individual performance experience and
expertise.  None of our Named Executive Officers have employment agreements with
us.  Additional  factors  reviewed by the Board in determining  appropriate base
salary levels and raises  include  subjective  factors  related to corporate and
individual  performance.  For the year ended  December 31, 2009,  all  executive
officer base salary decisions were approved by the Board.

         The Board determines base salaries for the Named Executive  Officers at
the  beginning  of each  fiscal  year,  and the Board  proposes  new base salary
amounts, if appropriate,  based on its evaluation of individual  performance and
expected future contributions. We do not have a 401(k) Plan, but if we adopt one
in the future,  base salary would be the only element of compensation that would
be used in determining  the amount of  contributions  permitted under the 401(k)
Plan.

INCENTIVE COMPENSATION AWARDS

         The Named  Executives  have not been paid bonuses and the Board has not
yet established a formal  compensation  policy for the determination of bonuses.
If the Company's  revenue grows and bonuses become  affordable and  justifiable,
the  Company  expects  to  use  the  following   parameters  in  justifying  and
quantifying  bonuses for our Named Executive  Officers and other officers of the
Company:  (1) the growth in our revenue,  (2) the growth in our earnings  before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization,  as adjusted ("EBITDA"), and (3)
our stock price. The Board has not adopted specific performance goals and target
bonus amounts for any of its fiscal years, but may do so in the future.

EQUITY INCENTIVE AWARDS

         Our Board has not yet adopted a management equity incentive plan and no
stock options or other equity  incentive awards have yet been made to any of our
Named  Executives  or other  officers or  employees  of the  Company.  As stated
previously,  in the future we plan to adopt a formal management equity incentive
plan pursuant to which we plan to grant stock options and make restricted  stock
awards to  members  of  management,  which  would not be  assignable  during the
executive's  life,  except for  certain  gifts to family  members or trusts that
benefit  family  members.  These  equity  incentive  awards,  we believe,  would
motivate our employees to work to improve the Company's business and stock price
performance,  thereby further linking the interests of our senior management and
our stockholders. The Board will consider several factors in determining whether
awards  are  granted  to  an  executive  officer,   including  those  previously
described,  as well as the  executive's  position,  his or her  performance  and
responsibilities,  and the amount of options or other awards, if any,  currently
held by the  officer  and their  vesting  schedule.  Our  policy  will  prohibit
backdating options or granting them retroactively.

                                      -16-



BENEFITS AND PREREQUISITES

         At  this  stage  of  our  business  we  have  limited  benefits  and no
prerequisites  for our  employees  other  than  health  insurance  and  vacation
benefits that are  generally  comparable to those offered by other small private
and public  companies or as may be required by applicable state employment laws.
We do not  have a  401(k)  Plan or any  other  retirement  plan  for  our  Named
Executive  Officers.  We may adopt these plans and confer other fringe  benefits
for our executive  officers in the future if our business grows  sufficiently to
enable us to afford them.

SEPARATION AND CHANGE IN CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS

         We do not have any  employment  agreements  with  our  Named  Executive
Officers or any other executive officer or employee of the Company. None of them
are eligible for specific benefits or payments if their employment or engagement
terminates in a separation or if there is a change of control.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         The following table summarizes compensation paid or accrued by Imaging3
and its subsidiaries for the years ended December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008
for services rendered in all capacities,  by the Chief Executive Officer and the
other most highly  compensated  executive officers during the fiscal years ended
December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008.
SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE - ---------------------- ------- ---------- -------- --------- ------------- -------------- --------------- ----------- Non-Equity Non-Qualified Name and Incentive Deferred Principal Position Option Plan Compensation All Other (1) Year Salary Bonus Awards Compensation Earnings Compensation Total - ---------------------- ------- ---------- -------- --------- ------------- -------------- --------------- ----------- Dean Janes, Chief Executive 2008 $138,092 0 0 0 0 0 $138,092 OfficerChief Executive 2009 $149,604 0 0 0 0 0 $149,604 Officer Christopher Sohn, President and Chief 2008 $115,384 0 0 0 0 0 $115,384 Operating OfficerPresident and Chief 2009 $125,008 0 0 0 0 0 $125,008 Operating Officer Xavier Aguilera, Chief Financial Officer/Treasurer, Executive Vice President, and 2008 $92,000 0 0 0 0 0 $92,000 Corporate SecretaryChief Financial 2009 $95,000 0 0 0 0 0 $95,000 Michele Janes,Officer/Treasurer, Executive Vice President, ofand Corporate Secretary Michele Janes, 2008 $46,153 0 0 0 0 0 $46,153 AdministrationVice President of 2009 $49,998 0 0 0 0 0 $49,998 Administration Officers as a Group 2008 $391,629 0 0 0 0 0 $391,629 2009 $369,612 0 0 0 0 0 $369,612 - -------------------------
(1) All officers serve at will without employment contracts except that Dean Janes is employed under a Consulting Agreement under which the Company pays Mr. Janes approximately $12,000 per month until either party terminates the Agreement on 30 days written notice. -17- EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS Imaging3 and its subsidiaries have not entered into any employment agreements with their executive officers to date, and do not intend to enter into employment agreements with them at the time. Imaging3 and its subsidiaries may enter into employment agreements with them in the future. Dean Janes, the Company's Chief Executive Officer, is engaged pursuant to a consulting agreement. OUTSTANDING EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR END None of Imaging3's executive officers received any equity awards during the year ended December 31, 2009. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS The Company has not yet, but may in the future, establish a management stock option plan pursuant to which stock options may be authorized and granted to the executive officers, directors, employees and key consultants of the Company. In the event the Company establishes the stock option plan, the Company expects to authorize approximately 16,000,000 shares or more for future issuance. DIRECTOR COMPENSATION None of the Company's directors received any compensation for their respective services rendered to the Company as directors during the year ended December 31, 2009. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT The following table sets forth the names of our executive officers and directors and all persons known by us to beneficially own 5% or more of the issued and outstanding common stock of Imaging3 at November 1, 2010. Beneficial ownership is determined in accordance with the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission. In computing the number of shares beneficially owned by a person and the percentage of ownership of that person, shares of common stock subject to options or warrants held by that person that are currently exercisable or become exercisable within 60 days of November 1, 2010 are deemed outstanding even if they have not actually been exercised. Those shares, however, are not deemed outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage ownership of any other person. The percentage ownership of each beneficial owner is based on 380,377,668 outstanding shares of common stock.stock, which do not include any shares issuable upon the exercise of outstanding warrants (i.e. any of the Warrant Shares). Except as otherwise listed below, the address of each person is c/o Imaging3, Inc., 3200 W. Valhalla Drive, Burbank, California 91505. Except as indicated, each person listed below has sole voting and investment power with respect to the shares set forth opposite such person's name. NUMBER OF SHARES PERCENTAGE NAME, TITLE AND ADDRESS BENEFICIALLY OWNED PERCENTAGEOWNERSHIP (1) OWNERSHIP - --------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------ ---------- Dean Janes (includes shares owned by wife, Michele Janes) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 59,576,328 15.7% Christopher Sohn President and Chief Operating Officer 23,000,000 6.0% Xavier Aguilera Director, Chief Financial Officer/Treasurer, Executive Vice President, and Secretary 200,000 * All current Executive Officers as a Group 82,776,328 21.7% - ---------------------------------------------------------- * Less than 1%. (1) Except as pursuant to applicable community property laws, the persons named in the table have sole voting and investment power with respect to all shares of common stock beneficially owned. The total number of issued and outstanding shares and the total number of shares owned by each person does not include unexercised warrants and stock options, and is calculated as of November 1, 2010. -18- SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE Our affiliates who are members of our management voluntarily comply with Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"), even though we do not have securities registered under Section 12 of the Exchange Act. Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires a registrant's officers and directors, and certain persons who own more than 10% of a registered class of a registrant's equity securities (collectively, "Reporting Persons"), to file reports of ownership and changes in ownership ("Section 16 Reports") with the SEC. Reporting Persons are required by the SEC to furnish the registrant with copies of all Section 16 Reports they file. Based solely on its review of the copies of such Section 16 Reports received by it, or written representations received from certain Reporting Persons, all Section 16(a) filing requirements that would be applicable to Imaging3's Reporting Persons (i.e. if Imaging3's securities were registered under Section 12 of the Exchange Act) during and with respect to the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 have been complied with on a timely basis, except that our Chief Executive Officer, Dean Janes, was late on the filing of one Form 4 covering a total of one transaction. For transactions occurring during the fiscal year ending December 31, 2008, Mr. Janes filed four Forms 4 late covering a total of ten transactions. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS Mr. Janes, the Company, and UBS Financial Services entered into an arrangement pursuant to which Mr. Janes had agreed to invest in the Company, using the proceeds from the sale by Mr. Janes of a portion of his existing shares in the open market. Effective March 23, 2009 and applicable retroactively to February 4, 2008, Mr. Janes modified and terminated his program with Imaging3, Inc. and UBS Financial Services. Under the modification, Mr. Janes will not have the right to purchase any shares of the common stock of the Company from the proceeds of his sales of stock in the open market through UBS Financial Services. Furthermore, effective March 23, 2009, Mr. Janes ceased sales of his common stock in the open market through UBS Financial Services. Mr. Janes sold a total of 7,557,374 shares of his common stock in the Company in the open market through UBS Financial Services from February 4, 2008 to March 23, 2009, resulting in net proceeds to Mr. Janes of approximately $615,885.34. Since February 4, 2008, Mr. Janes has loaned substantially all of those proceeds (i.e. $610,039.35 of the $615,885.34 net proceeds) to the Company without interest, payable to Mr. Janes on demand. Originally, Mr. Janes had the right to convert those advances into shares of the Company's common stock, at an aggregate conversion price approximately equal to the net proceeds from his stock sales, although no such conversions were ever made. Under the modifications, Mr. Janes does not have the right to convert any of the advances into shares of common stock. Instead, Mr. Janes and the Company modified Mr. Janes' demand notes into long-term noninterest bearing loans payable in full by the Company on or before December 31, 2012. On December 15, 2008, the Company prepaid $140,039.35 of the outstanding balance of these promissory notes to Mr. Janes. On November 5, 2009, the Company prepaid $470,000 of the outstanding balance of these promissory notes to Mr. Janes. The Company does not intend to resume or to engage in the future in any other program similar to the one previously conducted with UBS Financial Services. As disclosed in its reports on Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, during the period from January 25, 2008 to March 23, 2009, the Chief Executive Officer of the Company sold a portion of the Company's stock owned by him through UBS Financial Services, Inc., a registered member of FINRA, in the open market in a series of transactions under Rule 144 of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. The Chief Executive Officer then used the net proceeds of those sales to make loans to the Company. Initially under the program with -19- UBS, the Chief Executive Officer had the right to convert those loans into newly issued shares of the Company's common stock at the same price at which he sold his shares in the open market. The program was modified to provide that those loans were not convertible into shares but rather became long-term noninterest bearing loans to the Company. As a result, no shares of the Company's common stock were issued to the Company's Chief Executive Officer during the UBS program or from any notes issued to him from the program. The Company terminated the program in March 2009 when it realized that the program with UBS could be deemed to be the indirect sale of securities by the Company itself without registration in violation of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, even though there was compliance with the conditions of Rule 144, and even after the program was modified to eliminate the convertibility of the loans made by the Chief Executive Officer to the Company. While the Company disagrees with this interpretation of the UBS program, it recognizes that claims can be made against it for the indirect public sale of securities without registration as required by the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. The Company is subject to the risk that purchasers of securities from the Company's Chief Executive Officer during the program could attempt to seek the rescission of those sales on the basis that the shares sold should have first been registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. If purchasers were to be successful in making those rescission claims against the Company and its Chief Executive Officer, or if the Securities and Exchange Commission were to seek an enforcement action against the Company for such sales, the Company could experience a material adverse impact on its financial condition and operating results. To date, the Company has not been notified of any claim or action nor has it been threatened with one. Management presently believes that the Company will not be subject to private claims or an enforcement action from the Securities and Exchange Commission because (a) it fully disclosed the UBS program in public reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission from the program's inception, and modified and then terminated the program promptly upon learning that it could be interpreted to be a plan to evade the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, (b) it complied with the reporting requirements of Rule 144 of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and, other than late filings for certain transactions (see above, "Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management - Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance"), Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and (c) the Company's stock price has appreciated substantially since the Chief Executive Officer sold his shares. Furthermore, the Company and its Chief Executive Officer would vigorously resist such claims on the basis that there was full compliance with Rule 144 during the UBS program and that the program was modified so that no new shares of the Company's common stock were ever issued to replace the shares sold by its Chief Executive Officer. There is no assurance that the Company or its Chief Executive Officer would prevail in such a defense, should it ever become necessary. Mr. Janes is employed pursuant to a consulting agreement for $12,000 per month plus expenses. The Agreement is terminable by either party on 30 days written notice. The Company owes Mr. Janes $50,766 under the consulting agreement for the year ended December 31, 2009. On April 13, 2010, the Company issued a noninterest bearing promissory note to Mr. Janes in the amount of $66,500, payable on demand, for monies loaned by him to the Company. On June 28, 2010, Mr. Janes loaned another $100,000 to the Company pursuant to a noninterest bearing promissory note payable on demand. AUDIT AND NON-AUDIT FEES Kabani & Company, Inc., Certified Public Accountants ("KC") was the Company's principal auditing accountant firm for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2008. KC has also provided other non-audit services to the Company. The Audit Committee approved the engagement of KC before KC rendered audit and non-audit services to the Company. M&K CPAS, PLLC ("MK") was the Company's principal auditing accountant firm for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009. MK did not provide non-audit services to the Company during its fiscal year ending December 31, 2009. The Audit Committee approved the engagement of MK before MK rendered audit services to the Company. Each year the independent auditor's retention to audit our financial statements, including the associated fee, is approved by the Board before the filing of the previous year's Annual Report on Form 10-K. -20- KC AND MK FEES 2008 2009 ------------------------ Audit Fees(1) $39,500$ 39,500 $ 29,000 Audit Related Fees -0- -0- Tax Fees(2) All Other Fees 1,350 -0- ------------------------ $40,850 $29,000$ 40,850 $ 29,000 ======================== - ------------------------------------------------- (1) Audit Fees consist of fees for the audit of our financial statements and review of the financial statements included in our quarterly reports. An amount equal to $39,500 was paid to Kabani and Associates for year ending December 31, 2008 and $29,000 was paid to M&K CPAS, PLLC during the year ending December 31, 2009. (2) Tax fees consist of fees for the preparation of original federal and state income tax returns and fees for miscellaneous tax consulting services. PRE-APPROVAL OF AUDIT AND NON-AUDIT SERVICES The Audit Committee's policy is to pre-approve, typically at the beginning of our fiscal year, all audit and non-audit services, other than de minimis non-audit services, to be provided by an independent registered public accounting firm. These services may include, among others, audit services, audit-related services, tax services and other services and such services are generally subject to a specific budget. The independent registered public accounting firm and management are required to periodically report to the full Board regarding the extent of services provided by the independent registered public accounting firm in accordance with this pre-approval, and the fees for the services performed to date. As part of the Board's review, the Board will evaluate other known potential engagements of the independent auditor, including the scope of work proposed to be performed and the proposed fees, and approve or reject each service, taking into account whether the services are permissible under applicable law and the possible impact of each non-audit service on the independent auditor's independence from management. At Audit Committee meetings throughout the year, the auditor and management may present subsequent services for approval. Typically, these would be services such as due diligence for an acquisition, that would not have been known at the beginning of the year. The Audit Committee has considered the provision of non-audit services provided by our independent registered public accounting firm to be compatible with maintaining their independence. The Audit Committee will continue to approve all audit and permissible non-audit services provided by our independent registered public accounting firm. REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS The Company's Audit Committee has reviewed and discussed the Company's audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 with senior management. The Audit Committee has reviewed and discussed with management the Company's audited financial statements. The Audit Committee has also discussed with M&K CPAS, PLLC, Certified Public Accountants ("MK"), the Company's independent auditors for the year ended December 31, 2008, the matters required to be discussed by the statement on Auditing Standards No. 61 (Communication with Audit Committees) and received the written disclosures and the letter from KC required by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1 (Independence Discussion with Audit Committees). The Audit Committee has discussed with MK the independence of MK as auditors of the Company. Finally, the Audit Committee has considered whether the independent auditors' provision of non-audit services to the Company is compatible with the auditors' independence. Based on the foregoing, the Company's Audit Committee has recommended to the Board of Directors that the audited financial statements of the Company be included in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 for filing with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"). The Audit Committee also approved MK's engagement to prepare the Company's consolidated tax returns for its fiscal year ending December 31, 2009. The Company's Audit Committee did not submit a formal report regarding its findings. -21- AUDIT COMMITTEE XAVIER AGUILERA INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE In our filings with the SEC, information is sometimes "incorporated by reference." This means that we are referring you to information that has previously been filed with the SEC, so the information should be considered as part of the filing you are reading. Based on SEC regulations, the "Audit Committee Report" specifically is not incorporated by reference into any other filings with the SEC. This proxy statement is sent to you as part of the proxy materials for the 20102011 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. You may not consider this proxy statement as material for soliciting the purchase or sale of our common stock. OTHER MATTERS The Board of Directors knows of no other matters that will be presented for consideration at the 20102011 Annual Meeting. If any other matters are properly brought before the meeting, it is the intention of the persons named in the accompanying proxy to vote on such matters in accordance with their best judgment. No person is authorized to give any information or to make any representation not contained in this Proxy Statement, and, if given or made, such information or representation should not be relied upon as having been authorized. This Proxy Statement does not constitute the solicitation of a proxy, in any jurisdiction, from any person to whom it is unlawful to make such proxy solicitation in such jurisdiction. The delivery of this Proxy Statement shall not, under any circumstances, imply that there has not been any change in the information set forth herein since the date of the Proxy Statement. By Order of the Board of Directors Dean Janes Chief Executive Officer November 22,December 10, 2010 In some cases, only one Annual Report or Proxy Statement is being delivered to multiple stockholders sharing an address unless the Company has received contrary instructions from one or more of the stockholders. The Company will furnish, without charge, a copy of its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009 or Proxy Statement, to each stockholder residing at an address to which only one copy was mailed. Requests for additional copies should be directed to: Corporate Secretary, Imaging3, Inc., 3200 W. Valhalla Drive, Burbank, California 91505 or by telephone at (818) 260-0930. Additionally, any stockholders who are presently sharing an address and receiving multiple copies of the Annual Report or Proxy Statement and who would rather receive a single copy of these materials in the future may instruct the Company by directing their request in the same manner. -22- EXHIBIT A AMENDMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF IMAGING3, INC. The undersigned, Dean Janes and Xavier Aguilera, hereby certify that: 1. They are the Chief Executive Officer and Secretary, respectively, of Imaging3, Inc., a California corporation (the "Corporation"). 2. The Articles of Incorporation of the Corporation are hereby amended as follows: Article IV is hereby amended and restated to read as follows: IV.:The Corporation is authorized to issue two classes of shares. One class of shares shall be designated as common stock, par value $0.001 per share, and the total number of common shares which this Corporation is authorized to issue is 750,000,000. The other class of shares shall be designated as preferred stock, par value $0.001 per share, and the total number of preferred shares which this Corporation is authorized to issue is 1,000,000. The preferred stock authorized by these Articles of Incorporation shall be issued in series. The Board of Directors of this Corporation is authorized to determine or alter the rights, preferences, privileges, and restrictions granted to or imposed upon any wholly unissued series of preferred stock, and within the limitations or restrictions stated in any resolution or resolutions of the Board of Directors originally fixing the number of shares constituting any series, to increase or decrease (but not below the number of shares of any such series then outstanding) the number of shares of any such series subsequent to the issue of shares of that series, to determine the designation and par value of any series, and to fix the number of shares of any series. 3. The foregoing Amendment to Articles of Incorporation has been duly approved by the Board of Directors. 4. The foregoing Amendment to the Articles of Incorporation has been duly approved by the required vote of shareholders in accordance with Section 902 of the Corporations Code. The total number of outstanding shares of the Corporation entitled to vote was 380,377,668 shares of Common Stock. The number of shares voting in favor of the amendment equaled or exceeded the vote required. The percentage vote required was more than fifty percent (50%). The undersigned further declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of California that the matters set forth in this certificate are true and correct of their own knowledge. Dated: December 21, 2010 -----------------------------------January 18, 2011 -------------------------------------- Dean Janes, Chief Executive Officer ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Xavier Aguilera, Secretary EXHIBIT B AMENDMENT TO BYLAWS AMENDMENT TO BYLAWS OF IMAGING3, INC. A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION The following provision of the Bylaws of Imaging3, Inc. adopted on or about December 21, 2010January 18, 2011 (the "Bylaws") is hereby amended and restated (the "Amendment"): Article III, Section 2 of the Company's Bylaws is hereby amended and restated in its entirety as follows: "Number. The Corporation shall have no fewer than five (5) nor more than nine (9) directors. Initially the exact number of directors will be seven (7). The exact number of directors will be determined from time to time by resolution adopted by approval of the outstanding shares or by the affirmative vote of a majority of the Whole Board of Directors. Notwithstanding the foregoing, before the issuance of any shares and so long as the Corporation has only one shareholder, the number of directors may be one or two, and so long as the Corporation has two shareholders, the number may be two. As used in these Bylaws, the term "Whole Board" means the number of directors that the Corporation would have if there were no vacancies. After the issuance of shares, a bylaw specifying the changing of the maximum or minimum number of directors or changing from a variable to a fixed board or vice versa may be adopted only by approval of the outstanding shares. No reduction of the authorized number of directors shall have the effect of removing any director before the expiration of his term of office." The Bylaws shall remain in effect as modified by this Amendment to the Bylaws (the "Amendment") except to the extent that the Bylaws contradict the Amendment, in which case this Amendment shall govern. THIS IS TO CERTIFY: That I am the duly elected, qualified and acting Secretary of Imaging3, Inc., a California corporation (the "Company"), and that the foregoing Amendment to the Bylaws was validly adopted on December 21, 2010January 18, 2011 by written consent of the shareholders entitled to vote a majority of the outstanding capital stock of the Company. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this 21st18th day of December 2010.January 2011. ------------------------------------ Xavier Aguilera, Secretary BALLOT - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IMAGING3, INC. 3200 W. VALHALLA DRIVE BURBANK, CALIFORNIA 91505 (818) 260-0930 PROXY FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS, December 21, 2010January 18, 2011 PROXIES ARE BEING SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS. WE ARE ASKING YOU FOR A PROXY, AND YOU ARE REQUESTED TO SEND US A PROXY. The undersigned hereby appoints Dean Janes, Chief Executive proxy, with full power of substitution, for and in the name or names of the undersigned, to vote all shares of Common Stock of Imaging, Inc. held of record by the undersigned at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on December 21, 2010,January 18, 2011, at 10:00 a.m., Pacific Time, at 3200 W. Valhalla Drive, Burbank, California, and at any adjournment thereof, upon the matters described in the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and upon any other business that may properly come before, and matters incident to the conduct of, the meeting or any adjournment thereof. Said person is directed to vote on the matters described in the Notice of Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement as follows, and otherwise in their discretion upon such other business as may properly come before, and matters incident to the conduct of, the meeting and any adjournment thereof. 1. To increase the number of authorized shares of common stock from 500,000,000, par value $0.001 per share, to 750,000,000, par value $0.001 per share. (Amendment to Articles of Incorporation) [_] FOR [_] AGAINST [_] ABSTAIN 2. To authorize 1,000,000 shares of preferred stock, par value $0.001 per share. (Amendment to Articles of Incorporation) [_] FOR [_] AGAINST [_] ABSTAIN 3. To increase the size of the Company's Board of Directors from two (2) to a range of five (5) to nine (9) with the exact number of directors to be seven (7). (Amendment to Bylaws) [_] FOR [_] AGAINST [_] ABSTAIN -1- 4. To elect a Board of up to three (3) directors to hold office until the next annual meeting of stockholders or until their respective successors have been elected and qualified: Nominees: Dean Janes, Xavier Aguilera, and Christopher Sohn [_] FOR: nominees listed above (except as marked to the contrary below). [_] WITHHOLD authority to vote for nominee(s) specified below. INSTRUCTIONS: To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee(s), write the applicable name(s) in the space provided below. - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5. To ratify the appointment of M&K CPAS, PLLC as independent accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2010: [_] FOR [_] AGAINST [_] ABSTAIN YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE MEETING IN PERSON. WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING, YOU MAY SIGN AND RETURN THIS PROXY CARD IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED OR, IF NO DIRECTION IS INDICATED, WILL BE VOTED "FOR" THE STATED PROPOSALS. Number of shares owned ________________and voted hereby. -2- Name & Address of Shareholder - ----------------------------- - ----------------------------- - ----------------------------- - ----------------------------- (VOID WITHOUT INFO) ------------------------------------ Signature of Stockholder ------------------------------------ Signature if held jointly Dated: _______________________, 2010, 20 ----------------------- -- IMPORTANT: If shares are jointly owned, both owners should sign. If signing as attorney, executor, administrator, trustee, guardian or other person signing in a representative capacity, please give your full title as such. If a corporation, please sign in full corporate name by President or other authorized officer. If a partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person. -3-