The Confidential Contractor Release Agreement is heavily one-sided in favor of Platinum MF LLC dba Verdant Strategies. If you sign this as-is, you will be waiving valuable legal rights for an inadequate settlement ($3,000) while taking on significant risk and restrictions.


1. Major Problems with the Agreement

A. Payment is Inadequate and Not Legally Fair

  • $3,000 is a fraction of your claim (~$36,659.77).
  • They claim this amount is “more than you are entitled to”, which is false given their contractual breaches and the California Labor Code § 226.8 misclassification penalties ($5,000–$25,000 per violation).
  • They fail to include tax considerations for you—if this payment is misclassified as wages, you could face additional tax liabilities.

B. One-Sided Release of Claims

  • You waive all rights to sue them (including misclassification, unpaid wages, and termination breaches), but they retain rights to sue you.
  • You are releasing claims against everyone (officers, directors, employees, shareholders, etc.), while they give you nothing in return.
  • You even waive indemnification rights, meaning if they owe you reimbursement for legal costs, you forfeit that claim.

C. Mandatory Deletion of Negative Feedback

  • You must delete all negative online feedback (Upwork and other platforms), but they do not remove your name or work from their site.
  • This is a strong indicator they are worried about public exposure—which you can use as leverage.

D. Broad Non-Disparagement Clause (Only Against You)

  • You are prohibited from making any negative statements about them, but they retain the right to speak about you however they want.
  • This is completely unfair—at minimum, this clause must be mutual.

E. Extreme Confidentiality & Non-Disclosure Requirements

  • You are permanently bound to keep the settlement confidential, even from close colleagues and potential legal or business partners.
  • If they breach the contract, you still can’t disclose it.
  • They can sue you for injunctive relief (court order + monetary damages) if they think you violated confidentiality.

F. No Acknowledgment of Wrongdoing (While You Acknowledge Everything)

  • They explicitly state this does not constitute any admission of liability.
  • Meanwhile, you must acknowledge that you were fully paid and have no further claims, which contradicts your legal stance.

2. What You Should Demand in a Counteroffer

Your revised release agreement should be fair and mutual, ensuring you are adequately compensated and protected. Here’s what you should demand:

A. Fair Compensation

  • Increase settlement offer to at least $25,000, covering:
    • Misclassification penalties
    • Unpaid wages
    • Breach of contract damages
    • Improper termination notice period (10 days’ pay)
    • Compensation for wrongful nonpayment of work

B. Mutual Release of Claims

  • Both parties waive future claims—not just you.
  • The release must protect you from any claims they might try to file against you (e.g., fraud claims regarding Invoice #193).

C. Mutual Non-Disparagement

  • They cannot talk negatively about you either.
  • If they breach this and make any negative statements about you, the agreement is void.

D. Limited Confidentiality

  • You must be allowed to discuss general experiences regarding misclassification (without naming them).
  • You must be allowed to disclose settlement terms to tax advisors, attorneys, and regulatory agencies.

E. Removal of Your Work & Name

  • They must remove your name, bio, and content from their website and marketing materials.
  • They must confirm in writing that your intellectual property has been removed.

F. Payment & Tax Protections

  • Payment must be made within 10 business days (no delays).
  • The settlement must be classified as a 1099 non-wage payment so you don’t face unexpected tax liabilities.
  • They must cover any tax penalties if the IRS reclassifies the settlement.

3. Next Steps

  1. Upload your first draft response so I can refine it with these demands.
  2. I will rewrite their contract into a fair version that protects your interests.
  3. If they refuse to negotiate fairly, you can:
    • Escalate to California’s labor board (DLSE) for misclassification penalties.
    • Report them to the IRS for employment tax violations.
    • File a lawsuit and seek higher damages.

This employer is clearly afraid of exposure—use that leverage.