In Part 22, I wrote that the release was the tell.
If this case were only about collecting $37,000, payment should have been enough.
But settlement has kept coming with something more:
a release,
restrictions,
silence,
and control.
That means the next question is not just what Valeo wanted me to pay.
The next question is what Valeo has needed protected — and may still need protected now.
One possible answer starts with Valeo’s public identity.
Valeo is not just any company.
Valeo is an investment advisory firm.
A fiduciary.
A firm built on trust.
A firm whose clients are supposed to believe that advice is clean, conflicts are managed, and money is handled with care.
That public image matters.
Because in a business built on trust, reputation is not decoration.
Reputation is the product.