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18 USC Sec. 514 [01/06/97]
TITLE 18 - CRIMES AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
PART I - CRIMES
CHAPTER 25 - COUNTERFEITING AND FORGERY
Sec. 514. Fictitious Obligations Statute
Flawed Redemption Process
Taking Section 514
you can turn it around and use it on any government official, employee or the
employee of the IRS to charge them under this section for failing to list the
contract with the signature obligating the American, when they file a lien on
the American,
I draw an analogy
that even an eighth grader can understand. You don't have to go through a lot of
gobble-de-gook of law to understand. You buy a 1500-dollar refrigerator from
Sears under a contract to pay in 90-day cash. You sign the slip, they keep a
copy, and you keep a copy. Sears delivers to your house. 90 days comes and you
didn't pay. Sears now sends you a notice, commercial law you know, same as IRS
operates under. You either ignore the letter or respond saying you will pay.
Step one is done. Sears sends you a second letter. Same thing happens as in step
one. Sears now sends you a third notice and demand to pay. Now step three is
satisfied. Just like IRS does. Sears now goes to the county where you live and
files a UCC-1 Form. One of two processes is required.
#1 The UCC-1 must
contain the debtors signature and the creditors signature. Well Sears knows you
are not going to sign that Form.
#2 The Form states
that a bill, contract, must be presented containing the debtors signature before
filing can occur. Sears has that contract you signed 180 days ago so Sears
attaches the evidence to the UCC-1 Form and it is filed. This VERIFYS Sears
Claim. Now Sears, (United States) can take you to court anytime it wants or send
a collection agency (IRS) to hound you. Sears (United States, AKA Congress) can
get a court judgment against you without your having to appear in court because
you have been given the due process afforded under contract law. Sears can show
the contract bearing your signature. Can the United States? Sears can show
evidence of a 30-day letter, the second 30-day letter and the final 30-day
letter, all totaling 90 days past the 90 days you agreed, by contract you would
pay.
No, you cannot
claim lack of due process under contract law because you did not have a court
hearing. Sears created it's own court administratively and you failed to respond
or responded incorrectly.
Now what does the
IRS have to file with the county recorder if you won't go and sign the UCC-1
Form? Has the IRS this VALIDATION document that allows the County Recorder to
file the Notice of Lien? Hey, you are big people and can figure it out for
yourself, can't you? Ahhh , I see a lot of complicity with the IRS and County
Recorders lighting up so that not only Section 514 can be used, but EXTORTION,
FILING FALSE AND FRAUDULENT DOCUMENTS INTO THE PUBLIC RECORD, SLANDER OF TITLE,
and any other cogent law that you can find in State law.
Now use this same principle in the
Redemption scam. Yes, it is a scam. #1 You cannot contract with your
self, is the maxim of law.
#2 Do you have a signed contract
with the debtor, the alter ego you, that IRS says exists? Now you
know why you can't file a UCC-1 on the alter ego debtor.
#3. You "accept for value" the debt
the IRS laid on this alter ego.
What you have just
done is verify the IRS has a claim and in accepting for value you just made
yourself a surety for that 1500 dollar refrigerator. Geeze, just look it up in
the UCC - it's right there. Now you must pay that and Sears (IRS) can make you
pay it. IRS now has your signature verifying what they could not legally file,--
remember the contract bearing your signature that you signed for at the Sears
store? You, in doing this Redemption crap just helped the IRS overcome the
illegality of their flawed Lien process. It is all in the UCC if you took the
time to read it ALL, instead of blindly following the blind who did not
research far enough.
Will people ever
learn? No, because everyone is looking for that silver bullet that is handed to
them on a silver platter. There ain't no such two animals existing. No one wants
to tax their brain, and as a result, for decades upon decades people go to jail,
lose their property for failing to do their own research after we researchers
have warned of such things. If it sounds to easy and too good to be true, 99
percent of the time it is nothing for nothing but heartache.
The INFORMER

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