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.