The $6,130.10 Deposit — A Silent Strike to Derail the Case - July 1st, 2025


July 1, 2025.

The 48-hour deadline I set for respondents to agree to an AI-qualified arbitrator was in full motion.

And then — out of nowhere — a deposit hit my account:

$6,130.10

From DRVM LLC

Into a bank account I hadn’t used in over six months.

No email. No paystub. No conversation. No court order. No settlement.

Just silence.


A Tactical Ambush Disguised as “Backpay”

At first glance, it might seem like they were just “making things right.”

But when you’ve spent months watching how power protects itself, you see it clearly for what it is:

A legal trap.

Their hope?

That I would ignore it.

Or quietly accept it.

Or that the system would now declare the original wage dispute resolved — and dismiss the entire $15 billion fraud case based on a technicality.

They didn’t pay it through counsel.

They didn’t issue any supporting documentation.

They just sent the exact amount of the disputed back wages — as if this case was still just about one check. Like the fraud was never discovered...



This Wasn’t a Settlement — It Was a Sabotage

If they truly wanted to resolve the case, they had every opportunity.

I submitted a formal settlement offer early on. I gave them months of good-faith chances to respond. They ignored all of it. Even low-balled me like I was trash.

So why now?

Because this was strategic.

This was about timing.

It came the same day I was preparing to submit a federal petition to assign an AI and emerging tech arbitrator.

They knew the moment the petition hit the docket, this case would become public record.

That everything they’ve tried to bury would be exposed.

So they threw a last-minute wrench in the process — hoping I’d take the money, lose standing, or trigger a procedural dismissal.

They don’t need truth to win. They just need one slip. One technical flaw. One overlooked condition.


My Response: Exhibit 110

I didn’t stay quiet. I didn’t get scared.

I entered the deposit into the legal record as Exhibit 110.

If they thought they could end a $15 billion fraud case with a silent deposit, they underestimated how much I’ve learned from this system.

This isn’t just about money.

This is about fraud.

Obstruction. Intent. Cover-up.

And now this deposit, instead of erasing the case, has only added to the evidence trail.



The Case Moves Forward

Just one day after the deposit, Fisher Phillips finally agreed to the AI-qualified arbitrator list.

But it’s clear:

They’re still trying to minimize, to reframe this as a simple dispute — even as they make moves behind closed doors that prove how serious it truly is.

Let this be a reminder:

They don’t care how much they have to spend —

As long as they can keep you from seeing what they’ve done.

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