I think the banks, councils and utility companies should chip in a thousand quid each to establish an OPCA debunking website. Set out in a few simple clear pages the main nonsense arguments (promissory notes, securitisation of debts, straw man, three/five letters, etc). Explain that these schemes have no legal basis, are not valid and will not be accepted.Siegfried Shrink wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 2:06 pm If I were running a buiness that involved a lot of phone calls I'd brief the call center staff on sov-cit bingo. I'd give the staff a brief outline of the OPCA arguments and a card with typical phrases that indicate a wierdo is on the line. Then they could put them on hold till they went away.
Provide links to key judgements and Ombudsman decisions. Advise customers to beware of crazy advice from the internet. Provide a contact link for questions or clarifications, updating the site as necessary to add new crazy theories.
Endorsed & approved by Citizen's Advice, Action Fraud Alert, Bank of England, Financial Ombudsman, Law Society, National Police Chiefs' Council, senior judiciary, Treasury Dept, Inland Revenue, Legal Beagles, CAG etc.
Would save so much time for them, and also provide a united, consistent message for greedy, vulnerable or stupid customers who feel tempted by sovcit nonsense. Would also help to demonstrate bad faith by any customer who attempted to use sovcit methods after being referred to that information. Something like the USA's IRS list of frivolous tax arguments.