// METHODOLOGY

How a Fragment Zero case file is produced.

Topic selection

Cases are selected on three criteria: (1) the event is documented in public records — court filings, indictments, declassified intelligence reports, peer-reviewed publications, or named primary sourcing; (2) the event has not been adequately explained by mainstream coverage in a single accessible long-form treatment; (3) the event is consequential — it altered policy, infrastructure, or institutional trust in measurable ways.

Source hierarchy

Fragment Zero ranks evidence in the following order, from strongest to weakest:

  1. Court records, sworn affidavits, indictments, prosecution memoranda.
  2. Government documents released by request or declassification — FOIA, CRS reports, OIG reports, congressional testimony transcripts.
  3. Peer-reviewed academic publications.
  4. Investigative reporting by established outlets — Washington Post, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Reuters, ProPublica, the Miami Herald — particularly where independently confirmed across multiple outlets.
  5. On-the-record statements by named primary sources.
  6. Technical disclosures by vendors (CVE advisories, FBI Flash alerts, CISA advisories) where the disclosing party has direct knowledge.

Anonymous-source claims, unverified leaks, and speculative reconstructions are not used as the foundation of any specific factual assertion in a Fragment Zero case file. They may be acknowledged as context, but the factual spine of the narrative is built only on records that can be cited.

Research process

Each case file undergoes:

Production pipeline

Once research is complete and a script is written by the editorial team:

Editorial control

No part of the AI-assisted production stack — voice synthesis, image generation, subtitle translation — has authority to introduce, modify, or remove factual claims. All claims in the published narrative are written by human editors and verified against the sources listed above. Where the editorial team is uncertain about a claim, it is omitted rather than asserted.

Updates and corrections

If new public information materially affects a previously published case file, an update note is appended to both the YouTube description and the archive page. Substantive errors are corrected within forty-eight hours of identification; the original assertion is preserved in the correction notice.

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