June 3, 2026

Part 14: The Digital Fingerprints

At the end of Part 13, I said the story was about to move from paper to pixels.

That is where everything changed.

For most of the litigation, I was operating inside the paper version of the case.

Mailed filings.

Scanned copies.

Court-stamped pages.

Low-quality images.

 

Paper exhibits.

Documents that looked official because they had been filed in court.

That was the world I could see at the time.

But years later, when I was finally able to obtain and inspect more of the actual electronic court files, I began looking at the record differently.

Not just at what the documents said.

At what the files were.

That is when I started looking at metadata.

Metadata is not complicated.

It is the information stored inside or attached to an electronic file.

A PDF may show one thing on the page, but the file can also contain information about when it was created, when it was modified, what software generated it, who authored it, what source document it came from, and sometimes the system or organization connected to the file.

In other words, metadata can be a digital fingerprint.

June 2, 2026

Part 13: The Advice of Opposing Counsel

In Part 5, I showed an excerpt of hidden video from my June 28, 2017 meeting with Andrew Hull.

At the time, the obvious point was the admission itself.

Valeo’s lead attorney acknowledged that the Compensation Agreement had never been signed, that there was no signed original, and that Valeo did not have signed copies.

That was significant enough.

But after Part 12, that same video should look different.

May 28, 2026

Part 12: The Illness Leverage

 

In Part 11, I detailed the black-letter reality of Indiana Trial Rule 9.2 and the deep disconnect between the courtroom record and the final written judgment. But a pro se, self-represented defendant does not simply wake up one morning with clear evidence of an opponent’s contract default. To uncover the fact that Valeo was litigating without a signed contract, I had to build a specific diagnostic mechanism.

And when I deployed it, the firm’s counsel responded by weaponizing a medical crisis.

May 20, 2026

Part 11: The Pleading Trap

 

In Part 10, I described how a “lost” affidavit—a document that was actually a matter of public record—was used by Valeo’s counsel to trigger discovery sanctions that effectively blindfolded my defense. But while the firm was claiming I was withholding an explanation, they were concurrently managing a far more fundamental omission.

They were suing me for over two years based on a contract that did not exist in signed form.

May 12, 2026

Pause: The Sheriff and Two Tables

 

Litigation is often described in terms of numbers and rules, but at its core, it is a battle of attrition and pressure. The past few weeks, the “machinery” of the law provided a jarring example of how that pressure is applied in the present day.

Morning Grace, Afternoon Execution

In my prior post, I shared how on Friday morning, April 24th, Valeo’s attorney performed a “gracious” gesture by notifying the court that the hearing regarding my son Ethan’s frozen bank accounts was unnecessary because she was filing a motion to release all our accounts—Ethan’s, our personal accounts, and the business accounts.

We only asked for Ethan’s accounts to be released.

By that same afternoon, any illusion of goodwill was gone, when she filed a Praecipe for Execution

Part 14: The Digital Fingerprints

At the end of Part 13 , I said the story was about to move from paper to pixels. That is where everything changed. For most of the litigatio...