July 8, 2026

Part 22: The Release Was the Tell

In Part 21, I asked whether this case was ever really about collecting $37,000.

That question did not come from nowhere.

It came from the gap between the amount of money at issue and the amount of pressure Valeo has continued to apply.

A nearly $13 billion advisory firm does not need $37,000 to survive.

So when Valeo recently agreed to return to the original $37,476.96 number — but only with speech restrictions, takedown demands, removal of hearing videos, non-disparagement, and a release — the question became harder to ignore.

If this were only about payment, payment should have been enough.

This post is not going to repeat the full history.

I have already shown the wage fines, the missing Compensation Agreement, the summary-judgment contract problems, Hull’s admission, the current enforcement pressure, and the way this case has reached into my family.

This post is about one narrower question:

Why did Valeo keep wanting a release?


Settlement Is Supposed to Be the Off-Ramp

Most people think of settlement as the practical end of a lawsuit.

The parties fight.
The costs rise.
The risks become clearer.
Then someone finally says, “Let’s settle this.”

That sounds reasonable.

And for years, I thought settlement was supposed to be the off-ramp.

But in my case, settlement rarely looked like a clean exit.

It looked like something else.

It looked like a smaller payment in exchange for keeping Valeo’s leverage intact.

And, most importantly, it looked like a way to get me to release Valeo from liability.

June 24, 2026

Status Update: I Thought This Was an Exemption Hearing

I thought the recent hearing was going to be about exemptions.

That was the purpose as I understood it.

I had filed materials with the court identifying assets, liabilities, ownership issues, liens, and practical concerns. I was trying to explain what should not be seized, what was not mine, what had little or no equity, and what would create unnecessary problems for my family and for the Elkhart County Sheriff.

Instead, the process appears to have turned into something else.

The list I provided to help the court understand what should be protected was used, at least in substantial part, to identify property for the sheriff to seize.

That is hard to describe as ordinary.


What I Thought Was Happening

After the court proceedings involving my son Ethan’s bank accounts, I thought everyone would want to avoid creating the same problem again.

Ethan is not a judgment debtor.

His bank accounts contained only his own funds, including money from his summer job and graduation-related money.

Those accounts were frozen anyway.

Eventually, the funds were released.

So when I disclosed issues involving property owned by or connected to other family members, I assumed that mattered.

June 19, 2026

Part 21: The $37,000 Explanation No Longer Fits

In the last post, I used the image of a black hole.

Not because this story is about astronomy.

But because black holes help explain something we all understand intuitively:

Sometimes you cannot see the thing creating the pull.

You can only see what gets pulled toward it.

You can see the movement.

You can see the distortion.

You can see objects acting in ways that do not make sense unless something much larger is exerting force on them.

That is where this story is now.

For months, I have been laying out documents, dates, filings, emails, transcripts, wage reports, court orders, and metadata.

Piece by piece.

Post by post.

But there is a question readers keep asking.

And it is the right question.

Why would all of this happen over $37,000?

June 18, 2026

Part 20 — Not Enough Gravity

 

NASA visualization of a black hole’s gravity distorting light around it. We do not see the black hole itself; we see the effects of its pull.


Scientists do not see a black hole the way we see a building, a car, or a signed contract.

They see what happens around it.

They see light bend.

They see stars move.

They see matter accelerate.

They see objects behave in ways that do not make sense unless something powerful, unseen, and massive is pulling on them.

That is the shift in this series.

Up to now, I have mostly walked through direct facts.

Documents.

Dates.

Signatures.

Missing signatures.

Metadata.

Court orders.

Hearing records.

The story has been mostly linear.

Valeo withheld compensation.

Valeo sued me.

Valeo did not produce a signed Compensation Agreement.

Valeo’s lawyer later admitted there was no signed Compensation Agreement.

Unsigned 2010 agreement exhibits were generated from the same Word document shortly before summary judgment.

Judge Welch denied my Trial Rule 53.1 request herself.

A higher-court document later appeared with an earlier date and later electronic activity.

Now the judgment is being enforced against my family’s daily life.

That is the direct record.

But after Part 19, the question changes.

The next question is not only:

What happened next?

The next question is:

What has enough gravity to explain what happened?

June 17, 2026

Part 19 — The Vortex

In Part 18, I explained the limbo.

The missing Compensation Agreement should have stopped the case from moving forward cleanly.

It did not.

The Trial Rule 53.1 problem should have stopped the case from moving forward cleanly.

It did not.

The court-authority question should have been resolved before enforcement continued.

It was not.

And now the same judgment is being enforced against my family’s daily life.

That is why I keep coming back to the same image.

A vortex.

Part 22: The Release Was the Tell

In Part 21 , I asked whether this case was ever really about collecting $37,000. That question did not come from nowhere. It came from the g...