Mortgage Elimination
is
an administrative process, which disputes the debt through
administrative procedures and administrative law. Using the statutes,
laws, case law and acts that
are positive law, the process begins with administrative letters of dispute
sent to your mortgage bank. The administrative process is based on U.S.
Supreme Court decisions, United States Code (USC), the Fair Debt Collections
Practices Act, the Fair Credit Billing Act, the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC),
and numerous Banking and Lending laws.
Following the
administrative process, the mortgage elimination procedures are accomplished in
6 - 8 months depending on the process you choose to use.
Here is a "letter from a friend" that explains the
fraud in bank loans which allow for the mortgage elimination process.....
"We Thought We Were Getting A Loan"
A letter to a friend:
Dear (name deleted)
I’ve recovered my composure, but I’m still
dazed. A friend called me to ask if my wife and I had a conventional mortgage
and if we did, did we realize that we were being badly misled? That’s a serious
charge and I didn’t understand, so he explained that our lender used the
promissory note we signed at closing to pay off the former property owner, never
loaned us money out of his own pocket, did not tell us, and still requires
monthly payments!
But, I protested, how can he do that?
We’ve paid more than $140,000 so far, keeping our agreement at the risk of
default and foreclosure. And wasn’t the lender taking a big risk with us for 30 years by lending us
the purchase price of our home? No, he wasn’t, isn’t, and never will be.
Little did I know that the lender deposited
our note in an account just like cash, and listed it as a new asset. He then
obtained credit from the Federal Reserve with this asset, expanded that money
anywhere from 9 OR MORE times, used some of the money to pay off the previous
property owner, and kept the rest. He never loaned us a dime! In fact, we
loaned him money and he literally carries our promissory note on his books as a
liability, just as if we had deposited cash in his account that he would then be
obliged to give back to us if we demanded it. We literally paid for our house
on the spot with that promissory note, but we’re paying again, over 30 years,
for the same house! This is crazy, I said! I thought we were getting a loan.
In fact it was an exchange. Value for
value. Our note for the house. No loan that passes the “sniff test” was
made to us at any time. The bank never loaned us anything.
In an honest loan agreement, the lender’s
supply of money would shrink by the amount that he loaned us. He’d be earning
his profit (interest) by risking money that was really his. In our case, the
lender’s pool of money exploded when he took advantage of his status as a
Federal Reserve lender and created money out of thin air with our note. If a
private lender tried this, it’d be counterfeiting and he’d end up in the
slammer.
It’s called fractional reserve banking and all
lenders who are part of the Federal Reserve System do the same thing. Only they
don’t tell you what they do with your note, and that’s dishonest. Why? Because
by law, if the actions of either party to an agreement significantly alter the
cost or risk as originally represented, he is obligated to inform the other
party. Lenders NEVER tell “borrowers” that their promissory notes are instant
cash cows, that they use your note to fund your own loan, or that they incur
little risk. But you still pay a second time, month after month, year after
year for something you’ve already paid for with that note!
The lender is NOT telling you that:
-
He’s funding the purchase of the property with your promissory
note and that no money comes out of his pocket to do that.
-
He does not incur nearly the risk he says he does.
-
Your note is a negotiable instrument, redeemable in cash for
up to nine times the face value of your note, exponentially increasing his
profit potential.
-
And if you understood what your lender did with your note and
you had a law dictionary, you’d realize what your Deed of Trust or Mortgage
really says, which is that……
-
Your lender accepted your Promissory Note as payment in full
for the property.
-
You enter the Deed of Trust or Mortgage agreement after
signing the Promissory Note as the sole owner of that “Fee Simple” property,
paid for in full by your signature on the note, and then you sign it away as
collateral for the privilege of paying again, paying this “trickster”
principal and interest for the next 30 years.
(99.9% of the people who work at banks know nothing about this)
Whereas, silly us,
-
We thought we were taking out a loan.
-
We had to qualify for the loan, establish ourselves as a
worthy risk.
-
We had to jump through hoops to provide all the documentation
– tax statements, banking references, income statements, cash balances,
investments, other “loans”.
-
We felt so grateful to the lender for making it possible for
us to have a home.
-
We sweated the possibility of foreclosure, loss of our home
and our credit rating.
-
We’ve made every payment on time, over $140,000 so far, with
22 years of payments to go.
Have we kept our side of the bargain? You
bet we have. I even feel like we should keep paying because I’m old fashioned
and my granddaddy told me you don’t get something for nothing. Well, did we get
something for nothing? No, but the lender did! Were we tricked? Yes we were.
The lender created the money to purchase our
home from the previous owner out of thin air with our promissory note, expanded
it up to nine times, invested this free money to get free interest, never paid
taxes on this extra money he created, then held hostage the title to our home
that he didn’t pay for while he began collecting 2 ½ times the original purchase
price from us one month at a time for 30 years!
We gave that lender enormous value; value far
exceeding the purchase price of the home we live in. But, like millions of
other homeowners, we couldn’t see behind the curtain that was drawn when we
handed over the promissory note. We didn’t know how banking works. We didn’t
understand what constitutes value in our system these days, and the lender never
told us. Why would he? If he had, we’d have demanded a darn good reason why we
were going to have to pay him more than $500,000 over 30 years, for a house that
we had already paid for, not to mention the liberties he took with our note by
expanding its value without our permission.
We’re doing something about it, and you can
too. We’ve submitted our documents to a very professional company
that for a fee can satisfy the outstanding balance on our mortgage legally,
safely, and permanently. No more mortgage payments ever again in as little as 3
- 4 months.
Your friend, (Name deleted)