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Old 06-29-2004, 06:39 PM
jacob morosky
 
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administrative notices

I appreciate so much what ice gave us from 26 CFR 301.6101 (g). Since Jersee asked for some additional infoon administrative notices , I'd like everyone to be informed about the good writing of Alan Adask of the Anti-Shyster mag, Vol. 9. No. 2 pages 29-31 , anno domini 1999 , c/o www.antishyster.com , phone 1-800-477-5508 , 972-418-8993 ( actually ,the information in the whole year of volumes is priceless and important , on the subject of administrativenotices, bad faith ( no immunity ) , banking without a social security number , etc.) In that article , Alan wrote of the astounding successes that an Oklahoma man , named Bill Shephard had in 1997 . Alan says that Bill Shephards 's administrative Notices were so profound and powerful, that he shook up the Department of Agriculture . Does anyone know how to reach Bill Shephard ? I believe that Private Administrative Notices , verified , in the form of a declaration, then asking questions in interrogatory style , about the declarations ,demanding a verified, point by point response , using the notary as the party to witness whether or not there's been a response , Notices of Non-Response, Notorial Protest , is the way to go, intead of going into their tribunal and arguing with them. Anyone else have sources for good administrative notice training ? Thank you all, james
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Old 07-13-2004, 12:34 PM
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administrative notices

Sounds great except for the protest part. The only thing a notary can protest is the dishonor of a negotiable instrument. And using a notary to handle the mail (so you she can witness their dishonor) is a no-no.
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Old 09-13-2004, 03:36 AM
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administrative notices

What do you mean? The notary in a notorial protest is doing a protest on your behalf right?. How is the notary to see if there is truly a dishonor of the negotiable instrument if she does not send the notices himself?

What do you mean it is a no-no?

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Old 09-13-2004, 01:53 PM
Bird Bird is offline
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administrative notices

jacob morosky, dashboy:



Read carefully some of my posts and the discussion on notary protests in the following thread.



http://www.suijuris.net/main/suijuri...&show=5&page=4
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Old 09-13-2004, 09:06 PM
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administrative notices

Well, this is one of the first things I did some time ago. But I implemented the 1-2-3 default notice and had the notary issue a certificate of dishonor for (NON-RESPONSE/ FAILURE TO PERFORM. I used it as a third party witness to the banks dishonor on my CPN's they kept yet continued to demand payment. I have sent other notices to them in which they do not respond. In fact the last three they have not responded to and they were not even concerning the CPN's I had sent back in June. I guess as I finish up on my complaint I will have to decide whether to leave this NP out or not. Even without it the bank has done enough dishonor ten times over!
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Old 09-13-2004, 10:04 PM
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administrative notices

dashboy;



You can still use the fact that the did not respond to your correspondence to your advantage. (you could attest to such in an affidavit). That is dishonor any which way you slice it. As far as asserting a notarial protest, I have to stand on my earlier posts. Here is one of them pasted from the thread I recommended you read. Below it explains why and when a notarial protest is used.



Yes, the Notary Public Handbook authorizes notaries to perform protests for nonacceptance and nonpayment bills of exchange, or promissory notes. But I think the terms acceptance and payment may demand a closer scrutiny. I posted a definition of acceptance as it relates to bills of exchanges (according to Black's Law) earlier in this thread.



"Acceptance, as it relates to BOE's is: The act by which the person on whom a bill of exchange is drawn (called the "drawee") assents to the request of the drawer to pay it, or, in other words, engages, or makes himself liable, to pay it when due.



The above acceptance is in contradistinction to the matter whether or not a payee gleefully receives (commonly thought of as accepts), a note we may tender."



And it appears that nonpayment refers to a maker of a promissory note not fulfulling his promise (Payment = the fulfillment of a promise, or the performance of an agreement).



So if the drawee does not pay or "make good" on the BoE, than a protest is in order. And likewise, if the maker of a promissory note does not pay or "make good" on his promise, then it appears a protest would also be in order to hold the maker of the note to his promise.
Here is the thread here.
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