Monday, April 20, 2026

da sample in a jar

April 20, 2026


Chief of Police Gregory Bardwell

Shelburne Police Department

623 Mohawk Trail

Shelburne, MA 01370


CC: First Assistant District Attorney Steven Gagne

Northwestern District Attorney's Office


RE: Your April 9, 2026 Response Regarding the Instagram Post

"Part of a Musical Performance" — A Six-Year Record of a Family That

Says What It Will Do and Then Does It, and a Department That Looks Away



Chief,


Thank you for your April 9 response. You wrote that the content in question

"appears to be part of a musical performance" and that it "does not clearly

establish that the statements are directed toward you specifically."


I want to engage with that reasoning directly, because you have now put your

analytical framework in writing and copied the District Attorney's office.

That framework deserves a response — and it deserves to be read against a

six-year documented record of this family stating intentions and delivering

on them, and a department that has consistently ensured the objective evidence

of each delivery reached its expiration date before it could be processed.


An analytical summary of the six-phase pattern of institutional inaction is

attached as Exhibit A. The letter below provides the full argument. Exhibit A

is provided as a briefing reference.



WHAT THIS FAMILY SAYS AND WHAT THEY DO


In June 2020, during the confrontation that initiated six years of documented

escalation, Alouette Batteau posted publicly that it was "a challenge not to

deck him." Her mother engaged with and endorsed that post. The violence was

ideated publicly in June 2020. It was executed on November 30, 2025. Five

years and five months elapsed between statement and delivery.


In that same June 2020 comment thread — reviewed by your department without

action — another participant wrote: "I would throw his camera in the water."

Katherine Hennessey walked that specific act seventy-five feet to the Deerfield

River on November 30, 2025, with the phone still lit and recording, and threw

it in. The mob imagined it in 2020. She delivered it in 2025. Five years and

five months. Same delivery.


On June 28, 2020, when I identified a physical approach as threatening, Alouette

Batteau told me directly and on audio: "You'll know when I'm threatening you."

She told me explicitly that a threat from this family would be recognizable

when it arrived.


On September 6, 2024, Katherine Hennessey wrote to my landlord: "it's really

only a matter of time before someone gets hurt." That letter is in your

department's possession. Detective Jenkins received it. He read it twelve days

late and took no action. Fourteen months after that sentence was written, she

hurt me. On a public sidewalk. In front of witnesses. Thirty-plus blows. Phone

in the river.


On March 23, 2026, with her parents on bail for that assault, Alouette Batteau

posted a lyric expressing the wish to kill a man with bare hands, captioned it

"this one goes out to my stalker! teehee wish i was joking," and a named

collaborator commented "hope they d!e!!!!!" The comment received three likes

and was not removed.


I recognize it. She said I would.


This family does not speak carelessly. They have a documented record of stating

what they intend to do and then doing it. That record is the context your

April 9 letter did not engage with. When the March 23 post identifies the

target as "my stalker" — the exclusive label applied to me in every sworn

proceeding for six years — I am not reading it in isolation. I am reading it

against a pattern in which statements like this have previously been followed

by the described conduct. That pattern is the reason the post requires

contextual analysis rather than genre classification.



ON THE QUESTION OF WHETHER A SONG CAN BE A THREAT


You are correct that the post is framed as musical content. The question is

whether that framing insulates it from scrutiny. It does not.


Massachusetts courts do not apply a genre exemption to threatening

communications. The test under M.G.L. c.275 §2, and under the federal standard

established in Counterman v. Colorado (2023), is whether a reasonable person

in the recipient's position would interpret the communication as threatening,

taking into account all available context. Musical packaging is one data point.

It is not a determinative one.


A reasonable person in the recipient's position here is not a person reading

an anonymous post in a vacuum. It is a person who has watched this family

state an intention to throw his camera in the water in 2020 and watched them

throw his phone in the river in 2025. It is a person who has been told he

would know when the threat arrived and who has watched every prior statement

of this type materialize into conduct. For that person, reading "I never wished

so much to kill a man with my bare hands" during active criminal proceedings is

not an academic exercise in genre theory. It is pattern recognition backed by

a five-year documented record.



ON THE QUESTION OF WHETHER IT IS "CLEARLY DIRECTED" AT A SPECIFIC PERSON


You wrote that the post "does not clearly establish that the statements are

directed toward you specifically."


The word "stalker" is not generic in this situation. It is the specific and

exclusive label applied to me in every sworn affidavit, HPO petition, police

report, and live court testimony filed by this family across six years of

proceedings. It appeared in the most recent sworn affidavit in this case. It

was used in open court at the December 15, 2025 hearing.


To illustrate why context answers the clarity question: if a man had called his

neighbor "the gardener" in every argument, every letter to their landlord, every

court filing, and every conversation for six years, and then posted a lyric

about wanting to kill "the gardener" during active criminal proceedings — after

previously predicting in writing that someone would get hurt, and after having

a documented history of delivering on exactly those predictions — a reasonable

officer would not conclude that the target was unclear. The target is the person

called "the gardener" in every documented proceeding for six years. The word

"stalker" in this record is not a common noun. It is a proper noun.


Clarity, for this family, is something they have already directly addressed.

In June 2020, Alouette Batteau told me I would know when the threat arrived.

I know.



ON THE QUESTION OF TIMING AND YOUR OCTOBER 16 DISMISSAL


Your letter does not address timing. The post was published eleven days after

a court hearing involving the poster's family members as parties. It was

published fifteen days before the criminal arraignment at which those same

family members were the defendants. The recipient of the post is the

complaining witness in that proceeding.


This pattern of timing-blind dismissal is not new. On October 16, 2025, I stood

in front of you at the Neighbors gas station in active atrial fibrillation with

a heart rate near 180 bpm. I told you the ongoing inaction against this family

was producing documented cardiac harm. I asked you to feel my pulse. You replied:

"I don't want to." You stated on video that you cannot charge false police

reports — a statement that is factually incorrect under M.G.L. c.269 §13A.

You directed me to the Attorney General and walked away for coffee.


At that moment, the Walker letters were already in your department's possession.

The September 6, 2024 letter stating "it is really only a matter of time before

someone gets hurt" had been received by Detective Jenkins six weeks earlier.

He had read it twelve days late. He had taken no action. I was telling you,

on October 16, 2025, that the prediction in that letter was becoming

physiologically real. You did not want to feel the evidence.


Six weeks later: the assault. Your department had my November 29 warning email

in every inbox and Sergeant Gilmore's bodycam from the morning trespass.

Between 9 AM and 5:32 PM on November 30, you took no action. The prediction

in the Walker letter was fulfilled on a public sidewalk, in front of witnesses,

by the same person who wrote it.


The March 23 post is the next entry in this sequence.


That sequence — my documented warning on October 16, your dismissal, and the

November 30 attack — is the direct consequence of the same pattern of inaction

your April 9 response continues.



ON INVESTIGATIVE MANAGEMENT: THE NOVEMBER 30 RECORD


Your April 9 letter relies on the idea that context is "unclear." The context

is unclear only because your department managed the investigation to ensure the

most objective data points were lost.


The Omission of the Initial Aggressor: On the evening of November 30, I pointed

through the brewery window at the individual who had initiated the physical

confrontation at the door — Tom Del Negro, a known musical collaborator of the

Hennessey-Batteau family. Sergeant Gilmore's summons report (25SHL-47-AR)

notes that I "pointed at a male" but never identifies him, never interviews him,

and never includes him in the narrative. By omitting the known family

collaborator who initiated the physical sequence, the report decapitated the

timeline of the assault. The violence was framed as a reaction to my presence

rather than a continuation of a coordinated response by the family and its

associates.


The Strategic Abandonment of Evidence: Sergeant Gilmore knew within hours that

the morning trespass at Neighbors Gas Station was the documented context for

the evening assault. He knew that Hennessey's December 1 affidavit — claiming

she had "pulled into the parking lot to get a newspaper but chose to drive away

upon seeing him" — hinged entirely on whether the morning footage confirmed her

account. He never pulled the gas station cameras. He never checked Crystal

Visions, the ground-floor business whose camera has a direct line of sight to

the phone-toss location. He never checked the law office camera directly across

the street. He waited nine days to attempt to pull the brewery footage, by which

point the system had overwritten the data. Each tape was allowed to reach its

own expiration date without intervention.


I sent Gilmore the Hennessey affidavit within eighteen hours of the assault. He

knew within a day that her gas station account was provably false by the

geography of the property alone — the newspaper rack was around the corner, not

visible from where she would have parked to access it. He had the morning

bodycam. He had the timeline. He had her sworn statement. He chose to let the

footage that would have proven her perjury disappear.


The "Dual HPO" Coaching: Sergeant Gilmore's report explicitly states he

"suggested" the defendants seek Harassment Prevention Orders against me.

By coaching an aggressor to file a civil restraining order immediately after

committing a criminal battery, the department provided the legal instrument

used in court to frame a violent assault as a mutual harassment dispute. Three

courts then denied me protection — each starting fresh, none referencing the

prior not-credible findings against the same respondent — while the criminal

assault charges that should have invalidated the framing were processed

separately. The dual HPO strategy, coached by your officer the night of the

assault, is the architecture that allowed the "terrified victim" narrative to

survive long enough to matter.


This is not a series of oversights. It is an investigative profile: identify

the initial aggressor and omit him, allow the objective footage to expire, and

coach the aggressor on how to neutralize the criminal complaint with a civil

counter-filing. The March 23 Instagram post arrived after this profile had

already produced its results. Your "musical performance" classification is the

same profile applied to the next statement.



WHAT THIS HAS COST A HUMAN BODY


I want to place on the record what six years of this pattern has produced in

physical terms, because it is documented, measurable, and unlike sworn

affidavits, cannot be cross-examined.


When the June 6, 2020 video went viral — edited to remove the two minutes of

physical confrontation that preceded my visible agitation, distributed to

twenty thousand viewers, amplified by two front-page articles that never

contacted me — I lost thirty pounds in ten days. Not by choice. Through the

acute physiological crash of watching a fabricated identity attach to my name

while institutions processed complaints from my accusers without ever speaking

to me. My body recorded what happened before I had the legal language for it.

The weight has tracked with the escalations since — dropping when new incidents

occur, slowly returning between them.


The atrial fibrillation was formally diagnosed in 2021 and attributed by my

physician to documented harassment stress. The American Heart Association notes

that untreated atrial fibrillation reduces life expectancy by five to ten years.

Repeated episodes are self-reinforcing: the more episodes occur, the more the

heart learns that irregular pattern as its default. Each episode lowers the

threshold for the next.


I have documented episodes tied to specific actions at specific times: the

September 2024 Mill incident, the August 2025 ribbon-cutting confrontation, the

October 2025 gas station meeting — the one you walked away from for coffee —

the November 2025 assault, the March 2026 HPO hearing. Each dated. Each

traceable. The October 19, 2025 episode was documented at the Massachusetts

State Police barracks by Officer Sheerer on a Stryker LIFEPAK 15 monitor at

130–230 bpm. That equipment has no opinion about this case, no motive, and no

capacity for exaggeration.


Every escalation in this six-year record has been preceded by a statement of

intent and followed by a physiological consequence. The Walker letter predicted

the assault; the assault produced a cardiac emergency. The June 2020 mob

imagined throwing my camera in the water; Hennessey threw my phone in the

river; the episode that followed lasted weeks. The pattern is not coincidence.

It is causation with a documented paper trail.


When I saw the March 23 post, a new episode began. As of the date of this

letter, it has not resolved. This is consistent with what medical literature

describes as the heart having learned the irregular pattern as a persistent

default. With a six-year documented cardiac history tied directly to this

family's conduct and your department's pattern of inaction, I am telling you

that the body is running out of room to absorb entries in this sequence.


This is what the permission structure costs. Not in legal theory. In bpm.


The body kept the score your department refused to keep. I am asking you to

look at the score before another statement becomes another delivery.



ON THE JUDICIAL RECORD AND THE CONTRADICTION THE STAY-AWAY ORDER CREATES


Between March 17 and March 20, 2025, I appeared before two Franklin County

judges seeking harassment prevention orders. I presented five years of

documented incidents. Both courts denied protection — characterizing the

conduct as petitioning activity or as harm in the vernacular sense but not

the statutory sense. Neither court referenced Judge Mazanec's prior findings

of not-credible against the same respondent.


Seven months later, exactly what I warned those courts would happen, happened:

the assault, the phone in the river, the cardiac emergency, the probable cause

finding. The Walker letter's prediction was fulfilled.


On March 12, 2026, I appeared before Judge Powers. He denied the petition.

During the hearing, Hennessey performed obscene gestures at me from behind

her attorney's back while I was under oath. I reported it in real time. Judge

Powers told me that calling it out was not helping my case. The six-day AFib

episode that followed was the most sustained of the series.


On April 7, 2026, the Commonwealth requested and the court imposed a stay-away

and no-contact order as a condition of bail. That order is the judicial system

acknowledging, in binding legal terms, that I require protection from these

defendants — the same protection three courts had previously denied against the

same defendants with substantially the same factual record.


The stay-away order does not undo the assault, the phone in the river, the

cardiac emergency, or the Instagram post that triggered the episode still

running as I write this. But it establishes retroactively that the three prior

denials were inconsistent with what the system would ultimately conclude. One

court said protection was warranted. Three courts before it said it was not.

The facts before all four were substantially the same.


The pattern your April 9 letter continues — classify below threshold, refer

elsewhere, decline to analyze the documented context — is the same pattern

that produced three HPO denials followed by a criminal assault followed by a

stay-away order. Your "musical performance" classification is the April 2026

entry in that sequence. I am asking whether the next entry needs to occur

before the threshold classification is reconsidered.



ON CONSISTENCY OF ANALYSIS


The analytical framework applied in your April 9 letter necessarily carries

broader implications. If a statement expressing violent intent, framed as a

musical performance and using language historically applied to a specific

individual, is classified as "not clearly directed" without reference to

context, then that same framework would apply to any similarly constructed

communication regardless of speaker.


To test this, here is a short musical performance written to the exact same

standard. This is offered purely as an illustrative example of the analytical

point about context, framing, and direction — not as an actual threat or

expression of intent.


     blue thug leader on the take, badge heavy, soul light

     hiding in the station while the record screams at night

     you walk away from a pulse at one-eighty, coffee in your hand

     say you can't charge false reports, then hide behind the man

     i never wished so much to choke a blue thug leader with these hands

     limp in your fist while the body keeps the score across the land


     Tee-hee.

     Just a song.


Applied consistently, your framework would render this non-actionable as well.

If it does not, then the distinction is not being drawn from the structure of

the communication but from the context surrounding it. That is precisely the

point. Context cannot be excluded. In this case, the six-year documented record

of stated intent followed by physical delivery resolves what isolation obscures.


Note the further asymmetry: unlike Alouette Batteau's post, there is no

documented history of me waging false allegations, committing aggression, or

destroying the lives of police officers. The opposite is true. The

Hennessey/Batteau family has spent six years fabricating claims against me,

with your department's consistent assistance — including taking me to a

show-cause hearing, in violation of collateral estoppel, on charges that

collapsed the moment evidence was reviewed. Even without any such prior context

from me, the example above still reads as directed under the framework you

applied. This only makes the implications of Batteau's post clearer in light

of the actual documented six-year pattern of stated intent followed by physical

delivery — a pattern your department's investigative management has consistently

protected.



ON YOUR LEADERSHIP AND THE OFFICERS IT PRODUCED


Your April 9 letter reflects a departmental culture, not an isolated judgment.

That culture runs through the decisions you made about the officers under your

command.


In June 2023, after the show-cause hearing in which a clerk magistrate found No

Probable Cause — having reviewed approximately one hour of evidence that

demolished every complaint assembled by your officers — I brought that record

directly to you. You told me: "I trust the judgment of my officers." You ended

the meeting.


The officer whose judgment you trusted had co-signed a criminal harassment

charge against a man he had never interviewed, assembled eight unverified

complaints from a single accuser into a criminal referral, sat through the

entire show-cause presentation without taking any corrective action, and

received the Walker letters predicting violence without acting on them. No

perjury referral. No internal review. Nothing.


That same officer was subsequently found to have made 25 phone calls totaling

67 minutes to an 18-year-old student over a 30-day period, deleted the related

text messages, and refused to be interviewed by DA investigators. Your public

response characterized community concern as "reckless spreading of

reputation-wrecking rumors." You retained him.


On March 12, 2026, a federal judge denied qualified immunity to that detective

in a surviving false arrest claim, finding it plausible that he provided

"misleading information" and ignored exculpatory facts to manufacture probable

cause. Thirteen days later, you submitted a merit raise request — "fantastic

crew" — and it was approved as "well worth it."


This is the leadership record. The April 9 response is consistent with it.



ON THE BROADER QUESTION YOUR LETTER RAISES


You wrote that the DA's office "is best positioned to evaluate the context and

determine whether any further action or consideration is warranted."


I agree the DA's office has a critical role here. I also note that you have

been in possession of the full contextual record across the period during which

the following events occurred: a criminal assault, malicious destruction of

property, a stay-away order, a merit raise request for the officers involved,

a surviving federal civil rights claim against one of your detectives, and now

a post expressing violent ideation directed at the complaining witness in an

active case — posted by a member of the same family whose prior statements have

been followed by physical delivery, without exception, for six years.


The DA's office is best positioned to evaluate context that has been provided

to them. The context that makes this post legible as a potential threat is the

same context that has been provided to your department across multiple

interactions over multiple years. The referral is appropriate. The

characterization of the content as unclear, absent engagement with the

documented pattern of stated intent and physical delivery, is the part I am

asking you to reconsider.


"Does not clearly establish" is a post-analysis conclusion. Your letter presents

it as a pre-analysis classification. The analysis that would make that conclusion

meaningful requires examining whether this family has a documented record of

saying what they intend to do and doing it.


They do.


I am not asking you to reach a conclusion. I am asking you to perform the

analysis.



Respectfully,


John F. Sendelbach

Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts

April 20, 2026



════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════

EXHIBIT A


Analytical Summary: Six-Phase Pattern of Institutional Inaction (2020–2026)

Re: Commonwealth v. Hennessey (2641CR000158) and Commonwealth v. Batteau

(2641CR000159)


Prepared by: John F. Sendelbach

Date: April 20, 2026

════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════


This exhibit compresses the six-year documented record into its operational

phases for reference by investigators, prosecutors, and counsel. All events

are sourced from police reports, sworn statements, court records, and

contemporaneous documentation in the full archive.


The compression below is intended as a briefing reference. The letter to which

it is attached provides the full evidentiary argument.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

PHASE I: 2020 — THE PERMISSION STRUCTURE

(Signals received → no boundary set)

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────


Public Ideation of Violence: In the June 2020 Facebook thread generated by

Alouette Batteau's Iron Bridge video (20,000+ viewers), participants wrote

"deck him" and "I would throw his camera in the water." The Shelburne Police

Department reviewed these materials without action.


Direct Warning: Alouette Batteau stated on audio on June 28, 2020:

"You'll know when I'm threatening you." No follow-up.


July 2021 Gilmore Email (Ref: 21BUC-54-OF): "I told Hennessey that I was not

going to call Sendelbach because it hasn't worked in the past." Written policy

of one-sided processing formalized in official departmental record.


Outcome: No enforcement → no boundary → behavior normalized across the

department and communicated implicitly to the Hennessey-Batteau family.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

PHASE II: 2024 — THE PREDICTION

(Explicit warning → no response)

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────


Walker Letter (September 6, 2024): Explicit written prediction from Katherine

Hennessey to landlord Brad Walker: "It's really only a matter of time before

someone gets hurt." Letter forwarded to and received by Detective Tucker Jenkins.


Jenkins Handling: Letter read approximately 12 days late. No interview of

sender. No warning issued. No report generated. No action taken.


October 16, 2025 — Bardwell Gas Station (on video): Sendelbach presented

himself in active atrial fibrillation (~180 bpm), requested pulse check, and

warned that documented inaction was producing cardiac harm. Chief Bardwell

declined ("I don't want to"), stated on camera that he "can't charge false

police reports" (factually incorrect under M.G.L. c.269 §13A), directed

Sendelbach to the Attorney General, and walked away.


Outcome: Prediction received and in department's possession → no intervention

→ escalation continues toward assault.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

PHASE III: NOVEMBER 30, 2025 — THE MISSED INTERVENTION

(Same-day escalation → no containment)

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────


Morning Incident (Neighbors Gas Station): Hennessey trespassed onto

Sendelbach's rented property, performed double middle-finger gesture with

verbal provocation, and departed. Sergeant Gilmore responded, reviewed bodycam,

walked property line. No trespass charge filed. No gas station cameras checked.


Note: Containment at this stage — a trespass charge and evidence preservation —

would have created a formal record of Hennessey's morning conduct and directly

contradicted her December 1 affidavit before it was written. The morning and

the evening are causally connected: Hennessey returned in the afternoon because

no consequence followed the morning.


Evening Incident: Tom Del Negro (known musical collaborator of the

Hennessey-Batteau family) exited the brewery and initiated the physical

confrontation at the door. Brook Batteau then charged, shoved Sendelbach off

the curb, and assaulted him. Katherine Hennessey followed and delivered a

second assault. Hennessey seized the still-recording iPhone, walked 75 feet

to the Deerfield River, and threw it in. Zachary Livingston (neutral witness,

brewery co-owner) confirmed: "It was clear that Hennessey and Batteau did not

go outside to confront Sendelbach's filming — they went outside to confront

Sendelbach."


Outcome: Morning warning ignored → no containment → evening assault proceeds.

The prediction in the Walker letter (September 6, 2024) was delivered on

November 30, 2025, by the same person who wrote it.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

PHASE IV: POST-INCIDENT — EVIDENCE LOSS

(Critical evidence → not secured within overwrite window)

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────


Tom Del Negro: Identified by Sendelbach through the brewery window as the

initial aggressor. Sergeant Gilmore's summons report notes the identification

("pointed at a male") but never names him, never interviews him, and never

includes him in the narrative. Report 25SHL-47-AR.


Gas Station Footage (Neighbors): Never requested. Would have documented

Hennessey's morning trespass and directly contradicted her December 1 affidavit

claim that she "chose to drive away upon seeing him." The affidavit claim is

geographically impossible — the newspaper rack is around the corner from where

Sendelbach's vehicle was parked and not visible from a standard parking approach.

Footage was not retrieved and is presumed lost.


Crystal Visions (ground-floor business, 40 State Street): Camera with direct

line of sight to the phone-toss location. Never canvassed. Not mentioned in

report.


Law Office Camera (across the street): Exterior camera with documented view

of the trespass site. Never contacted. Not mentioned in report.


Brewery Interior Footage: Requested approximately nine days after the assault.

System had already overwritten the data.


Sendelbach emailed Gilmore the Hennessey affidavit within 18 hours of the

assault. Gilmore had documentary proof of perjury within one day. No footage

was subsequently retrieved to confirm or deny the perjured account.


"Dual HPO" Coaching: Sergeant Gilmore's report explicitly states he "suggested"

the defendants seek Harassment Prevention Orders against Sendelbach immediately

following the assault. This coaching provided the civil counter-filing instrument

used in subsequent proceedings to frame a criminal battery as a mutual harassment

dispute. It is the documented origin of the "terrified victim" narrative.


Outcome: Known evidence sources → not canvassed within the overwrite window

→ objective record of perjury lost → cover story survives to court.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

PHASE V: STRUCTURAL RESPONSE

(Post-event framing → system behavior)

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────


Characterization in Official Record: Gilmore's summons report (25SHL-47-AR)

documents Sendelbach's demeanor as "agitated" without noting that the agitation

followed a violent assault, the destruction of his phone, a wait outside a

locked police station while the officer was inside on the phone, and being told

his attackers would not be arrested that night.


HPO Proceedings: Three separate courts (Judge Tolan, March 17, 2025; Judge

McLeod, March 20, 2025; Judge Powers, March 12, 2026) denied Sendelbach's

protection petitions, each starting fresh without reference to Judge Mazanec's

three prior findings of not-credible against the same respondent. All three

denials occurred while probable cause for the November 30 assault had already

been found. The "dual HPO" coaching by Gilmore on November 30 produced the

counter-filing architecture that allowed each court to treat the matter as a

mutual dispute.


Administrative Silence: No internal review of the November 30 investigative

decisions. No review of the Walker letter handling. No perjury referral across

three judicial findings of not-credible.


Outcome: Response shapes narrative rather than record → objective evidence

gone → "terrified victim" framing survives → protection denied three times.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

PHASE VI: ADMINISTRATIVE ENDORSEMENT (2026)

(Outcomes reinforce prior conduct)

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────


Merit Raise Request (March 25, 2026): Chief Bardwell submitted a merit raise

request for the department — "fantastic crew" — thirteen days after a federal

judge denied qualified immunity to Detective Jenkins personally in Mlynick v.

Town of Erving et al (3:24-cv-30108), finding it plausible that Jenkins provided

"misleading information" and ignored exculpatory facts to manufacture probable

cause. Raise approved. LaPierre: "well worth it."


April 9 Classification: A violent lyric captioned "this one goes out to my

stalker!" — using the exclusive label applied to Sendelbach in every sworn

proceeding for six years, posted while the sender's parents were on bail for

assault — was classified as a "musical performance" without contextual analysis.


Stay-Away Order (April 7, 2026): The Commonwealth requested and the court

imposed a stay-away and no-contact order protecting Sendelbach from the

defendants as a condition of bail — retroactively confirming the protection

three civil courts had denied against the same defendants with substantially

the same factual record.


Outcome: Prior investigative and administrative decisions are institutionally

validated at the same time the judicial system finally acknowledges the risk

the SPD declined to assess.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

PATTERN COMPRESSION


Permission → Prediction → No Prevention → Evidence Lost →

Narrative Managed → Behavior Rewarded


Each phase enabled the next. The March 23, 2026 Instagram post is Phase VII

— the next statement in a sequence where every prior statement has been

followed by delivery.


────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

END OF EXHIBIT A

════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════









April 20, 2026


Chief of Police Gregory Bardwell

Shelburne Police Department

623 Mohawk Trail

Shelburne, MA 01370


CC: First Assistant District Attorney Steven Gagne

Northwestern District Attorney's Office


RE: Your April 9, 2026 Response Regarding the Instagram Post

"Part of a Musical Performance" — A Six-Year Record of a Family That

Says What It Will Do and Then Does It, and a Department That Looks Away