Three Employers, One Recurring Question: Three Madison-are employers charged with discrimination face the Respondent reality

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

EmployerEmployment outcomeEmployer rationale in recordDocumentary issue preserved
Marcus Corp.Burt alleges intended termination; later separation/resignationManagement and conduct disputes; employer denied accommodation and retaliation claimsDVR notice, hours, accommodation emails, threat characterization, and separation chronology
Frank ProductionsTerminated and venue ban, Nov. 8, 2024Alleged threatening statements and workplace-violence concernsIDPQ process, prior complaints, security evidence, witness accounts, unemployment record, and comparators
Camp CreateabilityTerminated June 7, 2025Performance, parent complaints, staff anxiety, client interactions, and confidentialityJune 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.

EmployerCorrelationIndicators in supplied recordLimits / alternative explanation
MarcusModerate; unresolvedAlleged accommodation and opposition chronology; reduced hours; asserted intended termination; separation disputeNo completed employer termination shown in this scan; resignation and management explanations complicate causation; full decision chronology needed
FrankModerate; materially disputedProtected-activity chronology asserted; termination and ban confirmed; detailed post-dispute medical questionnaire; contested completeness of security and witness evidenceEmployer documented an asserted threat/safety rationale; original incident evidence and valid comparators are needed to test pretext
CampModerate-to-strong timing signal; merits unresolvedJune 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 submissionTiming 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

MATTER: Journalism eDiscovery Cover Page for Wisconsin Equal Rights Divsion Case No. CR202601199

EVIDENTIARY SUBMISSION COVER PAGE

MatterBradley J. Burt v. Camp Createability LLC
ERD CaseCR202601199
Related EEOC26G202600896
Prepared byBradley J. Burt, Complainant pro se | Paralegal student
Progress dateJuly 17, 2026

JOURNALISM eDISCOVERY | EVIDENTIARY CONTROL

Purpose and Evidentiary Status

Purpose. This cover page controls the staged organization, authentication, and analysis of documentary evidence. It separates verified record content from party allegations, professional interpretation, and unresolved investigative questions.

Status. The email communication log is complete for initial review. Screenshot comparison, native-message verification, attachment matching, deduplication, and final exhibit numbering remain pending.

Current Work-Product Progress

WorkstreamStatusControl note
Email communication logCompleteInitial reverse-chronology review completed; authentication pending.
Respondent position reviewCompleteUnsupported assertions and missing source records identified.
Screenshot corroborationNextCompare screenshots against each logged email and preserve full context.
Native records / metadataPendingCollect original messages, attachments, headers, and export data.
Witness credibility matrixIn progressTest personal knowledge, inconsistency, bias, and corroboration.
Final legal overlayDeferredApply course material and governing authority after record completion.

Journalism eDiscovery Control Method

Reverse chronology, using stable identifiers and three-record review blocks where practicable.

Black layer: objective record content; White layer: professional evidentiary interpretation; Grey layer: documentary analysis and unresolved inference.

For every exhibit: relevance, source, authentication, completeness, personal knowledge, hearsay purpose, corroboration, contradiction, limitation, and preliminary weight.

AI assists with consistency checking and organization; it does not decide credibility, probable cause, admissibility, or liability.

Core Evidentiary Questions Preserved

What did Debbie Armstrong know before the June 7, 2025 termination, and when did she know it?

What contemporaneous records support the asserted parent, client, staff, performance, training, confidentiality, and termination accounts?

Were project scope, dependencies, deadlines, check-ins, onboarding duties, telephone responsibilities, and accommodation needs clearly communicated?

Can later witness accounts be reconciled with the June 5 emails, termination correspondence, project records, and missing documentation?

Exhibit-Control Notice

This page is organizational work product and is not itself evidence of the truth of disputed allegations. No document should be described as authenticated, complete, or admissible until its foundation is separately established. Duplicate copies will be retained for source verification but will not be counted as independent events.

Return keywords: JED-EVIDENCE-PROTOCOL | CAMP-WITNESS-CREDIBILITY-MATRIX | CAMP-PATTERN-ABSENCES | CAMP-COMMS-PRESERVATION

Executive Decisions, Documentary Questions: Outpost 422 Examines the Interactive Process Before a Wisconsin Tribunal

PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

OUTPOST 422®
Journalism eDiscovery™ Investigative Desk

Outpost 422 Announces Journalism eDiscovery Timeline Examining Accommodation Documentation, Executive Decision-Making, and Workplace Investigation Practices

SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — July 10, 2026 — Outpost 422 announced today the continued development of its Journalism eDiscovery™ research project, an investigative methodology that combines contemporaneous documentation, chronology analysis, and public-interest reporting to examine employment disputes through a documentary framework.

The latest installment assembles emails, accommodation correspondence, Division of Vocational Rehabilitation (DVR) records, and employment communications into a chronological evidentiary timeline intended to assist readers in understanding how workplace decisions developed over time.

According to Outpost 422’s chronology, the documentary record reflects several phases:

  • cooperative employment communications;
  • disability disclosure and DVR participation;
  • Human Resources involvement;
  • use of an Interactive Dialogue Process Questionnaire (IDPQ);
  • executive review of accommodation-related documentation; and
  • the November 2024 termination decision.

The project does not purport to resolve disputed factual issues. Rather, it presents contemporaneous documents alongside the positions of the parties and identifies evidentiary questions that remain subject to review in pending administrative proceedings.

One focus of the research examines the distinction between documented chronology and later witness recollections. Through Journalism eDiscovery™, Outpost 422 compares investigative documentation practices across different employment matters to explore how contemporaneous records, witness statements, accommodation communications, and executive decision-making may influence credibility assessments during administrative hearings.

The publication also notes publicly available information regarding Frank Productions CEO Joel Plant’s legal education and professional background. Public sources indicate Plant earned a Juris Doctor from the University of Wisconsin Law School and has prior legal and public-sector experience. Wisconsin law permits qualifying graduates of UW Law School to seek admission to the Wisconsin bar through diploma privilege upon satisfying the applicable academic and character-and-fitness requirements.

Outpost 422 emphasizes that its reporting concerns the documentary process, not personal attacks. The project asks readers to examine the chronology of events, the documentation relied upon by the parties, and the evidentiary questions that remain for adjudication.

The Journalism eDiscovery™ methodology is being developed as an educational and journalistic framework that explores how AI-assisted organization of documentary evidence may support long-form investigative reporting while preserving distinctions between verified facts, documentary observations, and the legal questions reserved for administrative tribunals and courts.

Journalism eDiscovery Observation

Contemporaneous documentation does not determine liability. It provides a timestamped record from which investigators, administrative law judges, and readers may evaluate credibility, chronology, and competing interpretations of disputed events.

Media Contact
Bradley J. Burt
Founder, Outpost 422®
Bob Cobb Freelance Ink LLC
Journalism eDiscovery™ Research Project

OP-ED | The Silent Argument: How Journalism eDiscovery Turns Documentary Evidence Into the Story Behind an Administrative Appeal

WISCONSIN EQUAL RIGHTS DIVISION OP-EXPOSE—Sun Prairie, Wis.: In legal studies, we are now allowed to blend 25 percent Open AI legally drafted work product.

Journalism eDiscovery uses 5 percent for brevity, and 95 percent objective evidence to develop metadata storytelling. In law, we have what is called, “the silent argument.” The silent argument in this case is three-sourced AI narrated data-driven journalism news footage stamped by a journalist who is studying law.

The Op-Expose converges a journalism Op-ed argument regarding lawyer sophistry with rhetoric and then exposes the flaws in their argument in the form of legal exhibit documentary.

Basically, as an editor, I decide what is and what is not newsworthy by the Respondent, generate a Journalism eDiscovery sophistry report, then argue the validity of the witness based upon newsworthiness that lawyers have zero clue how to do.

As of now, the ###BOBCOBB evidence blending manual is slated to publish in 2027 teaching you as a pro se litigant how to walk the fine line with ethical use of AI as a self-represented party and argue from facts, not legal opinion, that will help your case when you appeal. Then, you can turn the evidence into a documentary like I did with the video linked below.

In this exhibit, the Dept. of Veterans Affairs challenged that I am totally and permanently disabled after I worked for Frank Productions LLC for 13 months.

The rule makes clear that TDIU, which is the jargon we as disabled veterans use regarding the VA benefit, will sever if the employee works for more than 13 months. The VA then determines the employee gainfully employable.

I then took all of my footage and evidence gathered from the event and built Journalism eDiscovery as a documentary exhibit regarding how the company used voice-to-text retaliation with my conversation with Jadon Bower.

What Frank Productions found out last week was that the “off-the-clock” conversation video screenshots excusing Jadon Bower from union organizing as I was working to form and develop a security union to tackle micro aggressive management who neglected people with disabilities and ultimately terminated them.

I openly tell people that Frank Productions LLC terminated me for threatening violence after I tried to organize a union, which was the matter overlooked by the Initial Determination letter by the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division investigator.

As of March, I have appealed the Initial Determination and am now converging my Marcus Theatres appeal with this appeal and claiming the two cases equate to proof that ableism exists through constructive discharge in the form of medical document papering.

Substantive Facts: Frank Productions between 2023 to 2025 terminated over 200 employees and I am one.

We have an issue with egregious at-will termination privilege abuse and failure to engage in good faith dialogue. In Fall 2026, the matter will develop through the Legal Research and Video Production courses to develop the Op-Expose that contains all evidence into a Netflix submission press kit and then goes to Netflix for further publication review.

I am taking the Federal Labor Relations Act (FLRA) to the big screen on Vimeo and declare that all communications regarding my ERD matters comprise my right to discuss unfair labor practices on social media, YouTube and WordPress as concerted activity Op-Ed discussion.

Through documentary memoir called a “STEMoir” for STEM journalism science communication content blending, I am building ERD and EEOC exhibits through experimental law convergent media by blending Facebook metadata with ChatGPT driven KPI personas.

In the marketing field, we call this “crossing the streams” and could potentially cause a shift in how social media is used by attorneys and those who practice law without one.

This documentary and the remaining appeals will eventually end up on Vimeo exposing the Wisconsin Equal Right Division’s treatment of Pro Se litigants built upon recordings, letters from the Division and all matters legally publishable through the screening of Open AI.

###

The Next Chapter: Building Journalism eDiscovery One Exhibit at a Time

By Bob Cobb
Wisconsin State Capitol Wolf Watch Reporting Source

For the past several months, readers have watched Outpost 422 investigate a single question: How should evidence be preserved when journalism, disability rights, and administrative law intersect?

The next phase of this project moves beyond individual blog posts.

It moves into methodology.

Every article published going forward will become part of what I call Journalism eDiscovery™—a structured approach to preserving, organizing, and presenting documentary evidence through convergent media. Rather than treating a news story as the final product, each publication will become one component of a larger evidentiary record that includes emails, public records, administrative filings, photographs, audio recordings, timelines, contemporaneous notes, and other source materials.

This approach reflects a simple editorial principle:

Publication preserves the public narrative. Evidence preserves the historical record.

Over the coming months, readers can expect a different style of investigative reporting.

Each story will begin with a documented event.

Each event will be organized into an evidence locker.

Each exhibit will receive contextual analysis before publication.

Each publication will then connect readers to the underlying documentary record through timelines, multimedia, and archived source materials whenever appropriate.

The goal is not simply to tell readers what happened.

The goal is to demonstrate how conclusions are reached by documenting the investigative process itself.

That process draws from journalism, documentary filmmaking, legal research, multimedia storytelling, and modern evidence management. Together, they create an evolving newsroom model designed for an era in which digital records, artificial intelligence, and public transparency increasingly intersect.

Bob Cobb serves as the project’s editorial “sheepdog.”

His role is not to decide outcomes or render judgments.

His role is to gather the flock of evidence, preserve its integrity, identify unanswered questions, and ensure that each published story remains connected to its documentary foundation.

Readers will begin seeing recurring features that include:

  • Evidence Preservation Bulletins
  • Chronology Maps
  • Source Reliability Reviews
  • Journalism eDiscovery Case Files
  • Multimedia Documentary Exhibits
  • Interactive timelines and QR-linked archives

Some stories will examine government transparency.

Others will explore disability accommodation, veterans’ issues, media ethics, public institutions, or workplace documentation.

Regardless of subject matter, every investigation will follow the same guiding principle:

Collect first. Preserve second. Analyze third. Publish last.

That sequence is the foundation of Journalism eDiscovery.

Outpost 422 is no longer simply documenting events.

It is building an evolving archive of investigative work designed to preserve the evidentiary history behind every story it publishes.

The next chapter begins not with a conclusion, but with a commitment—to careful documentation, transparent reporting, and a permanent public record that allows readers to follow the evidence for themselves.

Journalism eDiscovery Examines Whether Administrative Fairness Requires a Fully Developed Record Before Witness Credibility Is Decided

MADISON, Wis. — U.S. Army veteran and investigative journalist Bradley J. Burt has filed a work product objection in ERD Case No. CR202500211, arguing that the administrative record should be fully developed before witness credibility becomes the deciding factor in his appeal involving Frank Productions, LLC.

The objection does not ask the Equal Rights Division to rule in Burt’s favor. Instead, it asks the Division to complete the evidentiary record first.

According to Burt, the appeal has evolved beyond competing narratives. Over the past two years, he has assembled a chronology consisting of emails, text messages, accommodation correspondence, Department of Veterans Affairs records, Department of Vocational Rehabilitation communications, unemployment records, investigative materials, and contemporaneous journals documenting events before and after his November 2024 termination.

“The question is no longer whether documents exist,” Burt said. “The question is whether the complete documentary record will be examined before credibility determinations are made.”

Building the Record Before Judging the Record

Rather than attacking individual witnesses, Burt’s objection asks a procedural question:

Should disputed witness statements be evaluated only after the complete documentary chronology has been assembled?

His filing argues that administrative fairness requires decision-makers to examine documentary evidence alongside witness testimony instead of treating isolated statements as the entire factual record.

The objection also seeks to preserve Burt’s opportunity to present additional documentary evidence that he contends bears on chronology, accommodation communications, witness consistency, and the respondent’s stated reasons for termination.

Journalism eDiscovery in Practice

The filing represents another step in Burt’s continuing development of Journalism eDiscovery™, a research methodology that blends investigative journalism, chronological documentary analysis, legal evidence organization, and AI-assisted document management.

Unlike traditional investigative reporting, Journalism eDiscovery organizes evidence before drawing conclusions.

The methodology asks a series of questions:

  • What documents exist?
  • When were they created?
  • Who authored them?
  • Do independent records corroborate or contradict witness accounts?
  • How does the chronology change when viewed as a complete record rather than isolated events?

The objective is not to allow artificial intelligence to decide disputes. Instead, AI assists in organizing large volumes of documentary material while editorial responsibility remains with the human researcher.

A Question of Process

Burt emphasizes that his objection concerns procedure rather than outcome.

He maintains that every party deserves an opportunity to present documentary evidence before credibility findings become dispositive. Whether that evidence ultimately supports or undermines his claims remains a matter for the Equal Rights Division to determine after reviewing the complete record.

For Outpost 422, however, the larger story extends beyond a single employment dispute.

It asks whether administrative proceedings can benefit from methods that combine investigative journalism, chronological evidence organization, and responsible AI-assisted analysis to improve transparency and public confidence in fact-finding.

As the appeal progresses, Outpost 422 will continue documenting the chronology of the case, the development of Journalism eDiscovery, and the broader implications for veterans, self-represented litigants, journalists, and administrative agencies navigating increasingly complex digital records.

Editor’s Note: The matters discussed in this article remain pending before the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division. The positions described are those of the complainant as presented in publicly filed materials and related documentation. No final determination on the merits has been issued in the appeal. My Op-Ed argues that the statements relied upon to justify my termination should be subjected to credibility analysis under Wis. Stat. § 906.16 because documentary evidence may demonstrate bias, prejudice, interest, or motive affecting the reliability of those accusations.

Letter to the US Vice President: Disabled Veteran Challenges Frank Productions Termination, Launches AI-Powered Journalism eDiscovery Project

Outpost 422 Investigates Workplace Documentation, Disability Accommodations, and the Future of Evidence-Based Journalism

MADISON, Wis. — Nearly two years after his termination from Frank Productions following a November 5, 2024 assignment at the Orpheum Theatre during U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin’s election-night event, U.S. Army veteran Bradley J. Burt says his focus has evolved from a single employment dispute into a broader examination of workplace documentation, disability accommodations, and the role artificial intelligence may play in future administrative proceedings.

Rather than treating the matter solely as litigation, Burt has spent the past two years assembling what he describes as a “Journalism eDiscovery” archive—a chronological collection of emails, text messages, agency correspondence, hearing records, unemployment decisions, veterans’ documentation, and contemporaneous notes intended to preserve an objective documentary record.

“I realized this wasn’t just about one termination,” Burt said. “It became a question of how evidence is preserved, evaluated, and presented when disability accommodations, veterans’ rights, and workplace investigations intersect.”

Letter to the Vice President

Vice President Vance,

I am writing as a disabled U.S. Army veteran, journalism graduate, and legal studies student seeking your attention to an issue I believe extends beyond my individual employment case.

On November 5, 2024, while assigned to work security at the Orpheum Theater in Madison during U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin’s election-night event, I contend I was terminated shortly afterward following months of advocating for disability accommodations, workplace safety, and veteran-related concerns. I believe the documentary record raises important questions regarding the treatment of disabled veterans in the workplace, the interactive accommodation process, and whether stereotypes surrounding PTSD can influence employment decisions.

Prior to my termination, I documented concerns through emails, text messages, and internal communications. I raised workplace safety issues, advocated for veteran suicide awareness initiatives, requested accommodations through the interactive process, and attempted to comply with my employer’s requests while also following guidance from my Department of Veterans Affairs medical providers. My VA physician advised that portions of the employer’s medical questionnaire exceeded the scope of what my primary care provider could appropriately certify.

After my discharge, I received a ban letter and allegations that I have consistently disputed. Subsequent administrative proceedings have produced a substantial documentary record, including unemployment findings that concluded my discharge was not for misconduct or substantial fault and noted that the employer failed to provide evidence sufficient to establish misconduct during that proceeding.

Rather than simply pursuing litigation, I transformed my experience into a research initiative called Journalism eDiscovery. The project explores how artificial intelligence, investigative journalism, documentary evidence, and legal analysis can work together to preserve factual records, organize evidence chronologically, and improve transparency in administrative proceedings.

My concern is that disabled veterans should never have to choose between requesting reasonable accommodations and protecting their careers. Equally important, allegations involving PTSD or military service should be evaluated through objective evidence rather than assumptions or stigma. Veterans deserve fair investigations, due process, and employment decisions grounded in documented facts.

I respectfully invite you and your staff to review my work at www.outpost422.com. My purpose is not to request intervention in my pending matters, but to demonstrate how emerging AI-assisted documentation and investigative journalism may help strengthen transparency, accountability, and confidence in workplace investigations and administrative justice for veterans and all Americans.

Thank you for your consideration and for your continued support of those who have served our nation.

Respectfully,

Bradley J. Burt
U.S. Army Veteran
Founder, Outpost 422
Journalism eDiscovery Research Initiative
www.outpost422.com

A Timeline Built on Documents

According to Burt, the documentary record begins months before his separation from Frank Productions.

The timeline includes requests for disability accommodations, communications regarding an Interactive Process Questionnaire, workplace safety discussions, text messages with coworkers, unemployment proceedings, Equal Rights Division filings, and ongoing appeals.

Among the documents Burt highlights are:

  • Communications regarding disability accommodation requests.
  • Correspondence with Department of Veterans Affairs medical providers concerning employer medical documentation.
  • Text messages documenting relationships with coworkers before the termination.
  • Workplace safety concerns raised during employment.
  • Wisconsin Unemployment Insurance findings concluding the discharge was not for misconduct or substantial fault, while noting the employer did not provide evidence during that proceeding sufficient to establish misconduct.
  • Administrative filings now forming part of a growing documentary archive.

Burt argues these records should be viewed chronologically rather than as isolated events.

From Employment Case to Research Project

Instead of allowing the documents to remain scattered across multiple proceedings, Burt developed Journalism eDiscovery, an emerging framework combining investigative journalism, legal analysis, documentary evidence, and artificial intelligence.

The project seeks to answer a broader question:

Can AI help organize evidence without replacing human judgment?

The concept focuses on preserving contemporaneous records, authenticating timelines, identifying factual inconsistencies, and improving transparency before administrative hearings or court proceedings.

Rather than asking artificial intelligence to determine who is right, the framework emphasizes helping readers understand what was documented, when it was documented, and how those records evolved over time.

A Veteran’s Perspective

Burt, a former member of the U.S. Army’s 10th Mountain Division, says his military experience continues to shape his approach to documentation and accountability.

He contends that disabled veterans often face unique challenges when navigating accommodation requests while attempting to remain productive employees.

One area of continuing interest involves the relationship between workplace investigations, disability accommodation procedures, and public perceptions surrounding post-traumatic stress.

Burt maintains that employment decisions affecting veterans should be evaluated through documented evidence rather than assumptions or stereotypes.

Those issues remain the subject of pending administrative proceedings.

Looking Ahead

Outpost 422 will continue publishing documents, timelines, and investigative analyses as additional records become available.

Future installments will examine:

  • the chronology leading to the November 2024 termination;
  • disability accommodation documentation and interactive process communications;
  • unemployment findings and subsequent administrative proceedings;
  • witness chronology and credibility analysis;
  • and the continuing development of the Journalism eDiscovery framework.

The project also seeks to explore how AI-assisted document organization may improve transparency for journalists, self-represented litigants, veterans, researchers, and public agencies.

Whether the documentary record ultimately supports or contradicts Burt’s claims will remain a matter for the appropriate tribunals. Outpost 422’s objective is to preserve the chronology, present the available evidence in context, and encourage readers to evaluate the record for themselves.

About Outpost 422

Outpost 422 is an independent multimedia journalism initiative founded by U.S. Army veteran Bradley J. Burt. Through investigative reporting, documentary storytelling, and the Journalism eDiscovery framework, the publication examines veterans’ issues, administrative law, workplace accountability, public records, and the responsible use of artificial intelligence in investigative journalism.

Bradley J. Burt v. Frank Productions LLC: Outpost 422 Releases Journalism eDiscovery Timeline Challenging Basis of Former Employee’s Termination

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Outpost 422 Releases Journalism eDiscovery Timeline Challenging Basis of Former Employee’s Termination

SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — Outpost 422 has completed the next phase of its Journalism eDiscovery project, releasing a chronological reconstruction of events surrounding the November 8, 2024 termination of founder Bradley J. Burt from Frank Productions LLC.

The memorandum summarizes communications, contemporaneous text messages, recordings, workplace documentation, Human Resources communications, and administrative filings that Burt contends demonstrate the employer had notice of an ongoing workplace conflict before making the decision to terminate his employment.

Rather than examining the matter through isolated witness statements, the Journalism eDiscovery timeline seeks to reconstruct what each participant allegedly knew, when they knew it, and how that information was communicated throughout the investigation.

“Journalism eDiscovery is not about proving conclusions first. It is about reconstructing the timeline from contemporaneous evidence so readers can evaluate credibility for themselves.”

Timeline of Events

September 2024

Workplace Concerns Begin

According to the timeline, workplace concerns developed during September 2024 following multiple interactions involving security operations, management oversight, and employee conduct.

Burt states that these concerns were documented as they occurred rather than recreated after termination.

The timeline identifies this period as the beginning of what he describes as an increasingly adversarial relationship between himself and management.

September–October 2024

Human Resources Notice

The timeline states that concerns were communicated to management and Human Resources, including discussions regarding workplace conduct and accommodation issues.

According to Burt, this placed Frank Productions on notice that multiple employment-related issues existed before the events that ultimately resulted in his termination.

The memorandum argues this notice is significant because it demonstrates management was aware that competing accounts and workplace disputes already existed.

October 2024

Investigation Continues

The chronology describes additional documentation, including:

  • accommodation discussions;
  • management meetings;
  • employee communications;
  • contemporaneous notes;
  • text messages;
  • recordings.

According to the memorandum, these materials were preserved as part of what later became the Journalism eDiscovery archive.

November 5, 2024

Election Night at the Orpheum Theatre

The memorandum identifies Election Night as the central incident leading to the later investigation.

Burt contends that multiple employees occupied different positions throughout the evening and therefore possessed different opportunities to observe the events.

The timeline argues that those differing vantage points should be considered when evaluating subsequent witness statements.

November 6–7, 2024

Internal Investigation

According to the memorandum, management interviewed employees following the event.

Burt argues that management already possessed knowledge of ongoing workplace disputes before these interviews occurred.

The timeline therefore questions whether witness statements should be viewed independently of the broader workplace context.

November 8, 2024

Termination

Burt was terminated on November 8, 2024.

The memorandum states that immediately following the termination, additional evidence continued to accumulate through text messages, recordings, and communications with former coworkers.

December 2024

Former Coworker Communications

Outpost 422’s Journalism eDiscovery archive includes text message exchanges between Burt and a former coworker discussing the aftermath of the termination.

According to Burt’s interpretation of those communications, the messages indicate:

  • the former coworker believed management was aware of workplace conflicts before the investigation concluded;
  • discussions occurred regarding alleged favoritism within management;
  • workplace relationships and internal conflicts were believed by the participants to be relevant to the investigation;
  • the coworker described his own termination as connected to events occurring after he spoke with management.

These communications form part of the evidentiary record that Burt contends should be evaluated alongside formal witness statements.

Administrative Proceedings

Since his termination, Burt has filed administrative complaints challenging the decision.

Those proceedings remain pending.

Through those filings, Burt argues that the evidence should be examined chronologically rather than relying exclusively upon post-incident witness statements.

Journalism eDiscovery Analysis

The Journalism eDiscovery methodology applies investigative journalism principles to documentary evidence by organizing:

  • contemporaneous text messages;
  • recordings;
  • HR communications;
  • management emails;
  • administrative filings;
  • witness timelines;
  • documentary exhibits.

Rather than asking readers to accept a predetermined conclusion, the project encourages examination of the documentary record in chronological order.

About Outpost 422

Outpost 422 is an independent multimedia journalism project founded by Bradley J. Burt. The Journalism eDiscovery initiative combines investigative reporting, legal chronology, and documentary evidence to examine workplace disputes, public accountability, veterans’ issues, and administrative law.

Editor’s Note

The matters discussed in this release are the subject of ongoing administrative proceedings. The chronology reflects Bradley J. Burt’s account and analysis of the available documentary evidence. Frank Productions LLC has denied liability in the pending proceedings, and no final adjudication has been reached. This release is intended as a summary of the documentary timeline assembled through the Journalism eDiscovery project, not as a determination of legal liability.

When the Record Speaks: Building a Journalism eDiscovery Archive from a Wisconsin Employment Discrimination Case

No Way Pro Se:

What Happens When a Documentary Record Meets an Administrative Investigation?

By Bradley J. Burt
Outpost 422® | Journalism eDiscovery™

Administrative agencies occupy a unique position in the American justice system. They are often the first forum where employees, employers, and government investigators examine allegations of discrimination, retaliation, and workplace misconduct. Their role is not to advocate for either side, but to evaluate the available evidence and determine whether sufficient grounds exist to move a case forward.

That process raises an important question for investigative journalists and self-represented litigants alike: How can a complex documentary record be organized so that decision-makers—and eventually the public—can understand it?

That question is the foundation of Journalism eDiscovery™.

Rather than viewing an administrative complaint as a collection of isolated exhibits, Journalism eDiscovery organizes every email, memorandum, screenshot, timeline, policy, and witness communication into a searchable investigative record. Each document becomes part of a larger chronology that allows readers to follow events from beginning to end while independently reviewing the supporting evidence.

In my own proceedings before the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division, the investigative record now spans years of correspondence, disability accommodation discussions, Division of Vocational Rehabilitation reports, workplace journals, and administrative filings. Those materials include communications with management, accommodation requests, responses from human resources, and the agency’s Initial Determinations. Together, they form a documentary archive that extends far beyond a single complaint.

The purpose of this project is not to relitigate those cases through a blog. Courts and administrative tribunals exist for that purpose. Instead, the goal is to examine how documentary evidence is created, organized, and communicated during an administrative investigation.

As a journalism graduate, my interest extends beyond any individual outcome. I am interested in the process itself:

  • How does chronology influence understanding?
  • Which documents become central to an investigation?
  • How do contemporaneous records compare with later summaries?
  • What information is discussed directly in administrative decisions, and what remains part of the broader documentary record?

Those questions are not unique to one case. They arise wherever public agencies evaluate extensive documentary evidence.

That realization led to the development of Journalism eDiscovery™, a methodology combining investigative journalism, chronological analysis, multimedia publishing, and structured evidence indexing. Every exhibit receives an identifier, a timeline entry, a factual summary, and links to related documents. The result is a transparent archive designed to help readers understand both the evidence and the sequence in which events unfolded.

This project is also an experiment in convergent media. The same evidence may appear in a legal chronology, a news article, a podcast, a documentary, or a field manual, but each format points back to the same underlying source material. Rather than creating separate narratives, the project maintains a single documentary foundation that supports multiple forms of public communication.

For self-represented litigants, that approach offers another benefit. Administrative proceedings often generate hundreds of pages of correspondence and exhibits. Organizing those materials into a structured, searchable chronology may improve transparency, reduce duplication, and help both the public and decision-makers understand how the record developed over time.

Whether readers ultimately agree or disagree with any particular legal position, the broader mission remains the same:

Preserve the record.
Analyze the chronology.
Document the evidence.
Inform the public.

That is the mission of Journalism eDiscovery™—a continuing exploration of how investigative journalism and documentary organization can work together to create a transparent public record.

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.