The Observer wrote:Nothing distorted at all, David. I have asked you twice what "terminators" would have to do when their employer or bank ignored their "termination" of the tax lien and continued to forward monies to the IRS. You clearly stated both times that they would have to go to district court.David Merrill wrote:P.S. What really gets me chuckling is when the defendant's attorney in a Libel of Review writes a letter to the suitor about how stupid the bogus suit is, imploring that the suitor needs to seek out an attorney who understands real law! That is what The Observer reminds me of.
She understands exactly what I have said and parrots back a rediculously distorted rendition. Why? Something really bugs her about the truth.
Nope. You get it all distorted and parrot it out that way. Garbage in; garbage out.
That is really the best way to terminate a tax lien but it involves going into US district court at the onset of the libel.
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But since that is not what I was talking about, that is not what I would have said.
What I was talking about is removing the NFTL from publication. Both Prof and Judge Roy Bean admit that the tax lien process is a matter of filing the lien. That is foundational to all such chattel obligations - publication/recordation.
At any rate the IRS or State revenue agent will, when pressed by a broker, banker or employer, come clean and admit in writing that there never was a lien to begin with. It is very helpful for the holder of the funds subject to possible diversion not to be able to find the filed lien in form of an NFTL.
Regards,
David Merrill.