
OUTPOST 422 | PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM
PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM
Three Employers, One Recurring Question
What the documentary record shows when a disabled veteran says he opposed discrimination
By Bradley J. Burt | Outpost 422 | Bob Cobb Freelance Ink LLC
July 17, 2026 | Sun Prairie, Wisconsin | For editorial and documentary review
SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — Three Wisconsin employers encountered the same worker through vocational rehabilitation. In each employment, Bradley J. Burt says he disclosed disability or veteran-related context, raised workplace objections, and documented the response. Marcus Corporation allegedly considered termination before Burt separated from employment; Frank Productions terminated and banned him on November 8, 2024; Camp Createability terminated him on June 7, 2025. Each employer disputes unlawful motive.
An Outpost 422 Journalism eDiscovery scan identifies a recurring documentary question rather than a proven legal conclusion: when an employee opposes what he perceives as discrimination, do contemporaneous records support the employer’s stated reason, or do unresolved inconsistencies warrant further investigation?
The scan reviewed complaints, employer responses, accommodation questionnaires, DVR communications, unemployment records, project records, and evidentiary submissions. The pattern is measurable: three DVR-linked employments; three asserted opposition narratives; two completed terminations; one asserted intended termination followed by separation; three disputes over notice or accommodation; and repeated employer reliance on conduct, communication, safety, anxiety, or threat-related explanations.
The comparison at a glance
| Employer | Employment outcome | Employer rationale in record | Documentary issue preserved |
| Marcus Corp. | Burt alleges intended termination; later separation/resignation | Management and conduct disputes; employer denied accommodation and retaliation claims | DVR notice, hours, accommodation emails, threat characterization, and separation chronology |
| Frank Productions | Terminated and venue ban, Nov. 8, 2024 | Alleged threatening statements and workplace-violence concerns | IDPQ process, prior complaints, security evidence, witness accounts, unemployment record, and comparators |
| Camp Createability | Terminated June 7, 2025 | Performance, parent complaints, staff anxiety, client interactions, and confidentiality | June 5 notice dispute, absent source exhibits, project dependencies, phone accommodation, and onboarding records |
| RECORD STATUS: Marcus Corporation, Frank Productions LLC, and Camp Createability LLC deny unlawful discrimination or retaliation. Burt’s claims remain disputed, and no tribunal has issued a single final merits ruling establishing bad faith, discriminatory motive, or witness bias across all three matters. |
Objective correlation to bad faith: a screening analysis
“Bad faith” is used here as an investigative hypothesis—an asserted mismatch between a stated reason and the contemporaneous record—not as a finding of liability. The scan applies five neutral indicators: close timing after asserted protected activity; an explanation not supported by contemporaneous source records; a material shift in explanation; departure from a promised or ordinary process; and selective treatment shown by a valid comparator. The supplied record permits screening of the first four indicators, but does not yet establish the fifth across all three employers.
| Employer | Correlation | Indicators in supplied record | Limits / alternative explanation |
| Marcus | Moderate; unresolved | Alleged accommodation and opposition chronology; reduced hours; asserted intended termination; separation dispute | No completed employer termination shown in this scan; resignation and management explanations complicate causation; full decision chronology needed |
| Frank | Moderate; materially disputed | Protected-activity chronology asserted; termination and ban confirmed; detailed post-dispute medical questionnaire; contested completeness of security and witness evidence | Employer documented an asserted threat/safety rationale; original incident evidence and valid comparators are needed to test pretext |
| Camp | Moderate-to-strong timing signal; merits unresolved | June 5 complaint followed by June 7 termination; no prior performance review identified in supplied email log; position statement relies on reports not appended to the reviewed submission | Timing alone is insufficient; employer says concerns accumulated earlier and cites client, parent, staff, performance, and confidentiality grounds |
Bottom line: the three records correlate with a bad-faith hypothesis strongly enough to justify targeted discovery, but not strongly enough to state that bad faith occurred. Camp presents the clearest temporal signal. Frank presents the most developed competing safety rationale. Marcus presents a consequential accommodation-and-separation dispute but, on this record, the weakest fit with a completed retaliatory-discharge theory. The most important missing cross-case proof is contemporaneous decision documentation and similarly situated comparator evidence.
Connection 1: opposition followed by adverse employment consequences
The strongest common connection is temporal and procedural. Burt says he raised discrimination, accommodation, DVR, or workplace-treatment concerns before material changes in each employment. At Marcus, he alleges reduced hours, isolation, an intended termination, and eventual separation. At Frank, the company confirms termination and a venue ban, while disputing any connection to protected activity. At Camp, June 5 emails document a workplace complaint and a conversation with Armstrong less than two days before the June 7 termination, although the legal character of the complaint remains contested.
Temporal sequence can support an inference, but timing alone does not prove retaliation. Each matter still requires evidence that the decisionmaker knew of legally protected opposition and that the adverse action was causally connected to it.
Connection 2: accommodation notice and the interactive process
All three records contain a dispute over what the employer knew and what process followed. Marcus materials include an accommodation-letter template and competing accounts of DVR notice. Frank issued a detailed Interactive Process Questionnaire to a healthcare provider after Burt raised concerns; the parties dispute whether the form was necessary, proportionate, or evidence of engagement. Camp denies knowledge of a qualifying disability or accommodation request, while Burt cites DVR involvement, migraine awareness, a knee-related request for additional time to reach the telephone, and the absence of an interactive consultation.
The common data point is not that every employer violated the accommodation law. It is that each case turns partly on documentary notice: what was disclosed, to whom, when, and what response the employer recorded.
Connection 3: conduct and safety labels became decisive
The employers’ stated explanations differ, but share a vocabulary of workplace conduct. Frank relied on alleged threats, intimidation, and workplace-violence concerns. Camp cited disrespect, inappropriate communication, staff anxiety, possible client unenrollment, and confidentiality. Marcus materials contain disputes over threat reporting, management reaction, and whether Burt’s safety reporting was reframed as problematic conduct.
Those similarities are newsworthy because conduct labels can be legitimate safety judgments, pretextual explanations, or a mixture of both. The distinction cannot be resolved through rhetoric. It depends on original complaints, video, incident reports, decision timelines, comparator treatment, and testimony grounded in personal knowledge.
Connection 4: objective records and later narratives do not always align
At Frank, the employer’s response confirms the termination and ban but disputes the relevance of the unemployment determination and denies a discriminatory connection. At Camp, the unemployment determination states that the discharge was not for misconduct or substantial fault, while also stating that the discharge was for performance issues. That determination concerns benefit eligibility; it does not adjudicate discrimination.
Camp’s position statement relies on parent, staff, and client reports without appending the underlying records to the eight-page submission reviewed here. Frank supplied extensive attachments, but Burt disputes their completeness, characterization, and the absence of other electronic evidence. Marcus materials similarly reflect conflicts over DVR communications, hours, accommodation notice, and the characterization of safety reporting.
What the State has—and has not—decided
Burt argues that Wisconsin’s administrative process has repeatedly discounted or failed to acknowledge objective evidence. That is his position, not an established statewide finding. The procedural posture differs by case, and Camp Createability had no assigned investigator when the present email log was completed. A no-probable-cause determination, remand, appeal, intake status, or unemployment decision must not be collapsed into a single claim that “the State rejected the evidence.”
The accurate public-interest question is whether the agencies have meaningfully reconciled identified documentary conflicts before reaching—or eventually reaching—probable-cause decisions. Journalism eDiscovery tracks those conflicts so that the record can be tested against the explanation given for each procedural outcome.
Why Brockmeyer matters—and where it does not
The Wisconsin Supreme Court’s 1983 decision in Brockmeyer v. Dun & Bradstreet remains important because it explains the boundary of at-will employment. The court rejected a general implied duty requiring every termination to be made in good faith. Bad faith, standing alone, is not the rule. The court instead recognized a narrow wrongful-discharge exception where a termination contravenes a fundamental, well-defined public policy evidenced by existing constitutional or statutory law.
For these three disputes, the more direct statutory framework is the Wisconsin Fair Employment Act. Wis. Stat. § 111.322 prohibits specified forms of discrimination and retaliation, while § 111.34 addresses disability discrimination and reasonable accommodation. Brockmeyer supports the general proposition that at-will employment does not authorize an unlawful end; it does not establish that Burt has proved such an end in any particular case.
A necessary correction about witness bias
Wis. Stat. § 906.16 provides that evidence of a witness’s bias, prejudice, or interest is admissible to attack credibility. It is an evidentiary rule, not an independent finding that an employer acted in bad faith. Its role in these matters would be to test witnesses at a hearing through demonstrated interest, inconsistent statements, personal relationships, or documentary contradiction. No witness should be publicly labeled dishonest merely because Burt disputes the account.
Data-driven investigative requests
Decision chronology: when termination was first considered, who participated, and what documents were reviewed.
Protected-activity notice: the exact complaint, decisionmaker knowledge, transmission path, and timing.
Accommodation record: disclosure, requested change, essential duties, medical information sought, and employer response.
Conduct evidence: original complaints, incident reports, video, call records, messages, and contemporaneous witness accounts.
Comparator evidence: whether employees outside the asserted protected category engaged in materially similar conduct and received different treatment.
Credibility controls: personal knowledge, prior inconsistent statements, bias or interest, missing records, and complete message threads.
Journalism eDiscovery scan conclusion
The present record supports investigation of a recurring pattern; it does not establish a recurring violation. Across three employers, the same worker’s DVR participation, accommodation communications, protected-opposition claims, and detailed reporting style intersected with employer concerns about conduct, communication, safety, or performance. The evidentiary task is to determine whether those explanations were contemporaneously supported and consistently applied.
For a pro se litigant, newsworthiness matters because it forces the record into a form the public and the tribunal can audit: verified dates, attributed statements, competing explanations, missing evidence, and clearly labeled inference. Public reporting cannot replace the burden of proof. It can expose which questions remain unanswered and preserve the documentary path by which an agency reaches its decision.
Sources, response, and human-centered authorship
Sources reviewed include the supplied Marcus, Frank Productions, and Camp Createability submissions; DVR communications; accommodation materials; unemployment records; project documents; and employer position statements. Legal references: Brockmeyer v. Dun & Bradstreet, 113 Wis. 2d 561, 335 N.W.2d 834 (1983), https://law.justia.com/cases/wisconsin/supreme-court/1983/81-2024-9.html; Wis. Stat. §§ 111.322, 111.34, and 906.16, available through the Wisconsin Legislature.
Before publication, Outpost 422 should offer each employer and relevant agency representative a fair opportunity to identify factual errors, provide missing records, or submit a response. Bradley J. Burt directed the reporting purpose, selected the records, supplied context, and retained final editorial judgment for Outpost 422 and Bob Cobb Freelance Ink LLC. AI assisted with organization, comparison, and neutral drafting; it did not determine credibility, probable cause, admissibility, or liability.
Three-employer Journalism eDiscovery scan | Allegations disputed











