Frank Productions’ Interactive Process Questionnaire: A Journalism eDiscovery Analysis of Disability Accommodation and Workplace Documentation

PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Outpost 422® Releases Journalism eDiscovery Memorandum Comparing Disability Privacy Concerns With Administrative Findings

Sun Prairie, Wisconsin — Outpost 422 today released a Journalism eDiscovery memorandum examining documents submitted during administrative proceedings involving disability accommodations, veterans’ privacy, and the evaluation of documentary evidence.

The memorandum compares contemporaneous communications, employer accommodation documents, and Equal Rights Division determinations to identify issues the author believes warrant closer examination through the administrative appeal process.

Documentary Chronology

The exhibits include:

  • A September 15, 2024 Messenger conversation in which the complainant objected to discussing disability accommodation matters in a group communication platform, asserting that the discussion involved confidential disability information connected with Wisconsin DVR.
  • Frank Productions’ Interactive Process Questionnaire, which requested information from a health care provider regarding medical limitations, accommodations, prognosis, and whether the employee presented a “significant risk of substantial harm” to themselves or others.
  • VA privacy guidance describing veterans’ medical records as protected health information and explaining that disclosure generally occurs only through the veteran’s written authorization.

Administrative Record

The memorandum notes that the Equal Rights Division ultimately issued Initial Determinations finding no probable cause in the respective matters.

The author argues on appeal that certain contemporaneous documents deserved greater consideration when evaluating the overall chronology of disability-related communications.

Specifically, the author contends that the following categories of evidence should be evaluated together rather than individually:

  • communications concerning confidentiality of disability accommodations;
  • documentation regarding the ADA interactive process;
  • VA privacy materials;
  • contemporaneous DVR correspondence;
  • employer accommodation requests; and
  • later employment actions.

Questions Raised by the Record

The memorandum does not assert that these documents alone establish liability. Instead, it identifies questions that the author believes deserve closer administrative review, including:

  • whether confidentiality concerns expressed before termination provide context for later disputes;
  • whether the chronology of accommodation discussions should be evaluated together with subsequent employment actions;
  • how “direct threat” language contained in accommodation questionnaires should be interpreted within the overall record; and
  • what weight should be assigned to contemporaneous documentary evidence when compared with later witness recollections.

Journalism eDiscovery Position

Outpost 422 states that its Journalism eDiscovery methodology is intended to preserve contemporaneous documents, correspondence, and chronology so that readers—and, where applicable, adjudicators—can examine the complete record rather than isolated events.

The memorandum concludes that preserving dated communications, accommodation documents, and administrative filings may assist future reviewers in understanding how disability accommodation discussions evolved over time and why chronology can be significant when evaluating employment disputes.

EXHIBIT A: FRANK PRODUCTIONS LLC MEDICAL RELEASE DOCUMENT

Exhibit A. This exhibit consists of the employer’s Interactive Process Questionnaire dated September 19, 2024. While the interactive process is recognized under disability law as a mechanism for identifying reasonable workplace accommodations, the questionnaire requested medical opinions extending beyond functional limitations by asking the healthcare provider to determine whether the employee presented “a significant risk of substantial harm” and whether accommodations could eliminate any perceived direct threat. The complainant submits this exhibit together with contemporaneous communications regarding confidentiality and disability accommodations to argue that the chronology raises questions about whether the medical inquiry remained focused on accommodation or evolved into documentation supporting later disciplinary action. The complainant requests that the factfinder evaluate this issue in light of the entire documentary record rather than any single exhibit in isolation.No harm was noted by the VA primary care doctor. No occurences happened in the past. Only after opposing discrimination.

OP-EXPOSÉ | Reading the Record: What the Frank Productions Initial Determination Addresses—and What the Appeal Will Examine

Reading the Record: What the Frank Productions Initial Determination Addresses—and What the Appeal Will Examine

By Bradley J. Burt
Outpost 422 | Jaded Patriot Brief

When an administrative investigator issues an Initial Determination, the document becomes more than a decision—it becomes the roadmap for appellate review.

On March 5, 2026, the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division issued an Initial Determination finding no probable cause in my military-service discrimination complaint against Frank Productions LLC. The determination summarized the Respondent’s position, my allegations, and concluded that the employer had articulated a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for terminating my employment.

As the complainant, I respectfully disagree with that conclusion.

More importantly, my disagreement is not based solely on the outcome. It centers on what I contend the written determination leaves unexplained.

A Narrow Focus

The Initial Determination primarily analyzes the employer’s explanation that I threatened violence toward another individual while working security.

The document concludes that witness statements supplied by the employer supported that explanation and that insufficient evidence established military-service discrimination.

That is the investigator’s conclusion.

The Questions Raised on Appeal

The appeal asks a different question:

Did the Initial Determination fully evaluate the complete evidentiary chronology before reaching that conclusion?

Among the materials I contend deserve greater consideration are:

  • accommodation-related communications preceding the termination, including the Interactive Process Questionnaire;
  • contemporaneous diary entries documenting workplace concerns before the adverse action;
  • communications with the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation documenting requests for assistance and escalation of workplace concerns;
  • supplemental exhibits regarding chronology, motive, and pretext submitted during the administrative process;
  • an affidavit disputing the alleged threatening statements and describing efforts to avoid confrontation rather than escalate it.

Whether these materials ultimately change the outcome is a question for the Administrative Law Judge—not for me.

Why This Matters

Administrative investigations are designed to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to proceed to a hearing.

When a complainant believes important chronology, documentary evidence, or objective corroborating evidence was not fully considered, the appeal process exists to allow an independent Administrative Law Judge to evaluate the evidence presented at hearing.

That is the procedural posture of this case.

The Larger Story

This appeal is also part of a broader project examining how self-represented litigants organize evidence in administrative proceedings.

Through Outpost 422, I have been documenting timelines, preserving contemporaneous records, and studying how documentary evidence, witness credibility, and chronology are evaluated in employment discrimination investigations.

Readers should understand that an Initial Determination is not the final word. It reflects one stage of the administrative process. Wisconsin law provides an appeal mechanism precisely so disputed facts, credibility questions, and documentary evidence may be evaluated in a formal hearing.

As this matter proceeds, I will continue reporting on the publicly available filings, the administrative record, and the legal issues presented—allowing readers to examine the evidence as it develops rather than relying solely on conclusions.

###JPP

PRESS RELEASE: Wisconsin Equal Rights Division Appeal Challenges Administrative Record and Evidence Review in Frank Productions Case

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Questions Raised Over Administrative Review Process Following Wisconsin Equal Rights Division Response

SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — Bradley J. Burt, a self-represented complainant in multiple matters before the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development’s Equal Rights Division (ERD), announced that he has formally preserved objections concerning the handling of evidence, investigator assignments, and the administrative record following correspondence with ERD Administrator Colin Stroud.

According to Burt, his request was not based solely on disagreement with prior investigative outcomes. Rather, he asked the Division to conduct an administrative review addressing what he believes are concerns regarding evidentiary development, chronology, corroboration, record preservation, and confidence in the investigative process.

In a written response, Administrator Colin Stroud stated that ERD investigators are “neutral fact finders” who base decisions on the evidence presented by the parties, that a prior adverse determination is not grounds for reassignment of an investigator, and that the Division preserves records consistent with applicable retention schedules. He also advised that parties may pursue the Division’s appeal process if they believe investigative errors occurred.

Burt subsequently replied that his request concerned specific evidentiary issues—including documentary evidence, chronology evidence, witness credibility, objective corroboration, and accommodation-related communications—and asked that those concerns be preserved within the administrative record.

Later correspondence from Administrator Stroud confirmed that Burt’s submissions would be added to the case file, while subsequent communications directed that future case-specific materials be submitted directly to the assigned investigator or administrative law judge rather than to the Division Administrator.

Burt states that he has also requested independent review by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission of his cross-filed charge, asserting that his concerns involve the completeness of the evidentiary record rather than disagreement with any single determination.

The pending administrative appeal involving Frank Productions LLC likewise challenges aspects of the evidentiary record, including the evaluation of witness credibility, chronology, and the availability of objective evidence. Burt has filed an affidavit denying that he made violent threats and asserting that available security footage would support his account of the events.

Burt says the broader issue extends beyond his individual cases.

“My objective is to ensure confidence in the fairness, neutrality, and integrity of the investigative process. My concern is not simply the outcome of one case, but whether documentary evidence, chronology, witness credibility, and objective corroboration receive meaningful consideration during administrative investigations.”

The Equal Rights Division has not publicly indicated that it found misconduct by any investigator. The correspondence reflects the Division’s position that investigators act as neutral fact finders and that disagreements regarding investigative conclusions are addressed through the established administrative appeal process.

Media Contact

Bradley J. Burt
Outpost 422®
Sun Prairie, Wisconsin

Outpost 422 Responds to Wisconsin ERD Administrator’s Procedural Guidance

Press Release Memorandum

Outpost 422 Responds to Wisconsin ERD Administrator’s Procedural Guidance

Journalism eDiscovery Examines the Difference Between Administrative Process and Public Accountability

By Bradley J. Burt
Outpost 422 | The Jaded Patriot Press

SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development Equal Rights Division Administrator Colin Stroud has responded to my recent request for supervisory review regarding pending Equal Rights Division matters. His response did not address the merits of my concerns. Instead, it clarified the Division’s internal procedure: case-related materials should be directed to the assigned investigator or administrative law judge rather than to the Division Administrator.

From an administrative perspective, the response is understandable. Agency administrators generally oversee operations rather than conduct individual investigations. However, from the perspective of Journalism eDiscovery, the exchange raises an important question about how parties preserve objections before an investigator has been assigned.

My memorandum requested four things: preservation of my objection, written identification of the assigned investigator, notice of whether supervisory review would occur, and an explanation of how the Division intended to proceed if reassignment were denied. It also stated that I remained willing to cooperate fully with the investigation and was seeking only to preserve the integrity of the administrative record.

Administrator Stroud’s response clarifies that the Division expects those requests to be directed through the assigned investigator once a case enters the investigative stage. For independent observers, that distinction illustrates how administrative agencies separate policy oversight from case development.

For me, the response also defines the next procedural step.

Once an investigator is assigned, the administrative record will become the appropriate place to present any objections, documentary evidence, or requests for relief. Until that assignment occurs, the agency has indicated that it will process the complaint through its ordinary intake procedures.

This exchange is precisely why Outpost 422 documents administrative correspondence as part of its Journalism eDiscovery methodology. Investigative journalism is not limited to reporting outcomes. It also examines the procedural pathways that determine how public agencies receive information, preserve records, and communicate with citizens.

Whether one ultimately agrees or disagrees with the agency’s decisions, understanding those procedures promotes transparency.

The correspondence therefore becomes part of the story—not because it resolves the dispute, but because it documents how the administrative process functions before the evidentiary record is fully developed.

Outpost 422 will continue to document the investigation as additional assignments, filings, and agency responses become part of the public record.

Author’s Note: What Is a Press Release Memorandum?

A Press Release Memorandum is an Outpost 422 editorial format that blends the structure of a traditional news article with the organization of a legal memorandum. Rather than advocating a legal position, it documents administrative events, correspondence, and procedural developments in a manner intended to preserve chronology, distinguish documented facts from commentary, and promote transparency throughout the reporting process. It is designed as a Journalism eDiscovery work product that combines investigative reporting with disciplined record preservation.

The Press Release Memorandum: Where News Copy Meets Structured Analysis

OUTPOST 422® PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM

FOR IMMEDIATE DOCUMENTATION

To: Colin R. Stroud, Administrator
Wisconsin Equal Rights Division
Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development

From: Bradley J. Burt
Complainant | Founder, Outpost 422®

Date: July 2, 2026

Subject: Request for Supervisory Review, Preservation of Objection, and Conditional Request for EEOC Review

Executive Summary

Outpost 422 respectfully submits this Press Release Memorandum to preserve the administrative record concerning the investigation of the above-referenced Equal Rights Division matter. This memorandum serves two purposes:

  1. It constitutes a formal request for supervisory review directed to the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division; and
  2. It documents, for purposes of Journalism eDiscovery, the chronology of concerns previously raised regarding investigative procedure, evidentiary development, and administrative transparency.

The objective of this memorandum is to preserve the integrity of the administrative record while informing the public about the procedural issues presented through an evidence-centered reporting format.

Statement of the Request

Dear Administrator Stroud:

As reflected in my previous correspondence, my request is not based solely upon disagreement with prior investigative outcomes. Rather, it concerns my confidence in the completeness of the investigative process, including the development of documentary evidence, chronology evidence, corroborating records, and the evaluation of disputed factual issues.

Accordingly, if this matter is assigned to Investigator Matthew Meissner, I respectfully renew my request that the investigation be reassigned or that supervisory oversight be provided before additional investigative activity proceeds.

This request is submitted to preserve confidence in the neutrality of the administrative process and should not be interpreted as a refusal to cooperate with the Division’s investigation.

Requested Administrative Action

I respectfully request that the Division:

  • preserve this memorandum within the official administrative record;
  • identify the investigator assigned to this matter;
  • advise whether supervisory review has been conducted;
  • explain how the investigation will proceed should reassignment be denied; and
  • if the charge remains eligible under the EEOC–Wisconsin work-sharing procedures, note my request for EEOC review within the administrative record.

Journalism eDiscovery Record

This memorandum is also preserved as part of the Outpost 422 Journalism eDiscovery archive.

The publication of this memorandum is intended to document:

  • the chronology of procedural requests;
  • preservation of administrative objections;
  • transparency regarding investigative communications; and
  • the evolution of the administrative record during an active proceeding.

Publication is not intended to substitute for the administrative process. Rather, it serves as contemporaneous documentation of communications submitted to the agency.

Editorial Statement

Outpost 422 believes that investigative transparency is strengthened when procedural communications are documented alongside investigative reporting.

The Press Release Memorandum format reflects that philosophy by combining:

  • news reporting,
  • documentary chronology,
  • administrative correspondence,
  • and editorial transparency

into a single published work product.

The goal is not merely to report governmental proceedings, but to preserve how those proceedings are documented over time.

Respectfully Submitted

Bradley J. Burt
Complainant
Founder, Outpost 422®
The Jaded Patriot Press

Outpost 422 Introduces the Press Release Memorandum: A New Format for Journalism eDiscovery™

FOR IMMEDIATE PUBLICATION

OUTPOST 422 | The Jaded Patriot Press

Outpost 422 today announced the formal adoption of the Press Release Memorandum, a publication format developed to blend traditional news reporting with structured analytical writing. The format is designed to improve transparency by allowing readers to examine both the reported events and the documented reasoning used to organize complex information.

Rather than separating investigative reporting from research notes, the Press Release Memorandum combines elements of both into a single publication. Each article is organized to distinguish documented facts, chronology, source materials, analysis, and commentary, enabling readers to better understand how a story was assembled.

The format supports the continuing development of Journalism eDiscovery™, an evidence-centered reporting methodology that emphasizes chronology, documentation, multimedia storytelling, and responsible use of AI-assisted editorial tools.

Future Outpost 422 publications will use this structure to report on matters involving public records, administrative proceedings, veteran issues, institutional transparency, workplace accountability, and other subjects of public interest.

The objective is not simply to report conclusions, but to document the reporting process itself.

Author’s Note

What Is a Press Release Memorandum?

A Press Release Memorandum is an editorial format developed for Outpost 422 that combines the accessibility of a news article with the structured organization of a memorandum.

Unlike a traditional press release, which is generally intended to announce news on behalf of an organization, a Press Release Memorandum presents information using clearly identified sections that distinguish:

  • reported facts;
  • chronology;
  • documentary sources;
  • contextual analysis;
  • editorial commentary; and
  • concluding observations.

The purpose is to improve transparency by showing readers not only what is being reported, but also how the reporting has been organized and evaluated.

Within the Outpost 422 newsroom, this format serves as a journalism work product that documents the evolution of an investigation while maintaining clear distinctions between factual reporting, analytical discussion, and opinion.

The Press Release Memorandum is a component of the broader Journalism eDiscovery™ methodology, which explores how investigative journalism, multimedia storytelling, legal research techniques, and AI-assisted editorial workflows can be integrated into a transparent publishing process.

About Outpost 422

Outpost 422 is an independent veteran-led journalism project exploring convergent media, investigative reporting, multimedia storytelling, and Journalism eDiscovery™. Through blogs, newsletters, documentaries, podcasts, and public-interest reporting, the project documents both the stories being investigated and the editorial methods used to produce them.

“Document the facts. Preserve the chronology. Publish the record.”

An Outpost 422 examination of how contemporaneous documentation, administrative findings, and chronological evidence can be organized for independent public review.

Outpost 422 | Journalism eDiscovery

Exhibit Before Opinion: When the Record and the Narrative Diverge

By Bradley J. Burt
Outpost 422 | Journalism eDiscovery

Journalism is entering a period where artificial intelligence, documentary evidence, multimedia reporting, and reflective field observation can be integrated into a transparent editorial workflow.

I propose Journalism eDiscovery as a convergent methodology that combines investigative reporting, evidence management principles, multimedia documentation, and narrative inquiry to improve transparency, reproducibility, and public understanding of complex investigations.

Unlike traditional investigative journalism, Journalism eDiscovery documents not only the story but also the evolution of the investigation itself.

In journalism, the first obligation is not to win an argument—it is to preserve the record.

Every employment dispute eventually reaches a point where competing narratives collide. One side explains why a decision was made. The other examines whether the documentary evidence supports that explanation.

This report applies the Outpost 422 Journalism eDiscovery method to one recurring question:

Does the documented record support the stated justification for the employment decision?

Instead of relying on opinion, the analysis begins with the available administrative record.

The Employer’s Position

According to the stated justification summarized in the exhibit, the termination was based on allegations that the employee threatened violence and that management acted for workplace safety. The explanation also relied on coworker statements.

Those allegations deserve careful examination because workplace safety is a legitimate concern for every employer.

The question, however, is not whether allegations were made.

The question is whether the available evidence corroborates them.

What the Documentary Record Reflects

The exhibit identifies several facts presented from the administrative record:

  • the employee requested reassignment or permission to leave;
  • management denied that request;
  • the employee remained assigned to a fixed public position;
  • no incident report or police response was documented;
  • the Wisconsin unemployment adjudication found no misconduct and no evidence of a threat;
  • the employer did not participate in the unemployment fact-finding process.

Standing alone, none of these items necessarily resolves every factual dispute.

Taken together, however, they become evidence that readers, investigators, or adjudicators may evaluate alongside the employer’s explanation.

As objectively scanned evidence, Journalism eDiscovery argues that credibility in modern investigative journalism is strengthened not merely by publishing conclusions, but by documenting the investigative process itself. By integrating field observation, evidence preservation, multimedia storytelling, and AI-assisted organization into a transparent workflow, the methodology seeks to make the path from observation to publication as visible as the final story. In this model, the newsroom becomes an evidence laboratory, the reporter becomes a documented observer, and the published work serves as both narrative and record. The objective is not to replace traditional journalism, but to extend it into a reproducible, accountable framework suited to the complexities of the digital age.

Journalism eDiscovery in Practice

The purpose of Journalism eDiscovery is not to replace a court or an administrative agency.

Its purpose is to organize evidence chronologically so that documents, witness accounts, agency findings, and contemporaneous records can be examined together.

Rather than asking readers to accept a conclusion, the method asks them to compare:

  • the allegation,
  • the contemporaneous documentation,
  • independent agency findings,
  • and the sequence of events.

That comparison often reveals whether the stated rationale and the documentary record move in the same direction—or whether meaningful questions remain.

Why Documentation Matters

Employment disputes frequently turn on credibility.

Documents created at the time of an event often carry different evidentiary value than statements prepared months later.

The exhibit also emphasizes an important reporting principle: present the evidence without unnecessary commentary and allow the audience to evaluate what the record shows.

For investigative journalism, restraint can strengthen credibility.

The Outpost 422 Standard

Outpost 422 was built on a simple principle:

Preserve first. Analyze second. Publish responsibly.

Whether the issue involves employment, government, veterans’ affairs, or public accountability, Journalism eDiscovery seeks to separate documented facts from interpretation.

The goal is not to inflame controversy.

The goal is to build a transparent record that others can independently review.

When the documents speak clearly, they often become the strongest witnesses.

The Future of Outpost 422: Journalism eDiscovery in the Wisconsin Equal Rights Tribunal

By Bradley J. Burt
Founder, Outpost 422 | The Jaded Patriot Press

“Every investigation begins with a question. Every question deserves a documented answer.”

For the past several years, Outpost 422 has served as more than a blog. It has been a working laboratory where investigative journalism, multimedia storytelling, legal research, veteran advocacy, and emerging artificial intelligence tools have been tested in real time.

Today marks the beginning of the next phase.

Outpost 422 is evolving into a convergent media newsroom built around a framework I call Journalism eDiscovery—a structured editorial workflow designed to help organize complex investigations while maintaining transparency about sources, chronology, and editorial judgment.

The objective is straightforward: produce journalism that is organized, documented, and understandable.

Artificial intelligence has changed how information can be gathered and organized. It can rapidly summarize documents, identify timelines, compare statements, and assist with drafting. Yet technology alone does not produce journalism. Editorial judgment, verification, ethical decision-making, and accountability remain the responsibility of the journalist.

That distinction is central to everything we publish.

The Convergent Media Framework

Outpost 422 applies a convergent media model that blends multiple forms of communication into a single investigative workflow.

Instead of treating research, photography, video, interviews, public records, and editorial writing as separate disciplines, each becomes part of one evolving story.

The workflow generally follows these stages:

  • Observation and field documentation.
  • Collection and organization of records.
  • Chronological reconstruction of events.
  • Identification of corroborating and conflicting information.
  • Editorial analysis that clearly distinguishes reporting from commentary.
  • Multimedia publication through articles, graphics, newsletters, podcasts, and documentary storytelling.

The goal is not simply to publish information. The goal is to help readers understand how conclusions are reached.

Journalism eDiscovery

Journalism eDiscovery is an editorial methodology inspired by the organizational discipline of evidence management.

Rather than viewing documents as isolated exhibits, the framework asks broader questions:

  • What does this document establish?
  • What does it not establish?
  • What other sources corroborate or contradict it?
  • Where are the gaps?
  • What additional reporting is necessary?

The emphasis is on documenting investigative reasoning rather than merely presenting conclusions.

Readers should be able to follow the reporting process as clearly as they follow the final story.

The Role of The Jaded Patriot Press

The launch of The Jaded Patriot Press on Beehiiv represents another milestone.

The newsletter expands Outpost 422 beyond traditional blogging by providing a dedicated platform for investigative features, editorial essays, research journals, multimedia projects, and updates on the continuing development of Journalism eDiscovery.

Each issue will explore not only public-interest topics but also the methods behind the reporting itself.

In that sense, readers become participants in an ongoing experiment in modern independent journalism.

Looking Ahead

Future reporting will continue to examine issues affecting veterans, public institutions, workplace accountability, administrative proceedings, government transparency, and community reporting.

As these stories develop, Outpost 422 will continue refining its convergent media workflow while documenting how AI-assisted tools can support—rather than replace—responsible investigative journalism.

Technology will continue to evolve.

Journalism must evolve with it.

The mission of Outpost 422 is not simply to publish stories. It is to build a transparent reporting process that others can examine, critique, improve, and adapt.

The watch continues.

Mission

To produce transparent, evidence-centered independent journalism through responsible use of multimedia storytelling, public records research, and AI-assisted editorial workflows.

Vision

To demonstrate how convergent media and Journalism eDiscovery can strengthen investigative reporting while preserving editorial integrity, accountability, and the public record.

Values

  • Truth before narrative.
  • Transparency in editorial process.
  • Respect for documentary evidence.
  • Independent reporting.
  • Public accountability.
  • Continuous learning through innovation.

Outpost 422 is entering its next chapter—not simply as a publication, but as an evolving newsroom dedicated to exploring how investigative journalism can responsibly adapt to the technologies of the future.

Bradley J. Burt Challenges Boardman & Clark LLP Representation in Related Wisconsin Employment Proceedings

The Record Before the Ruling

Why Administrative Justice Should Begin With the Entire Documentary Record

There is a recurring question at the center of every administrative investigation:

Should a tribunal evaluate one isolated incident, or the entire chronology that led to it?

That question sits at the heart of my ongoing employment appeal.

My filings do not simply challenge a termination. They ask a broader procedural question: How should administrative agencies evaluate complex workplace disputes in the digital age?

Modern workplaces generate emails, scheduling systems, accommodation forms, text messages, personnel communications, and other electronically stored information. At the same time, investigations often rely heavily on witness recollections gathered months later.

My position is that chronology matters.

A timeline may include accommodation requests, internal complaints, organizational communications, and contemporaneous records that help explain how a dispute developed over time. When viewed together, those materials may provide context that is difficult to reconstruct from isolated testimony alone.

This perspective has led me to develop Journalism eDiscovery™—a documentation methodology that blends investigative journalism, multimedia storytelling, digital organization, and AI-assisted drafting into a transparent workflow for preserving complex factual records.

The objective is not to decide legal disputes outside the courtroom.

It is to preserve the record so that investigators, tribunals, and the public can evaluate it in its entirety.

Whether a tribunal ultimately agrees with my legal arguments remains for the legal process to decide.

But preserving chronology before memory fades is a principle that extends beyond any single case.

That is why Outpost 422® continues to archive documents, timelines, and multimedia records—not to replace the judicial process, but to ensure that the documentary history remains available for those entrusted with deciding it.

Preserve the Record. Tell the Story. Overcome Impossibility.

Converging Journalism, Law, and Multimedia: The Outpost 422® Press Release Memorandum

OUTPOST 422®

PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM

Subject: Establishment of the Outpost 422® Press Release Memorandum Method for Public Record Preservation

Date: June 29, 2026

From:
Bradley J. Burt
Founder, Outpost 422®
Bob Cobb Freelance Ink LLC

Purpose

This memorandum announces the continued development of the Outpost 422® Press Release Memorandum Method, a convergent-media reporting framework designed to preserve the public record through contemporaneous documentation, multimedia storytelling, and qualitative research.

The method was developed through undergraduate journalism coursework, independent study, feature writing, interpersonal communication, honors research, and subsequent legal studies. It combines traditional reporting practices with structured record preservation to create a repeatable publication workflow.

Background

The methodology originated during journalism studies at the University of Wisconsin–Whitewater and continued through Madison College coursework and professional field reporting. The framework integrates:

  • investigative journalism;
  • feature writing;
  • reflective qualitative observation;
  • multimedia production;
  • legal memorandum organization; and
  • public-record documentation.

Rather than treating blogs, podcasts, and documentaries as separate products, the methodology organizes them around a single foundational work product: the Press Release Memorandum.

The Press Release Memorandum

The Press Release Memorandum serves as the primary archival document within the Outpost 422® publication system.

Each memorandum is intended to:

  • establish a factual chronology;
  • identify relevant public records;
  • summarize observations and supporting documentation;
  • preserve contemporaneous notes;
  • identify issues requiring additional investigation;
  • provide source material for future reporting.

The memorandum is not intended to replace investigative reporting. Instead, it functions as the documentary foundation from which additional reporting may develop.

Publication Workflow

The Outpost 422® methodology follows a structured publication sequence:

  1. Field observations and evidence collection.
  2. Preparation of a contemporaneous Press Release Memorandum.
  3. Organization of supporting exhibits and public records.
  4. Qualitative and variable-based analysis.
  5. Development of derivative publications, including:
    • WordPress articles;
    • podcast episodes;
    • documentary productions;
    • educational workshops;
    • presentations;
    • newsletters; and
    • long-form publications.

This workflow creates a documented chain of development from initial observation through final publication.

Convergent Media Philosophy

The methodology combines principles from journalism, legal writing, and science communication.

Its objective is to organize complex public-interest topics into accessible multimedia formats while preserving the chronology of research and publication.

By maintaining contemporaneous memoranda, Outpost 422® seeks to create an organized archive that supports transparency, accountability, and future scholarship.

Mission

Outpost 422® is committed to documenting matters of public interest through ethical reporting, structured documentation, and multimedia storytelling.

The Press Release Memorandum Method is intended to preserve the historical record while providing a repeatable framework for investigative journalism, documentary production, and public communication.

Respectfully submitted,

Bradley J. Burt
Founder, Outpost 422®
Bob Cobb Freelance Ink LLC

NOTICE PRESERVED: Why Every Filing Becomes Part of the Record

Outpost 422® Documents Another Milestone in the Development of Journalism eDiscovery™

By Bradley J. Burt
Founder, Outpost 422®

There is a common misconception about litigation.

Most people believe the story begins when a hearing is scheduled or a judge issues a ruling.

In reality, the story begins much earlier.

It begins the moment someone decides to preserve the record.

Today, I submitted a supplemental notice designed not to argue the merits of my pending administrative appeal, but to preserve the procedural chronology of my communications with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division.

The purpose was straightforward: document the timeline.

The EEOC acknowledged receipt of my inquiry and advised that case-specific matters should be directed to its Milwaukee Area Office. That response was not a ruling on the merits of my allegations. It was an acknowledgment that my concerns had been received and directed to the appropriate office for case-specific review. My objective in preserving that correspondence is to ensure that the administrative chronology accurately reflects the sequence of events.

The Record Is More Than a Collection of Documents

For years, I approached investigations as a journalist.

As my legal studies progressed, I began to recognize another dimension of reporting: the organization and preservation of documentary evidence.

Every email.

Every memorandum.

Every exhibit.

Every notice.

Every administrative response.

Together, they form something larger than any individual filing.

They create a documentary record that future readers, investigators, tribunals, and historians can evaluate in context.

That realization became the foundation of Journalism eDiscovery™.

Journalism eDiscovery™ Is About Process

Journalism eDiscovery™ is not a substitute for the legal process.

It is a methodology for documenting complex events through chronology, transparency, and organization.

The framework combines:

  • investigative journalism;
  • public records;
  • documentary storytelling;
  • metadata preservation;
  • AI-assisted organization;
  • multimedia publication; and
  • human verification.

The goal is not to tell readers what to believe.

The goal is to preserve enough of the record so they can evaluate it for themselves.

Why Transparency Matters

Throughout this project, I have consistently disclosed that I use artificial intelligence as an organizational and drafting tool.

The facts, legal positions, and decisions remain my responsibility.

Transparency is not a weakness.

It is a strength.

Readers deserve to understand how information is organized just as much as they deserve to understand the information itself.

Looking Ahead

My appeal remains pending.

An Administrative Law Judge has not yet been assigned.

When that occurs, the legal process will proceed according to the applicable procedural rules.

Until then, Outpost 422® will continue doing what it was created to do:

Preserve the record.

Document the chronology.

Build a transparent archive.

Because sometimes the most important filing is not the motion that wins the case.

Sometimes it is the notice that ensures the story is never lost.

Outpost 422®

Journalism eDiscovery™

Preserve the Record. Tell the Story. Overcome Impossibility.