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Old 04-10-2008, 03:12 PM
Charlie Blue Charlie Blue is offline
Waking Up
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 49
Quote:
Originally Posted by courttroubles
In my case I wrote a powerful complaint. This complaint was THREATENED after walking thru mud and as a last attempt at the FRAUDSTERS.

I to can prove they committed fraud upon me and the bankruptcy court. Although I can't find an attorney to assist us. If their good they aren't taking on cases.

What kind of case is yours? How are you basing your complaint? If it's against a mortgage lender mine wasn't based on state law it was based on The U.S.C. and Fdcpa

Needless to say I'm still waiting to see how they strike after the STRIKE I've given them. To me NO NEWS IS GOOD NEWS. RAN WITH THEIR TAIL IN BETWEEN THEIR LEGS. YOU CAN'T DENY THE TRUTH! NO JUDGE WILL EITHER.

Let us know,

Kathy
Mine is a landlord/tenant case. Anyway, someone informed me that in a situation like that I should "strike" and how to go about it. Thanks Kathy.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Lawdog
Your post is a little too vague if what you want is advice on what to do next.

Also, how do you know you filed a "winning" complaint if you haven't won the case yet?
LOL Good point, a little ego-tripping I guess.

Anyway, as far as "vagueness", I don't know what you mean. Someone submits something to the court (either a complaint or motion), the other side submits their response with evidence/exhibits but there's one documents they submitted that the Petitioner knows is false. What do they [the Petitioner] do?

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheIntelCritic
Charlie Blue:

If records are submitted, they must be properly authenticated. Kleet Lbr. Co., Inc. v. Lucchese
Thanks, good looking-out.
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