================================================================================

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


Filed by the Registrant [ ]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [X]
    Check the appropriate box:
     [ ]   Preliminary Proxy Statement
     [ ]   Confidential, for Use of the Commission only (as permitted by
           Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
     [ ]   Definitive Proxy Statement
     [ ]   Definitive Additional Materials
     [X]   Soliciting Material Under Rule 14a-12


                       NORTHFIELD LABORATORIES INC.

                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)

                             C. ROBERT COATES
                             ----------------

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


Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required.
[ ]  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), 14a-6(i)(2) or
     Item 22(a)(2) of Schedule 14A.
[ ]  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: C. Robert Coates
     4)     Date Filed: August 27, 2002

================================================================================

HOW TO MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT IN THE NORTHFIELD LABS ELECTION

This year you will receive proxy statements and ballot cards from Northfield
Labs and from C. Robert Coates and Bert Williams.  Northfield's directors
could easily have invited Coates and Williams to join the board, but instead
they chose to wage an expensive proxy contest.  Northfield's directors will
be spending your money and that of the other shareholders' to hold onto
their absolute power, so they really have nothing to lose.

On the other hand, C. Robert Coates will personally pay all of the costs of
the Coates and Williams campaign.  Like you, he has everything to lose.  He
owns 644,200 shares purchased at an average price of $14.95.  He has held
his shares for an average of 3.5 years.  He wants to see PolyHeme succeed
and the share price back at $20 or more.

The proxy rules can seem complicated.  But the KEY POINT is that:

ONLY THE LAST PROXY THAT YOU MAIL IN WILL BE COUNTED!

Here are several other points about making your vote for Coates and Williams
count:

-  If you mail the Coates/Williams proxy card first and then send a
   Northfield proxy card withholding votes for directors, your
   Coates/Williams vote will not be counted.

-  If you mail the Coates/Williams proxy, then vote for several directors on
   the Northfield ballot (card), your Coates/Williams vote will not be
   counted.

So if you want to cast your votes for two truly independent directors who
will represent your interests, make sure that the Coates/Williams proxy card
is the last one you fill out and mail.

Meanwhile, shareholders looking for a no-lose proposition can elect both
Coates and Williams to the expanded seven-member board without ousting the
current five incumbent directors. Because Northfield's by-laws provide for
as many as nine directors, electing the two independents would not prevent
the company's nominations for two new directors, John F. Bierbaum and Dr.
Paul M. Ness, from also serving on the board. To accomplish this,
Northfield's five incumbent directors could easily expand the board to nine
and appoint Bierbaum and Ness.

If you are a shareholder and have any comments, suggestions or questions,
please call Simon Goldberg of The Robert Coates Group at 1-800-295-0841,
extension 240 or e-mail us at sgoldberg@rcoates.com.
================================================================================

IT'S ALL ABOUT SAVING LIVES... AND SAVING NORTHFIELD

Dear Northfield Shareholder,

For countless trauma victims, it's already too late. Highway accidents,
natural disasters, military battles and deliberate acts of terrorism all
have taken their toll. C. Robert Coates and Bert R. Williams III, running as
independent candidates for the board of Northfield Laboratories, can't help
but wonder how many of those losses could have been prevented by the
availability of a viable blood substitute such as  Northfield's PolyHeme.

Any answer, however, is moot, because even though Northfield has spent much
time and money developing a blood substitute that has proven itself in
clinical trials to be a powerful lifesaver, you won't find it stockpiled in
ambulances or emergency rooms where it's so badly needed. Northfield dropped
the ball on PolyHeme, filing a deficient application with the Food and Drug
Administration that subsequently issued a Refuse to File letter in November
2001. PolyHeme now faces potentially costly new trials and a need for
improved manufacturing processes.

Just as the clock is ticking for trauma victims, time also is running out
for Northfield. The company in a recent proxy said it has $18.4 million of
cash left - enough to stay afloat for about 18 months. It could potentially
burn through all of its reserves while trying to re-file its application
with the FDA.

As Northfield shareholders you are in a unique position to do something
positive to help save lives and to fix your ailing company. We - C. Robert
Coates and Bert R. Williams III - would like to see PolyHeme realize its
full potential. To do that we need you to vote our proxy for the Sept. 13
election. We represent all investors who are tired of watching from the
sidelines as Northfield and its entrenched board embrace the status quo and
offer no substantive game plan.

The "cure" for Northfield is something we have long advocated: to get its
head out of the sand and align itself with a major pharmaceutical partner
with enough cash to bring PolyHeme to market and with the talent to manage
the FDA approval process and commercialization of the product. That's very
high on our list of priorities.

As part of our strategy, we also want Northfield to partner with companies
eager to extend the possible applications of PolyHeme as a transport
delivery mechanism for other drugs. One company, Zengen Inc., approached us
about its interest in learning how its peptides might work in harmony with
PolyHeme. But its overtures to Northfield a year ago on this subject fell on
deaf ears.

Raising the profile of PolyHeme and finding partners to exploit its
potential are parts of the Coates and Williams action plan. In addition, our
aims are to:

-  Work with the Department of Defense and the Homeland Security Agency to
   explore the possibility of stockpiling PolyHeme as a safe, effective
   blood substitute for emergencies;

-  Gain representation on Northfield's board as independent directors; and

-  Keep investors informed of Northfield news.

With our marketing and business experience, we can successfully implement
such a demanding plan.

Northfield remains compromised by a handpicked board of directors closely
allied to management. Corporate governance has become a matter of corporate
convenience. Two nominees, Paul Ness and Gerald Moss, have drawn significant
consulting income from Northfield in 2002. One nominee, David Savner, until
April 1998 had served as the company's chief outside counsel for more than a
decade. Some directors who are up for reelection have attended less than 75%
of the board and committee meetings over the last four years.

We believe independence is a director's greatest virtue, the cornerstone of
accountability.  Policies adopted earlier this year by Institutional
Shareholder Services (ISS), a leading provider of proxy voting and corporate
governance services, spell out a preference that all key board committees
comprise only independent outsiders. ISS contends that insiders serving on
compensation or audit committees threaten to undermine the purpose of such
committees in providing independent oversight and preventing conflicts of
interest.

By ISS standards, the election of Coates and Williams would provide
Northfield's board with the independent directors it lacks. Shareholders
aren't getting that in a board dominated by insiders Moss, Ness, Savner and
Steven Gould.

Many shareholders - both large and small - have strongly endorsed our
efforts, and we appreciate the support. For our grassroots campaign to
succeed, every vote must count. If you have not returned the Coates/Williams
proxy, please do so today!

With your continued encouragement, Coates and Williams can get Northfield
back on track. PolyHeme ought to be out there doing its job, saving lives.
And shareholders deserve better than the tarnished track record Northfield
has accrued so far, highlighted by a stock price that has fallen a
precipitous 91% since March 2000.

According to Northfield's proxy rules, withholding a vote for any director
is equivalent to not voting. It does not prevent a director from gaining a
seat on the board. As we described in a press release on Aug. 13:
Shareholders get a no-lose proposition. They can elect both Coates and
Williams to the expanded seven-member board without ousting the current five
incumbent directors. Because Northfield's by-laws provide for as many as
nine directors, electing the two independents would not prevent the
company's nominations for two new directors, John F. Bierbaum and Dr. Paul
M. Ness, from also serving on the board. To accomplish this, Northfield's
five incumbent directors could easily expand the board to nine and appoint
Bierbaum and Ness.

C. Robert Coates and Bert Williams Independent candidates for the Northfield
Laboratories Board of Directors

P.S.  URGENT. THE CLOCK IS RACING AS THE SEPT. 13 ANNUAL MEETING APPROACHES.
PLEASE MARK ONLY THE BALLOT FOR C. ROBERT COATES AND BERT WILLIAMS AND
RETURN IT IN THE SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE TODAY. REMEMBER, THE LAST PROXY
RECEIVED IS THE ONE THAT COUNTS.