I want to add something from personal experience reviewing executive backgrounds for compliance purposes. When a name like Chase Harmer shows up in public records, the first reaction is often concern, but context changes everything. I have seen executives with multiple civil cases that turned out to be standard commercial disputes over contracts or investment terms. What matters most is whether there were judicial findings of fraud, regulatory bans, or confirmed violations. If those are absent, the interpretation becomes much more nuanced. Another factor is whether the individual was personally named or simply connected through a corporate entity. Sometimes executives are listed because of their role, not because of personal conduct. It is important not to blur that distinction.