Thank you all for the support following the recent “Are the Headlines True?”
Update. We received a lot of questions and input, and wanted to circle back with a clear update on where things stand regarding the two sour grape lawsuits.
Many of you have asked for additional details, so I wanted to provide a summary of the relevant information in one place, including documentation related to Kastleman’s criminal history, extortion attempts, and the harassment directed at my family. You can review the facts directly below. And if you have any information related to Kastleman’s harassment of my family, I ask that you please come forward.
Links & Documents
- Overwatch Dismissal of their lawsuit against GVA
- GVA Lawsuit against Zac Richard’s
- GVA Lawsuit against Kastleman
- Stalcup Family Litigation against Kastleman’s harassment campaign
- Texas State Bar Grievance filed against Kastleman’s attorney for extortion-related conduct
- Austin Police Report filed for Kastleman harassment activity
- Kastleman Criminal History showing 40 years of felony behavior
- Recent Media Coverage: The Promote Interview with GVA CEO
- Overwatch This matter has now been fully dismissed. It took 18 months, but ultimately the truth came out. The claims were based on fraudulent and stolen information provided by Zac Richards. I appreciate Ben at OW and others who took the time to reassess the facts and come to that realization.
- Kastleman The Kastleman lawsuit involves virtually the same claims, again relying on the same stolen and misleading information from Zac Richards. It was filed in November 2025. Based on the trajectory of OW and the facts in front of us, GVA will prevail here as well, likely much sooner. Now that the portfolio is stabilized, we can focus our attention on these outlandish claims directly, and we expect a significant portion is dismissed in the next 30 to 60 days.
There’s been a lot of noise, but I’m grateful for the support received and especially for my team, who continue to show up, stay focused, and execute despite the distractions.
Thank you,
Alan Stalcup
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