Today I submitted supplemental materials to the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division to preserve procedural issues and document the chronology of several related administrative proceedings. The filing was not intended to argue the merits of my case. Instead, it sought to ensure that the administrative record reflects the procedural history, related filings, and the existence of documentary materials that may become relevant after an Administrative Law Judge is assigned.
That filing also marks another step in the development of what I call Journalism eDiscovery™.

When the Record Becomes the Story
For generations, journalism has asked one fundamental question:
“What happened?”
Litigation asks a different question:
“What can be proven?”
Those questions increasingly intersect in an era where nearly every significant event leaves behind a digital trail.
Emails, surveillance systems, text messages, social media posts, cloud archives, and electronic metadata often become as important as witness testimony. The challenge is no longer whether information exists. The challenge is preserving, organizing, and authenticating it.
That is the foundation of Journalism eDiscovery™.
The concept is not that journalists should become judges, nor that artificial intelligence should replace lawyers or investigators. Rather, it recognizes that responsible documentation can help preserve records before they disappear and can provide a structured chronology for later examination.
Federal evidentiary principles illustrate why preservation matters. For example:
- Federal Rule of Evidence 401 explains that evidence is relevant if it has any tendency to make a fact of consequence more or less probable.
- Federal Rule of Evidence 402 provides that relevant evidence is generally admissible unless another rule or law excludes it.
- Federal Rule of Evidence 901 requires that evidence be authenticated by sufficient proof that it is what the proponent claims it is.
- Federal Rule of Evidence 1002, often called the “Best Evidence Rule,” generally requires an original writing, recording, or photograph when a party seeks to prove its contents.
These rules underscore a broader principle: credibility is strengthened when claims can be connected to authentic, reliable, and contemporaneous records.
Journalism eDiscovery™ is an attempt to organize those records before they are scattered across inboxes, hard drives, cloud accounts, and public databases.
Whether courts ultimately accept a particular argument remains for the legal process to decide.
But preserving the record is a task that begins long before trial.
That, ultimately, is the purpose of Journalism eDiscovery™.
The premise is straightforward: modern disputes rarely exist only in witness memories. They also exist in emails, electronic scheduling systems, public records, digital photographs, videos, cloud storage, social media, and metadata. Preserving those records in an organized, transparent manner can assist journalists, litigants, investigators, and tribunals in understanding the chronology of disputed events.
Journalism eDiscovery™ does not replace the judicial process. It seeks to complement it by emphasizing documentation, authentication, chronology, and preservation.
As my legal studies continue, I intend to explore how traditional investigative reporting can intersect with electronic discovery principles, creating a workflow that helps preserve complex factual records while maintaining transparency about the methods used to organize them.
Today’s filing represents another checkpoint in that ongoing work.
Outpost 422®
Preserve the Record. Tell the Story. Overcome Impossibility.









