Greggory Don Butler is the founder of TA-14 and the architect of Environmental Integrity Governance, Atmospheric Integrity Records, Personal Atmospheric Integrity Records, TA-14 Admissible Execution Integrity Governance, Admissible Execution Architecture, TA-14 Financial Execution Integrity Governance, and TA-14 Insurance Execution Integrity Governance.
His work centers on a single governing principle:
If consequence is allowed to become real, the evidence supporting it must be admissible before and at the moment it binds.
TA-14 was developed to address a structural failure across modern systems: decisions are increasingly automated, distributed, optimized, and explained after the fact, while the underlying reality used to justify those decisions is often fragmented, reconstructed, overwritten, or unverifiable.
Greggory’s architecture separates observation, recordkeeping, interpretation, governance, and execution. This separation ensures that systems do not merely explain outcomes after they occur, but prevent inadmissible outcomes from becoming real in the first place.
TA-14 began with environmental integrity and the recognition that buildings, systems, and occupied spaces often lack a continuous, append-only record of atmospheric reality.
From that foundation, the work expanded into a broader architecture for execution integrity:
Environmental Integrity Governance
Atmospheric Integrity Records (AIR)
Personal Atmospheric Integrity Records (PAIR)
TA-14 Admissible Execution Integrity Governance
Admissible Execution Architecture (AEA)
TA-14 Financial Execution Integrity Governance
TA-14 Insurance Execution Integrity Governance
Across each domain, the governing requirement remains the same:
no material action should bind unless admissible reality exists at commit-time.
Greggory’s work focuses on:
proof-bound execution
append-only evidence records
admissibility before consequence
non-bypassable commit-time boundaries
deterministic ALLOW / BLOCK / ESCALATE enforcement
separation of evidence, interpretation, and execution
policyholder, institutional, and environmental accountability
TA-14 is not designed to replace professionals, regulators, engineers, insurers, financial institutions, or control systems.
It defines the integrity conditions under which their actions may become consequential.
Greggory has filed provisional patent applications covering TA-14 financial and insurance execution integrity architectures, including systems and methods for proof-bound execution using append-only integrity records, transition objects, and non-bypassable commit-time admissibility boundaries.
His published work also introduces Environmental Integrity Governance and Atmospheric Integrity Records as foundational recordkeeping layers for buildings, HVAC systems, environmental accountability, and continuous commissioning.
Greggory’s position is direct:
Modern systems do not need more explanations after consequence.
They need stronger conditions before consequence.
TA-14 exists to define those conditions.
The future of governance is not post-hoc audit.
It is admissible execution.
If it cannot be proven, it cannot be allowed.