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Old 03-27-2008, 04:55 PM
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David Merrill David Merrill is offline
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Colorado.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Livefire
My question is this....Has anyone ever made a claim against the bond that risk management is required to have on their officials??? I definately believe that filing liens on officials is bad juju unless it can be proven they acted in bad faith outside of their authority. This is a tough road to go! If you can prove your case, filing a claim against a bond is far less risky since it isnt against the official personally.

That would simply be the synonym for "suitor" - court of competent jurisdiction -


A man or woman who knows how to create the record. The lien this thread is about would be a request for jail time "please" if the First Lien by the Treasury upon which the IRS agent published a NOFTL were a valid lien. The reason the lien against the IRS agent is a valid lien is simply because the NOFTL is not.

The suitor has already created a record showing so in the US district court.

Quote:
My question is this....Has anyone ever made a claim against the bond that risk management is required to have on their officials???

That is the assumption that IRS agents are government officials. Since the Secretary as their principal is not paid by the US, that bonding is very elusive. The Institution that pays the Secretary is the IMF - an organ of the UN.


Regards,

David Merrill.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoonra
It is worth noting that the fealty to the Pope, which you cited for its explicit mention of the Templar abbey in Dover, is the legal basis for the invalidation of the Magna Carta after it was sealed at Runnymede.
During discussion about the Treaty of 1213 and the Magna Charta (1215).

http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/magframe.htm
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/john1a.html
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