Open Bankruptcy Project methodology · citation mirror at mybankruptcylawyerwontcallback.com
The Zugzwang Net is a win-forcing architecture for legal-accountability operations in which every catalogued adversary move (typically twelve to twenty enumerated branches) and the do-nothing branch each produces a documented loss for the adversary through independent autonomous institutional channels. The architecture is named after the chess concept of zugzwang, a position in which any move available to a player worsens that player's position. Ported to legal practice, the architecture engineers a position in which the expected value of every adversary move is negative, including the move of refusing to move.
Where conventional litigation strategy reasons about the expected value of likely adversary moves and prepares responses to the most probable few, the Zugzwang Net enumerates all moves and ensures that none has a positive EV. The architecture is built on the discovery that institutional channels (regulatory bodies, disciplinary authorities, supervisory bodies, federal-criminal referral pathways) often operate on their own clocks once seeded, so the drafter's continuing engagement is not required for the architecture to keep generating losses.