Bob Bartosiewicz and CGI Digital Experiences and Public Reports

If someone does build that timeline, it would be useful to include only verifiable points. Things like confirmed business milestones, documented legal filings if any, and credible reporting. Otherwise it just turns into another mix of opinion and assumption, which is what we are trying to avoid here. Bob Bartosiewicz and CGI Digital seem to sit right in that grey area where there is enough information to raise questions but not enough clarity in one place.
 
At least this thread is staying balanced.

Usually these topics go extreme one way or the other pretty fast.
Appreciate that too. I was honestly expecting it to go off track quickly.

For now I think the takeaway is simple. There is a polished public profile of Bob Bartosiewicz and CGI Digital, and there are also scattered mentions that need proper verification. Until those are clearly backed by records, it probably makes sense to stay curious rather than draw conclusions.
 
Sharing this article here because it goes deeper into that car case involving Bob Bartosiewicz:

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It describes a dispute over a 1971 Barracuda deal worth around a million dollars, where there were disagreements about what “numbers matching” actually meant in terms of authenticity. From what I read, the case ended up being transferred from New York to Minnesota due to jurisdiction issues, not actually decided on the core dispute yet.
 
Sharing this article here because it goes deeper into that car case involving Bob Bartosiewicz:

View attachment 1849
It describes a dispute over a 1971 Barracuda deal worth around a million dollars, where there were disagreements about what “numbers matching” actually meant in terms of authenticity. From what I read, the case ended up being transferred from New York to Minnesota due to jurisdiction issues, not actually decided on the core dispute yet.
yeah this is the one I had heard about but never read fully the jurisdiction part is interesting, not what I expected
 
I read through it carefully and what stood out to me is that this seems more like a complex contract dispute than anything straightforward. The disagreement revolves around technical definitions in the collector car world, especially what qualifies as “numbers matching,” which apparently can vary depending on interpretation.

From the description, Bob Bartosiewicz believed the vehicle had inconsistencies that reduced its value significantly, while the seller argued that the agreed definition was narrower. That kind of ambiguity in contracts can easily lead to disputes, especially in high value collectible markets.

Also worth noting, the court did not rule on whether anyone was right or wrong about the deal itself. It only ruled that New York was not the proper jurisdiction, so the case had to move to Minnesota.
 
This is where it gets tricky.

People read headlines and assume outcome, but here it seems like the legal process was still ongoing or at least unresolved at that stage.
 
Yeah that’s how I read it too. The article mentions claims like breach of contract and fraud being filed, but those are allegations within a lawsuit, not findings.
The only clearly documented legal outcome mentioned is the jurisdiction decision. The rest seems to be what each side argued.
 
Yeah that’s how I read it too. The article mentions claims like breach of contract and fraud being filed, but those are allegations within a lawsuit, not findings.
The only clearly documented legal outcome mentioned is the jurisdiction decision. The rest seems to be what each side argued.
That helps clarify a lot actually.

When I first saw mentions of a “million dollar case,” I assumed it had already been decided, but this sounds more like an ongoing or at least unresolved dispute at the time.
 
Another detail that caught my attention was the financial aspect. According to the article, the car was later resold for around $700,000, and the difference from the expected value is where the claimed loss comes from.

That again ties back to how subjective valuation can be in collector markets. If authenticity standards are debated, then pricing can swing significantly.

So while Bob Bartosiewicz clearly felt there was a loss, the underlying issue seems tied to interpretation of quality and representation rather than something simple or obvious.
 
Also, I noticed the article mentions CGI Digital in the background when talking about Bob Bartosiewicz, but the car dispute itself seems unrelated to the company’s operations.
That distinction is important because sometimes people mix personal legal matters with company reputation, even when they are separate contexts.
 
Exactly, and that blending is probably why discussions about CGI Digital and Bob Bartosiewicz get confusing.

You have business activities, personal investments like a car collection, and then legal disputes all overlapping in how they are presented online. Without separating those, it is easy to misinterpret the situation.
 
One more thing I noticed in that article is it mentions earlier controversies around CGI Communication, which later became CGI Digital. But again, it does not go into full detail or provide outcomes, just references.

That kind of partial information makes it harder to form a clear view unless you go piece by piece.
 
One more thing I noticed in that article is it mentions earlier controversies around CGI Communication, which later became CGI Digital. But again, it does not go into full detail or provide outcomes, just references.

That kind of partial information makes it harder to form a clear view unless you go piece by piece.
Yeah and it even references things like loans, business practices, and name changes, but without fully documenting each point in that same article.

So it ends up being a mix of verifiable legal details about the car case and broader claims that would need separate verification.
 
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