OP-EXPOSÉ®
Three Employers, One Question:
Does a Worker Have the Right to Defend Himself in Public?
By Bradley J. Burt
For nearly three years, I have documented a recurring pattern appearing across three separate employment disputes involving three different employers.
The employers deny discrimination. Government agencies have not yet issued final determinations on many of the allegations. Nevertheless, one common question continues to emerge from the record:
What happens when an employee documents everything?
As a disabled veteran, Division of Vocational Rehabilitation client, journalism graduate, and legal studies student, I was required by various systems to maintain records, report incidents, preserve communications, and document workplace concerns. What began as self-advocacy eventually evolved into a convergent-media project known as Outpost 422, a platform developed from an independent-study project exploring the fusion of journalism, documentary storytelling, blogging, podcasting, and digital evidence preservation.
In the Marcus matter, the dispute centered on workplace safety complaints, accommodation discussions, and allegations of retaliation. Marcus denied discrimination and argued the matter involved workplace safety concerns rather than disability discrimination.
In the Frank Productions matter, the company maintains that termination resulted from workplace conduct involving alleged threats toward a patron. The company states multiple employees reported hearing statements that justified discharge. I dispute those allegations and contend that my protected activity—including accommodation requests, reporting concerns to management, DVR involvement, and executive-level escalation—preceded the adverse action. Documents submitted to investigators argue that the chronology supports an inference of pretext.
Across the records, one theme repeatedly appears: documentation.
Accommodation forms. Interactive-process questionnaires. Emails. DVR communications. Position statements. Rebuttals. Policy manuals. Executive correspondence. These documents tell competing stories about the same events.
The legal question ultimately belongs to investigators, administrative law judges, and courts. The journalistic question is different.
If an employee believes allegations made against him are false, exaggerated, or incomplete, does he have the right to preserve the record and publicly defend himself?
Outpost 422 was built around that question.
The project does not attempt to replace courts, investigators, or due process. Instead, it applies the principles of convergent media to preserve timelines, documents, interviews, correspondence, and contextual evidence so that future decision-makers can evaluate the complete record rather than isolated allegations. The underlying methodology was developed through an academic independent study focused on multimedia convergence and documentary storytelling.
Whether the agencies ultimately agree with my claims remains to be seen.
What is already clear, however, is that documentation changes the balance of power. When records are preserved, allegations can be compared against timelines. Statements can be compared against policies. Decisions can be compared against prior communications.
That is the central premise of the Op-Exposé model:
Preserve first. Analyze second. Publish third. Let the record speak for itself.










